- Joined
- Jan 28, 2013
The backflip could be construed to say to his competitors, "hey, I can throw away two points intentionally, and I'm still not worried about losing to you." While it may be true, it's a little insulting.
On the other hand, it was obviously true, which may say a bit about the state of men's skating in Europe in general. As has been pointed out, he didn't "push the sport" when he was facing Ilia or the top Japanese men.
On the other hand, it was obviously true, which may say a bit about the state of men's skating in Europe in general. As has been pointed out, he didn't "push the sport" when he was facing Ilia or the top Japanese men.
if more of them will start doing it in their search of signature moves...well, ISU might put a bigger penalty on it or allow it. Then the appeal will be about as much as a cartwheel. You can do it, sure.
but I just think that accepting to take a deduction on an illegal move sends the wrong message to his competitors and fans. His intentions may be noble, the perception though, is something else.