- Joined
- Jul 11, 2003
(I think this topic got lost in the 3A topic so I am repeating it here.)
As to the definitions of the jumps, except for the take-off, all jumps look the same in the air and have the same required landings. It is without question that the take off is what makes them different. Scott Hamiliton gave a demonstration on this very same subject. All the jumps revolve around the air the same way; all the jumps land on one foot and on the same back outside edge It is also the defined take-offs that place the Base Value in scoring on different jumps.
Does anyone think Scott's statement is wrong?
I for one consider the take off the most important part of a jump to differentiate from the others. I'm not against partial credit. I am all for mandatory deductions in every phase of the jump with a wrong edge takeoff as being the most serious.
If the poor skater has trouble with a take off, it is not the end of the world for them. There are so many points in CoP where a skater can make up for it by just leaving it out. It would even make for better PCS scores.
Are we in fear that we will lose too many skaters if we demand perfecrt take-offs to satisfy the differentiation between the jumps? After all it is only the take-offs that make them different.
Joe
As to the definitions of the jumps, except for the take-off, all jumps look the same in the air and have the same required landings. It is without question that the take off is what makes them different. Scott Hamiliton gave a demonstration on this very same subject. All the jumps revolve around the air the same way; all the jumps land on one foot and on the same back outside edge It is also the defined take-offs that place the Base Value in scoring on different jumps.
Does anyone think Scott's statement is wrong?
I for one consider the take off the most important part of a jump to differentiate from the others. I'm not against partial credit. I am all for mandatory deductions in every phase of the jump with a wrong edge takeoff as being the most serious.
If the poor skater has trouble with a take off, it is not the end of the world for them. There are so many points in CoP where a skater can make up for it by just leaving it out. It would even make for better PCS scores.
Are we in fear that we will lose too many skaters if we demand perfecrt take-offs to satisfy the differentiation between the jumps? After all it is only the take-offs that make them different.
Joe
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