The winner of the men's performed two programs had 8/10 jumping elements and 8/9 quads slapped with q's or underrotations, however in the SP the 4F should have been given a q mark as well so significant errors on 9/10 jumping elements. I don't think something like that has ever happened before.
The winner of the women's got the gold by just over three points on the back of two 3A's. In the short program, the officials on gave her the one q but they missed the q on the 3A, the two footed landing on the loop, the additional underrotation on the combo, wasn't given a deduction for her fall. I already posted photographic proof in another thread. By my estimation this should have cost her 6 to 11 points. The margin for gold was just over 3 points.
In the junior women, the winner who was the only one to attempt a quad, fell and was downgraded on it, 3A on the q, fell on a loop as well, however, the win was never in doubt took gold by 8 points due to a big BV advantage (she took a big hit in warm up as well how many of these hits does she take in training I thought new rules was supposed to stop this unnecessary pressure to risk injury). Ironically the one skater in that competition who was clean apart from a not clear edge call got equal lowest PCS by quite a margin
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It is just my opinion, but we did not see a figure skating final but a figure jumping final. What's more, the best figure jumpers did not win because they won despite cheating on many of their jumps. Instead results went to the figure jumpers who train not to skate a clean and cohesive program free of interruption, but only train specific jumps with high BV to artificially lift their scores above the figure skaters who aim to skate clean programs. It is merely a difference in philosophy. The skaters/jumpers did not devise the rules. The jumpers and their coaches are not doing anything wrong, it is their job to understand the rules then exploit any loopholes.
What can be done to stop this, because I don't think the sport has seen anything like we witnessed over the weekend. I appreciate the jumpers who push the sport forward with their high value jumps, but not at the complete expense of skating.
I hope this is a big wake up call for the sport with the Olympics just 14 months away. I fear for the sport if this is what we'll see in the Olympic finals.
What can be changed to put the balance more towards skating rather than pure jumping?
The winner of the women's got the gold by just over three points on the back of two 3A's. In the short program, the officials on gave her the one q but they missed the q on the 3A, the two footed landing on the loop, the additional underrotation on the combo, wasn't given a deduction for her fall. I already posted photographic proof in another thread. By my estimation this should have cost her 6 to 11 points. The margin for gold was just over 3 points.
In the junior women, the winner who was the only one to attempt a quad, fell and was downgraded on it, 3A on the q, fell on a loop as well, however, the win was never in doubt took gold by 8 points due to a big BV advantage (she took a big hit in warm up as well how many of these hits does she take in training I thought new rules was supposed to stop this unnecessary pressure to risk injury). Ironically the one skater in that competition who was clean apart from a not clear edge call got equal lowest PCS by quite a margin
.It is just my opinion, but we did not see a figure skating final but a figure jumping final. What's more, the best figure jumpers did not win because they won despite cheating on many of their jumps. Instead results went to the figure jumpers who train not to skate a clean and cohesive program free of interruption, but only train specific jumps with high BV to artificially lift their scores above the figure skaters who aim to skate clean programs. It is merely a difference in philosophy. The skaters/jumpers did not devise the rules. The jumpers and their coaches are not doing anything wrong, it is their job to understand the rules then exploit any loopholes.
What can be done to stop this, because I don't think the sport has seen anything like we witnessed over the weekend. I appreciate the jumpers who push the sport forward with their high value jumps, but not at the complete expense of skating.
I hope this is a big wake up call for the sport with the Olympics just 14 months away. I fear for the sport if this is what we'll see in the Olympic finals.
What can be changed to put the balance more towards skating rather than pure jumping?
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