I recall you predicted Evan would finish 12th in Vancouver. You couldn't have been more wrong about that.
LOL, no I didn't. I knew Evan would almost surely be in the top 2, given the way everyone else was skating and the politics.
What I said is that if everyone skated their best (assuming no Quad from Evan), I would rank him 12th in the World.
Don't you have even the slightest clue about what it means to compete and which athletes are capable of rising to the top under pressure? Apparently not.
The other athletes did rise to the top under pressure, though? Evan skated a technically easier LP than almost every other top competitor in the field; a program that displayed average skating skills and almost no artistry. His only real accomplishment was skating nearly clean. The judges gave him ridiculously high PCS marks simply for skating clean and because of the politics. Anyone who knows what they are talking about would have marked Lysacek's skating skills far lower than what he actually got. He doesn't have great edge quality, he doesn't build speed with ease, and he doesn't stroke and turn with fluidity.
The artistic side is more subjective but, really, anyone with taste and a clear sense of view (IE. - not being stuck on the mindset of "AMERICA!! Rah rah rah!!!") would also recognize his program as being very baseless. Dick Button once called one of Plushenko's programs "applied nonsense". That is precisely how Lysacek's program should be described. He doesn't interpret the music or provide a unique artistic point of view, he just goes through the motions of what has been told to him. And a completely
objective point about his performance is that he ended WAY ahead of the music. Clearly you aren't listening to the music and interpreting it if you randomly throw your arms into your final pose before it's called for.
Takahashi got screwed over by getting 0 points for his Quad attempt, his 3Toe getting downgraded, and ridiculous -GOE on his excellent Triple Luzes. His edges, speed, and fluidity are an entirely higher plane than Lysacek's and his ability to interpret the music and actually generate genuine emotion and personality was greater as well.
Kozuka pretty much always gets screwed over by the judges no matter what. Except at 2008 Skate America when he deservedly defeated both Lysacek and Weir. That was such a great moment. Too bad the judges don't recognize his skating skills, which are clearly the best in the business, or the greater level of complexity and emotional depth in his programs. He landed a clean Quad too and didn't even get much credit for it. His fall later on was really no big deal seeing as how he had done so much more then Evan up to that point. He received crap GOE and PCS scores because of being the 3rd ranked Japanese guy.
Then there is Weir who skated clean just like Evan did and with a far more artistic program. Look at how Weir moves his arm and leg, creating a unique shape exactly in time with the sound of the bell music during his program. It doesn't matter if the choreography was simpler (it wasn't even that much so in comparison to Evan), he deserved a much higher score for Interpretation and, even though his speed could have been better, his edge quality was still stronger than Evan's too. He was ignored for being the 3rd ranked American, there's nothing more to it.
If Weir had gone into the Olympics as the reigning World and National Champ, everyone would have praised him for nailing the performance. And if Lysacek had gone in as the 3rd ranked American and with no major International titles, people would have said - "Good job for skating clean, but he doesn't have the same amount of artistry and refinement as the top skaters."
It's all politics and the judges are unable to separate the actual skating and performance quality. The GOE and PCS scores for the exact same performances will fluctuate vastly depending simply upon "clout", and that's simply wrong and will always be a problem no matter what the judging system is as long as we have poor judges.