@mrrice, You've never heard of Lu/Mitrofanov??? I suppose then that you've never had an opportunity to watch a full U.S. Nationals pairs event. I can see that being the case if you are not from the U.S., and thus not familiar with U.S. teams beyond the top two to three. Audrey & Misha have placed fourth and below at U.S. Nationals in prior years. They won the 2018 junior pairs championship at U.S. Nationals, and they train at the Skating Club of Boston with Russian coaches (Aleksei Letov & Olga Ganicheva).
ETA: I see that you said you aren't a huge pairs fan, so I suppose you don't watch full pairs competitions then. If you had done so for U.S. Nationals, you couldn't have missed seeing Audrey & Misha.
I guess they could have just skipped this event and rested. But it seems counterproductive to have our pairs hide from competitions and be afraid of making mistakes. K/F need to make mistakes as a newer team, so they can learn how to handle it together and prepare themselves for anything.
Granted, but this was also an opportunity to just go for it and show themselves that they could do it, especially in the absence of top Russian and Chinese teams. They've had a number of competitions with some hiccoughs and so forth, including 2021 Worlds, to learn something from. At some point, there has to be a solution, or a resolve about mental preparation, and finding a competitive strategy that works. I'm not saying that it's easy, and I don't know much about it in terms of all that's involved in being a front-line athletic competitor. Just from where I stand, I know they both have years of experience with their former partners. And it is so tremendous that from those wonderful partnerships, a new and exciting team has been formed. They have shown how overjoyed they are for this new opportunity to achieve their pairs goals.
Also, fyi: in my previous comments in the GS Zagreb competition thread, I was referencing C/J regarding how they could have ended their fall season with an uplifting performance at Warsaw Cup. So my thoughts were more toward wondering whether C/J might have been better served by staying home and practicing. But it was their decision to make, and they can still try to get into the right mindset for U.S. Nationals.
So, okay, this was another step in the learning process. File it away, move forward. Don't beat yourself up. But you have got to know and to believe that you can do it in the moment, the next time. If you have too many nerves and fears about grabbing opportunities that are there for the taking, that's a problem. I don't know that this is the case for either Alexa or Brandon. I'm not saying that it's completely about nerves. But they do seem to tighten up, when they need to be looser, focused, and determined.
(As an aside, Chelsea Liu, also tightened up a bit too much regarding her jumps. That speaks of some doubts, or anxiety about landing cleanly, or technical issues. Of course, right now Chelsea/Danny should only be thinking about taking the time they need to recover, and I wish them a safe and full recovery. In the beginning of the season, Chelsea/Danny started out well, but then for whatever reason, Chelsea's ability to land jumps cleanly began to worsen. But Chelsea/Danny are a new team, with adjustments to make, so I hope they can safely recover and return to training.
I liked what I saw from K/F on the GP. But, they have to get on the same page, so that they are both in sync, instead of one messing up here, and another there. I'm not sure what's going on with their 3-twist. It hasn't been horrible, but it seems off from their usual form. I always enjoy watching them, and I hope I can get back to feeling that they feel confident and capable of overcoming the hurdles to skate with more consistency.
This event wasn't critical for K/F. They weren't going to prove more than we already knew about them by winning this event over L/M, who they've always outscored. This score for K/F's roughest competition is to close to what L/M have scored for some of their better skates.
Yeah, the event wasn't about trying to beat L/M, by no means. Alexa/Brandon just had to skate after L/M had scored very well with good reception from the audience for L/M's performance. So, if this was what K/F needed to learn together: Trying to ignore another competitor's great performance, when you need to go out immediately afterward with your game face, and a calm focus on doing your program the way you can, with no other thoughts in your head -- then hopefully they've learned how they need to approach that. But as veteran pairs skaters, they should have a sense of how to do that already.
Since this wasn't a major competition, they needed to be ready to take advantage of posting good numbers and making the podium. While it isn't necessarily a loss that they didn't make the podium at least, and first place at best, it is still a competition for K/F and C/J where they didn't step up. Let's see how they process it moving forward.