- Joined
- Jun 21, 2003
I wouldn't call Yag's straightline genius...
That eye of the beholder thing again.
I liked it as much as a Dorothy Hamill scratch spin (also level 1 by CoP standards).Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
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I wouldn't call Yag's straightline genius...
I liked it as much as a Dorothy Hamill scratch spin (also level 1 by CoP standards).

re: ARTISTIC SKATING. It's also in the mind of the beholder and, of course, the Rusophiles. For me 'selling' the program is not art! As I said he (Plushenko) knows how to woo the judges with this simplistic of all show biz tricks.
Oh come on, give Joubert and Plushenko more credit. They were rewarded for their strong jumps. And Plushenko had solid spins and footwork. Of course, there are ''tricks'', but those only make up a small part of their skating.for me, no one does it better than kurt browning!!! and he did musical footwork long before the cop. Yagudin's footwork was theatrically effective for those fans who are new to figure skating.^ Well, sure, SOI. They're pros.![]()
Well, he did have that 'half-way down' sitspin which was credited as a true sit.mycelticblessing;373090. said:And Plushenko had solid spins and footwork.

Yagudin's footwork was theatrically effective for those fans who are new to figure skating.
I think that is really one of the main problems of COP (next to the "PCS"). I found it very poignant what Nathalie Pechalat said about thisOne more reason for disagreeing with CoP. Who decided what was difficult or not? to give out those Levels? Let a consensus of skaters tell you what is difficult - not some official.
It's actually quite funny: there is an element that according to the skaters is quite simple - but the powers that be think that the element is really hard to do and reward it with level 4. Like a bunch of schoolchildren who find out how to cheat in the math exam and the teacher thinks that they are all really blessed with high intelligence.icenetwork article said:Half of the dance couples will do the same rotational lift for the same reason: it is rather simple, and it is validated as a level 4. This of course is detrimental to creativity.
Well, he did have that 'half-way down' sitspin which was credited as a true sit.![]()
Nathalie and Fabian have been quite critical of the way levels are determined. They had to change some of their lifts earlier this season because they were not getting the levels, and went back to things they did in the past - I remember an interview in which they spoke about how disapointing it was to essentially be forced to regress in order to get the points. A real pity, because they seem to have some really great ideas that I'd be curious to see better developed.I think that is really one of the main problems of COP (next to the "PCS"). I found it very poignant what Nathalie Pechalat said about this: Half of the dance couples will do the same rotational lift for the same reason: it is rather simple, and it is validated as a level 4. This of course is detrimental to creativity.
In the first few years of CoP, I remember the Eurosport broadcasters would get really frustrated about the way the system rewards intricacy (which is good) but in doing so sacrificed speed - which is bad. Is doing intricate steps slowly better/harder than doing somewhat easier footwork but doing it fast? Personally, I want to see different approaches to step sequences and to program construction, and I don't see how the judging as currently set up promotes that.I think it's quite a dilemma. On the one hand the levels are there to reward a skater for every element, not just the jumps. Look at spins of some former Champions (e.g. Browning) - do we really want to go back to that? Joubert's and Plushenko's spins look fabulous compared to those. But then again it's such a shame that nobody does simple beautiful moves anymore, because they aren't rewarded. Or that creativity is not the way to go, because the move isn't classified in the rulebook. Just get rid of the levels for good and only award GOEs? That way simple and beautiful could be just as worthy as difficult and ugly? Problem with that would be that it's very subjective. But then again, it's a subjective sport and COP only tries to conceal the fact that it is subjective.
for me, no one does it better than kurt browning!!! and he did musical footwork long before the cop. Yagudin's footwork was theatrically effective for those fans who are new to figure skating.

Great video. He's actually trying to do the convoluted sitsspin of Lambiel's, the originator. Good for Plush. He even got all the way down.Talking about Plushenko's sit spin. Video from his recent training (yes, in the end he's started to train three times a day):
http://spb.kp.ru/daily/24243.4/442503/
This sit spin is excellent.
Of course, all best-rated performances are a matter of taste. We can disagree without argument.I think it`s a matter of taste. For me, Yags`s been the best. He was doing his footwork on ice as if dancing on the floor, without leaving even a slightest trace on the ice surface! Pure magic! And I`ve always adored Kurt Browning as well!![]()
^^Geez, can you even see us mere mortals from that high horse of yours?
Touché! 
Yagudin's footwork was definitely very original and amazing to watch *at the time*, mostly because people haven't seen it before. But I remember even in 2002 there have been posters who pointed out that the footwork was technically easy and repetitive since it most consisted of toe-pick steps. I think it's very good for entertainment and show value, but really it did very little to demonstrate the skater's mastery of the blades. The choreography, though very clever and catchy, didn't really come across as the most sophisticated. Under CoP we've seen some amazing footwork that have been inventive, musical, entertaining and difficult. Lambiel's are a great example. I think CoP does a very good job at rewarding techinical difficulty, but not so much the entertainment/inventiveness of choreography, which leads me to agree with Lambiel's idea from another interview that figure skating might be better off combining the efforts of both CoP and the 6.0 systems, instead of just one or the other.As Toni says, under the CoP Yagudin's footwork would be a level 1. That's what I don't like about the CoP. It rewards crap and punishes genius.
aaaaaaaaaaaaaa, the God of Ice in his templeTalking about Plushenko's sit spin. Video from his recent training (yes, in the end he's started to train three times a day):
http://spb.kp.ru/daily/24243.4/442503/
This sit spin is excellent.

