- Joined
- Sep 23, 2020
They do not necessarily observe them. They read about them in papers, over Internet or hear on TV when a big scandal hits and just stay with themDid I say it was never a factor? No, I did say, based on my experience, it is not a factor that stops people from watching figure skating. Based on your experience, it is. Our experiences differ.
The argument will also always depend on whether there is a perception of systemic biased judging. I do not have that viewpoint, and therefore need to work from it as a hypothetical, since for me it is not a fact.
Our experiences also differ on small feds and the impact of hypothetical "biased" judging on skaters from small feds. I do have an outsider's experience of that argument.
You will not find a smaller fed than México. Yet, based on my limited experience following and rooting for one particular Mexican skater intently for seven yearsjudging is not perceived as rigged by those who do not already follow the sport. (and I invite our Mexican friends to correct me or to offer their own experiences as I am not Mexican and do not live there).
Why? The casual observer in Mexico does not believe that or care. They care that Donovan is a charismatic skater, that the made the Olympics, that he made the finals of the Olympics, that he skates to Mexican songs, trained in Mexico, orgullo mexicano. Therefore, "rigged judging" does not prevent the casual observer in Mexico from becoming a skating fan. Believe me.
In my experience, again, it is persons who are already skating fans, who perceive some systemic inequities, who are ready to rally around the "small fed" skater. IME, the casual observer does not perceive those inequities and it does not prevent them from becoming fans.
But that's true, our experiences differ as do our opinions.
I am not sure really if people you refer to are Mexican Donovan fans or Mexican people not watching FS at all. Whichever way, I'd say Mexico might not be the best example for this discussion as this is not just a small fed but basically mostly non-skating country. I am, sure there are FS fans there but probably they are not many anyway. I mean no offense, but I guess, most people there do not have any opinion of figure skating or its judging, it is just some exotic winter sport and isn't it great that one of ours has some success with it, and does it promoting our culture, and has some fans abroad, just wow! I can well imagine it. Just like I have no opinion of American football, or baseball, or some other sports completely foreign to the culture I come from, so whatever you tell me I just take it without any second thought....
I think this is a point when we just need to agree to disagree and move on as I do not see we can come to any common conclusions and will just repeat the same arguments over and over again, just multiplying examples and counter-examples, and eventually effectively killing this thread.
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judging is not perceived as rigged by those who do not already follow the sport. (and I invite our Mexican friends to correct me or to offer their own experiences as I am not Mexican and do not live there).
), but Canada definitely had the advantage here when it came to a helpful judge.