Of course it is not unexpected and of course it is not a terrible decision (Jason certainly deserved to go too). It is just not quite understandable and logical. After all, I understand those criteria just as a guidelines, not as a strict rules you must follow. How can you compare Ilia's average score with the other seniors, when he couldn't jump quads or even triples he wanted in his short competing as a junior and couldn't perform one more element in his free for the same reason? When he couldn't have the same exposure as Jason in the international scene (he basically had one senior competition in his whole life)? If USFSA literally followed them, then they are just not good in understanding the rules (or better to say normal exceptions of those rules) in basic statistic

More logical explanation is when they were able to choose, majority of those who are making the decision just wanted Jason on the team (like they did in Russia with Mozalev vs Semenenko case).
This is my biggest issue with the Fed’s choice. At the beginning of the season, I wrote on here that the Olympic team is on lock-down with a long shot spoiler in Paniot. Because of his lack of international competition, I said that Paniot had to do well in any Challenger, his Grand Prix assignment, and place second at Nationals to make the Olympic team. But even with that he actually
wouldn’t have made the team, which is incorrect. Malinin very nearly did what Paniot had to do, but he was practically not eligible from the start because his BOW is small and most of his scores are from junior competitions.
Yet that’s not even the reason he wasn’t chosen! Malinin did what he had to do, bronze in Austria be damned. Malinin wasn’t selected because the Fed attempted to put standards in a pretty little box to lock the team up and it backfired, resulting in abandoning common sense. When this happens, that means there’s something wrong with the black-and-white and you need to make adjustments.
To the Fed’s credit, they must have
really debated over it because they took an awful long time in announcing the selections. They wanted Malinin on the team. I'll bet my paycheck on it. I don't think the
criteria deliberately shuts out certain skaters; it’s just they want to prevent one-time wonders yet didn’t expect an exceptional case like this. And yes, this was an exceptional case in which an exception should have been made. You don’t leave the guy at home that's on an upward trajectory and performed (under pressure) and did something that only 3-4 skaters in the world has done, handily beating the top two American men in a head-to-head in the process. On your
first try. Even Kagiyama didn't manage that. He was left at home too, if I recall, despite his bronze at Nationals. JFed named Tanaka to the Worlds team that year.