US Olympic Team Announced | Page 48 | Golden Skate

US Olympic Team Announced

Green/Parsons, L/M, Isabeau, and Ilia. I don’t normally watch but I wanted to watch the gala because apparently Gracie skated to live music and it was amazing and moving. But instead we got a rehash of the medal winners skates and the annointing of the team for 2026🙄
We should start a new thread—“Here are Tara & Johnny’s picks for the 2026 US Olympic team. Discuss!” I bet we would have some interesting responses. I myself disagree with at least one :)
 
After a three-day absence from the thread, I will add more thoughts even if no one else is left to read them :laugh: ...

... I do not see an equal argument under the criteria for both, which is probably why the selection committee took less than 40 minutes to make a decision. ...

... for some reason I thought the FS ended at 4 my time, 3 CST? But I could be wrong, so let's say 2:45 CST. And yes, the email to Jason was time stamped 4:15 according to the screen grab.

In my mind, I was giving the committee time to 1) go to the bathroom before they convene :laugh: and 2) actually write and send the emails, so that was my rough guess of 40 minutes. (3:15 to 3:50ish) But they certainly could have convened immediately and the emails were not lengthy and could have been pre-written. So maybe an hour?

But it was a guess. :)

FWIW: Jason was notified of his selection approx. fifteen minutes LATER than scheduled.
Which would go against the line of thinking that the committee's decision on men's Olympic team selection supposedly was particularly speedy/easy.

"Men’s Selection Meeting
Sunday, January 9 immediately following the men’s free skate competition
Nominated Olympic team members will be notified at approximately 4:00 p.m., and selected World/World Junior/Four Continents team members will be notified at approximately 4:45 p.m. The official announcement will take place on Sunday, January 9 at 5:45 p.m."

For other disciplines, the schedule called for athletes who were selected for Olympics, Worlds, Junior Worlds, Four Continents to be notified approx. 90 minutes after the start of the selection meetings on Friday and Saturday nights.

The schedules are here:

I only yesterday noticed the link above when I was going back to look for Junior Worlds criteria here:



Rather than the one who doesn't even have World minimums because he bombed an SP at a low level senior comp so badly.

Got it.

The fact that Ilia (just barely) missed the Worlds SP minimum did not deter the selection committee from naming him to the World team. (He of course will need to meet the minimum in time.)
Jason already has both World minimums, but the committee decided that he would be first alternate to Worlds.

So ... it would seem strange to me if the yet-to-be-attained Worlds SP minimum for Ilia had been a deterrent in Olympic selection, especially given that Worlds minimums are not part of the Olympic criteria.



FWIW, the point of view of George Rossano, a USFS official who has been immersed in the sport for decades, regarding 2022 Olympic selection criteria:

"... U.S. Figure Skating currently (with the approval of USOPC) uses not only the results at Nationals but results from the past two seasons, with various weighting factors specified. On paper this makes the process look objective. Yet it is not.

First, not all skaters eligible for consideration have a lengthy enough competition record to check off all the boxes (stacking the deck against rising newcomers), so there is still a comparing of apples and oranges.

Second, despite the numerical weighting factors specified, no attempt is made to roll these up into a meaningful numerical ranking which would be truly objective. Further, while performance trends going into the Olympics are supposed to be relevant, there is also no numerical calculation of performance trending leading to an objective numerical ranking - and given how infrequently skaters compete it is questionable whether trending can be meaningful at all.

So while on paper it's about competition history, in reality, there are so many factors spanning such a long period of time, anyone can come up with any selection they want among the top 4-5 skaters and point to something in the criteria to justify any choice. ... "




Would not have made any difference in Olympic selection, but for future reference:

Ilia did not withdraw from 2021 Nats.
Jackie Wong has misremembered why Ilia did not compete there. (Obviously not a dire error from Jackie.)

I refreshed my memory only within the last couple of days that because of injury (first reported by TSL -- I don't remember whether injury later was confirmed elsewhere), Ilia was unable to submit a video for last season's virtual Championship Series.
Not participating in Championship Series meant that he did not qualify for 2021 Nats.

ETA:
A pre-Nashville article (Jan 7) says:
"... He had hoped to compete in the senior men’s competition last year, but fractured his ankle after placing fifth at Skate America ..."
Also, re 2022 Nats: "To skate his potential, Malinin will need to overcome some lingering ankle problems that recently kept him from training for three weeks."​



... I don't fault you for liking Jason's skating, because I like it, too. I think he's amazing. But "interesting" and "likeable" and "great ambassador" are not, in my opinion, reasons to consider anyone for athletic team selection. Those are subjective arguments, and similar irrelevant arguments could be made for Ilia: "young" and "fresh" and "a blast to watch." ...

... I read @DancingCactus’ post to say considerations such as watchable and ambassador are considerations in addition to those merit based considerations. They occur in every single sport and they will occur in skating. ...

... General likeability is a nonsense consideration. It's the Olympic Team, not the People's Choice Awards.

... 5. What a skater puts on the ice over the course of a year is what should be considered for selecting various teams. I saw the other considerations as "gravy" after the decision was made. Every single sport from professional teams to skating promotes the fluff, it does not make skating less of a sport to take advantage of it. ...

Regarding this type of "gravy" outside the criteria:

I think that Ilia's narrative offers a lot that potentially could have piqued the interest of every-four-years viewers. Bullet points that write themselves:
- At his first senior Nationals only a month ago, seventeen-year-old Ilia won the silver medal, receiving standing ovations for both his short program and his free skate. (Cue video.)
- Ilia placed twelve points higher than Vincent Zhou (sixth place at 2018 Olympics, 2019 World bronze medalist, etc.) and Jason Brown (2014 Olympic bronze medalist in the team event, 2020 Four Continents silver medalist, etc.). (Cue scoreboard screenshot.)
- Born in Virginia, Ilia is coached by his parents, who both were Olympic figure skaters in singles for Uzbekistan. (Cue Olympic footage of Malinina and/or Skorniakov. Also of father-and-son's joy together in the Kiss and Cry when Ilia's FS and total scores were announced in Nashville.)
- Ilia is helping his younger sister learn to skate (per his USFS bio). (Cue video of brother helping sister -- if parents consent to usage.)
- In the weeks since 2022 Nats, Ilia has gained XX thousand (something like twenty fifteen thousand and counting, I think??) followers on Instagram, where he shares training videos including ambitious work-in-progress jump combinations. (Cue video.)​
Plus Ilia has a terrific smile and a nice sense of humor.

Yes, Jason's narrative also has a lot to offer (with supporting video too). And yes, Jason is watchable and is a good ambassador -- but I do not think that he has a monopoly on those attributes (subjective attributes).
From the moment that Ilia was introduced for his group's SP warm-up, the crowd inside Bridgestone Arena showed tremendous enthusiasm for him.

... I was in the arena and people were going WILD for Ilia. ...

(y) I was another first-hand observer of the same.​



... This is also the second time I've heard that somewhere, someone said "He's working on them, they'll come". I am a die hard Jason fan and I have never said it. Furthermore, I have followed Jason pretty closely over the past eight years and *never* heard anyone on his team say that. ...

Never anyone on his team? Jason has not been with Kori since 2018, but here is an example from Apr 2017 of her over-optimism with respect to quads:

Kori is on Ice Talk this week with Nick McCarvel.

http://web.icenetwork.com/fans/icetalk

Kori shared that Jason is working with Rohene a new SP this week (no music was mentioned) and the plan is to have two quads in the SP.

And here is another example from Kori from Oct 2017:

" '... I would definitely look forward to one or two quads in this program. And for sure in the long by the end of the season.' "

 
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I mean - Ilia was 2nd, not 3rd, and that by a wide margin. Jason had year after year after year to up his technical content at least a bit (1 reliable quad); he hasn't anything to show in that aspect - and there are some artistically great skaters around WITH technical content. He isn't needed for the team event either, so ... it would have been better, I think, to give Ilia the chance to test the waters at the greatest event of all - if he nails it, he is the sensation and scores will go up fast, if not - a great learning experience for him and no damage done.
100% agree. Jason is the past and llia is the future. It's time to let the youngers to learn experience and grow from it. From the math possibility perspective, llia has much higher odd than Jason to be on podium. That's why US figure skating is declining while Russia figure skating is gaining momentum. The gap between US and Russia figure skating sport is getting wider and wider.
 
None of the criteria was “landing a quad” or “number of quads landed.”
Ilia skates like a Junior. There would have to be an enormous splatfest for him to win. And if there is an enormous. splatfest, Jason could medal.

Jason is ranked 6th in the world. Ilia is ranked 32nd.

According to your criteria, Kamila should not be selected for Russia Women Olympics team. Kamila is ranked 10th at world ranking. Karen is even ranked higher than Kamila according to latest world ranking. You clearly has no idea how the world ranking works. Kamila and llia are in disadvantage because they don't compete at Senior World yet.


Karen 7th
Kamila 10th
 
Justice for Ilia? Give me a break. His nonselection wasn’t a travesty of justice. By adopting that kind of language in this situation, you trivialize the victims of hate crimes and police brutality and undercut any rational argument you might have had on Ilia’s behalf.

Regarding your “ice is slippery” comment, guess what: it applies to every skater out there, and if anything doesn’t support your argument that Ilia deserves to be on the team. Rather, the fact that Nathan placed behind Boyang, Javi, and Shoma at the 2018 Olympics should remind you that having the hardest technical content doesn’t guarantee medals.

all top 3 men (Yuyu, Shoma, Javi) all landed multiple quads and all of them have MUCH higher technical content than Jason. Nathan is not the only one has the difficult technical content. There are so many others can land quad in men competition. ICE is slippery but it doesn't mean someone with ZERO quad can be on Olympics podium. "ICE is slippery" doesn't apply to someone with nearly zero chance for podium (i.e. Jason). Same thing for Women. "Ice is slippery" doesn't mean Gracie Gold or Starr Andrews can win national championship in near future. It has to be a complete disaster for the competition before those skaters have any chance to be on podium. "ICE is slippery" only applies for the skaters who have long shot for Olympics podium (Vincent, Shoma, Koari, Young You, Wakaba)
 
all top 3 men (Yuyu, Shoma, Javi) all landed multiple quads and all of them have MUCH higher technical content than Jason. Nathan is not the only one has the difficult technical content. There are so many others can land quad in men competition. ICE is slippery but it doesn't mean someone with ZERO quad can be on Olympics podium. "ICE is slippery" doesn't apply to someone with nearly zero chance for podium (i.e. Jason). Same thing for Women. "Ice is slippery" doesn't mean Gracie Gold or Starr Andrews can win national championship in near future. It has to be a complete disaster for the competition before those skaters have any chance to be on podium. "ICE is slippery" only applies for the skaters who have long shot for Olympics podium (Vincent, Shoma, Koari, Young You, Wakaba)
This comparison isn't fair. Jason is within the top 10 for highest PB ever men's scores in the IJS. Suggesting he is at the same level as Gracie Gold or Starr Andrews scoring wise ( or skating wise) is completely ridiculous.

Jason's highest PB is 274 points. Jason made the GP final this year Young You and Wakaba didn't. So, that would suggest he is actually in a better position than they are not below them. Looking at international PB scores, Nathan and Yuzuru are in their own tier. Then, you have skaters like Vincent, Shoma and Yuma. After that, there is another group including Kolyada, Mark K., Jason B., Kevin Aymoz, and Daniel Grassl who are all unlikely to medal but who could medal if the two top groups have a bad skating day. Ilya's PB otoh puts him in a group of skaters who may or may not make the freeskate.

What people are forgetting ( who believe that Ilya could medal) is that this is men's skating. In women's skating, these days, BV rules the day. Judges give high GOE and PCS to skaters with high BV whether they deserve it or not. This isn't the case in men's skating, the judges hold back on PCS/GOE for younger skaters with lower quality elements and less than great SS. Among young male skaters only Yuma was able to get very good PCS/ GOE from the judges quite quickly ( and it still took him a year to get there) and this only happened because he has absolutely stunning SS. Ilya ( while very talented) is no Yuma Kagiyama in terms of SS or quality of non-jump elements. His jumps are good, but several of them at US nationals would have been called UR by an international panel.

All this to say, Jason is not likely to medal but previous scoring history, the way young male skaters are judged, and other evidence would suggest his chance of medaling is higher than Ilya's.
 
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According to your criteria, Kamila should not be selected for Russia Women Olympics team. Kamila is ranked 10th at world ranking. Karen is even ranked higher than Kamila according to latest world ranking. You clearly has no idea how the world ranking works. Kamila and llia are in disadvantage because they don't compete at Senior World yet.


Karen 7th
Kamila 10th

They aren’t my criteria. They are USFS criteria. I did not write them nor did I have anything to do with their being written.
 
Looking at the schedule for the team and individual events, it appears that the skaters will have six days between the team and singles events, Since the team event is first, I hope the skaters can "Get Back Up" for the singles event. I remember Yulia Lipnitskaya being brilliant during the team event and struggling in the Individual event. There's a lot of physical and emotional stress that will be let out during the team event and I hope the medal contenders will be OK when they skate in their Individual events.
 
Am I reading the schedule right that the men's individual SP is the day after the men's team LP? That's going to be tough for Vincent or Jason. I'm not sure why the men's LP wouldn't be Saturday in place of the pairs LP.
 
Am I reading the schedule right that the men's individual SP is the day after the men's team LP? That's going to be tough for Vincent or Jason. I'm not sure why the men's LP wouldn't be Saturday in place of the pairs LP.
I think the men's team LP is on 2/6 and the individual SP is on 2/8. The team event concludes on 2/7, but the men do not skate that day.
 
Am I reading the schedule right that the men's individual SP is the day after the men's team LP? That's going to be tough for Vincent or Jason. I'm not sure why the men's LP wouldn't be Saturday in place of the pairs LP.
No, they switched it. The men's LP is on Sunday and the Pairs LP is now Monday, with the men individual SP Tuesday.
 
Am I reading the schedule right that the men's individual SP is the day after the men's team LP? That's going to be tough for Vincent or Jason. I'm not sure why the men's LP wouldn't be Saturday in place of the pairs LP.
The schedule for the Olympics is ridiculously awful. Why did they switch it up? It's been pairs-men-dance-ladies/women for as long as I can recall.
 
Am I reading the schedule right that the men's individual SP is the day after the men's team LP? That's going to be tough for Vincent or Jason. I'm not sure why the men's LP wouldn't be Saturday in place of the pairs LP.
At least it isn't the same day team and men's. But it may be hard if they are celebrating their tam medal. I think it will be harder for the "forgotten one" Ilia. Can you imagine if Jason gets a team medal or even team gold. Life isn't fair but one skater gets to go to the olympics and gets a medal and the other is at home watching on Peacock tv. I doubt anyone or too many think that way but Ilia is human.
 
The schedule for the Olympics is ridiculously awful. Why did they switch it up? It's been pairs-men-dance-ladies/women for as long as I can recall.
Well they have changed it a little bit before but it is all about marketing and ratings. It's in China and there is only one event - pairs where they are sure bet medal threat if not gold medal winner. It was almost four years ago when China was plotting its way to win a team medal but something happened. Their promising dance team was left battling the second and third American, Russian and Canadian teams as well as Spain, Great Britain; the ladies collapsed, the men struggled. Only in pairs do they really reign. They could even lose to Canada and Georgia in the team event besides USA, Russia and Japan.
 
Well they have changed it a little bit before but it is all about marketing and ratings. It's in China and there is only one event - pairs where they are sure bet medal threat if not gold medal winner. It was almost four years ago when China was plotting its way to win a team medal but something happened. Their promising dance team was left battling the second and third American, Russian and Canadian teams as well as Spain, Great Britain; the ladies collapsed, the men struggled. Only in pairs do they really reign. They could even lose to Canada and Georgia in the team event besides USA, Russia and Japan.
I know, but it's been mostly the same way since figures were removed. The only thing they used to do was stick ice dance compulsories the day between the men's short and free. I find the schedule for Beijing disconcerting, especially for the men, and I'm really not all that happy about the women being in the middle of the week.
 
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At least it isn't the same day team and men's. But it may be hard if they are celebrating their tam medal. I think it will be harder for the "forgotten one" Ilia. Can you imagine if Jason gets a team medal or even team gold. Life isn't fair but one skater gets to go to the olympics and gets a medal and the other is at home watching on Peacock tv. I doubt anyone or too many think that way but Ilia is human.
And it happens at every Olympics. At least Ilia sitting at home would be comforted to see Jason skating his best and giving his all for the team. There was no such comfort for Max Aaron in 2014 when he had to sit at home and watch Jeremy Abbott flop all over the ice, give up, and then call it a "positive step" and "just a warmup".
 
It's interesting they changed the time of day for the women and pairs events to the evening Beijing time, so it's in the middle of the night in North America. I'm guessing cause NBC doesn't have as much interest with no American contenders, while China has a lot of interest in the pairs, and Russia in the ladies.
 
It's interesting they changed the time of day for the women and pairs events to the evening Beijing time, so it's in the middle of the night in North America. I'm guessing cause NBC doesn't have as much interest with no American contenders, while China has a lot of interest in the pairs, and Russia in the ladies.
It's good for the women and pairs, that they get to compete at proper times. The men and the dancers still get jerked around and forced to skate at stupidly early times purely to cater to Americans.
 
And it happens at every Olympics. At least Ilia sitting at home would be comforted to see Jason skating his best and giving his all for the team. There was no such comfort for Max Aaron in 2014 when he had to sit at home and watch Jeremy Abbott flop all over the ice, give up, and then call it a "positive step" and "just a warmup".

Nah, Max Aaron was too busy flopping all over the ice at 2014 US Nationals to be angry at Jeremy for delivering at the competition that mattered most to get to Sochi in the first place.

Jason Brown "giving his all" landed him in 4th in the team free only ahead of Max's training mate, Bonifacio, who was literally last in the team short--anyone of substance could have beat him. And it's not like Jason will be doing the team this time around. Jason's tendency to underrotate even his 3As makes him a bigger risk in the team event than even chronic under-rotator Vincent who at least packs his programs with quads over triples.
 
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