- Joined
- Mar 25, 2008
I agree SLC pairs was different, which was I wrote about protests in the aftermath of it rather than regarding that specific event. Though personally, I thought B/S deserved their gold, and I was bothered by the way many in the media treated them at the time. The criticism should have been directed at those responsible, not at two hard-working skaters who had done nothing wrong.Also wrt sportsmanship, I agree that petitioning is not a great option however, in SLC, it was absolutely the right decision because in that case, a judge was found to have cheated and cheating should not be tolerated. Cheating is an example of the worst kind of poor sportsmanship. The judge should have been from international judging for life IMO.
Brian knows the RULES of the game. How can he complain after the fact that he should have won based on the quad when he knew full well what point value it has relative to other elements? Did he want the judges to change the Cop during the competition? It's one thing to disagree with the rules - and processes available to try and change those rules.
Which is why I think ultimately Joubert's argument, even if not well expressed, was directed against the system and not against Jeffrey's win, which was very much deserved IMO. It's a variation on his "quads are undervalued and it's bad for the sport" argument, which he's been making pretty much since CoP came in. So far the ISU remains unconvinced.
I'm not sure how good a grasp Brian had/has on CoP; there are still changes being made to it, and his interview seemed to indicate he only figured out some of the base value issues after looking at the protocols. It seems a lot of skaters still aren't 100% up to speed on the scoring & rules (as could be seen from Daisuke's mistake with the combinations, for instance).
I don't think a quad in and of itself should mean victory, but I do believe the scoring system should make it worth a skater's while to put one or more in their programs; that's not the case right now, or we'd be seeing more Quads, especially in the SP where they currently seem to be few and far between. So I'd say, Brian keep working on your presentation and on maximizing content, and Jeffrey get to work on the quad so that it's consistent. May they both succeed in doing so and skate great programs next year.
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. Cheating is an example of the worst kind of poor sportsmanship. The judge should have been from international judging for life IMO.
. First because he does not criticize Buttle, but he believes that the system of punctuation has to be modified. Those who were estimating it before will know that what he said is not new because he says it for 2 years 