- Joined
- Sep 23, 2020
It was the system and its rules that left the decision to the skater and skater only, no matter the state he was in, no matter how blurred his mind was and how well he understood his medical condition. And it was the system that has been broadly criticized by many Japanese athletes from other sports for making skaters take this decision right after an accident, including by Yuzuru himself. And no, not the scoring, lol, scoring was the least important in this mess and TBH I find it surprising that anyone feels an urge to go back to discuss it 10 years later. It was the revealed lack of medical safety and emergency regulations at the rink which was way more important. Criticizing an athlete for taking a decision demanded from him by the system is something new to me. So both the athlete and judges had to operate in the horrid circumstances they found themselves under, the best they could at the moment, and whatever they did was responding in a shock to an emergency. I for one applauded the score, and would not feel anything else right under the circumstances.Applauding a skater for competing while injured and with a head injury - I can’t even with that. His choice of course but it was dangerous and sends the wrong message competing with a likely concussion - a way worse message than you can fall 5 times and get 84 PCS if your popularity is sound enough.
And what is more worrying AFAIK, the ISU rules on accidents have not been been changed in this aspect since, despite the pile of international criticism that followed, and many other amendments being introduced. It's not about sending messages, it's about having the rules. As Yuzu and other sports' Japanese OGMs pointed commenting on this, an athlete will want to compete, and especially if he's young and his mind is somewhat blurred, he will not have a good judgement of the medical situation, so this decision in such severe medical circumstances should not have been left in his hands as that is irresponsible. The way it was, criticizing him for it is somewhat petty to me.
I can only repeat - you may like it or not but this was not a case of reputational scoring, so you're barking a wrong tree.
Personally I thought then and think now that cancelling the free skate after such a horrible accident and just keeping placements from SP would have been much wiser, safer and more fair solution from the organizers.
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