Longer post, as promised. Preemptive apology about the length
1. I have to admit I took a little umbrage at the comment, Ellen, because I made NO reference to Russian skaters in my post. Janetfan (the poster of the quote I quoted) made reference to only one team, two results. Hardly fair to assume we’re denigrating an entire people, culture or figure skating tradition. Additionally, I have to admit I wondered the same about Ellen vis-a-vis D/W and DomShabs. Your criticisms about D/W are fair (indeed, I have them in a minor key myself) but it didn’t seem you were applying the same standard to DomShabs. You don’t have to, of course. But when making general comments about the trends in the sport, it helps.
2. Politics. Wier has complained about politics in his own nation. As much as a Russophile as he is, I’m pretty sure he means the USA. And that’s now. So no, politics have not disappeared. Nor will they.
But when I think of the detrimental effect of politicking, I think the most profound example would be the Duchesnays. They actually switched countries (away from Canada, I add, so you don’t think I’m pretending that Skate Canada is all angels and fairy dust) because they felt they didn’t get the political support from their first. Now, lets imagine for a second that they didn’t have that option as readily as they did (their mom was a French citizen, right?). Lets say they tried to make it work in Canada despite a politically “challenging” atmosphere. It’s extreme to say, but could you imagine ice dancing without “Missing” or “Savage Rights” or that crazy tango? Luckily for all of us, they went to a federation that supported them, but what if...? Maybe I’m overstating it
3. Pairs..... okay, pairs to me has been hurt the worst. I don’t know why exactly. Even if we credit the fact that the pairs of today aren’t as good as the pairs of the past, I do think that a big reason for the decline is the way COP dictates pairs programs.
Single skaters have to do three/four types of elements: jumps, spins, footwork (and spirals for the ladies). Ice dance only has four (footwork, spins, lifts, twizzles). Pairs? They have nine different types to pull off: SBS jumps, throws, twists, lifts, SBS spins, pairs spins, footwork, spirals, death spiral (even if you collapse the list down - I don’t know what elements are close enough to each other to require basically the same skills - it’s a long list). So what ends up happening is that the sheer volume of elements one needs to learn and get a high level on means that you see the same variations on the elements (that aren’t necessarily well done). I’d love to see COP for pairs revamped a bit.
Your answers are all good with me but saying no one deserved bronze in Vancouver feels like you are ducking the question. Of course someone deserved bronze, but maybe a team skating a horrible OD and a belt assisted FD was not the one who deserved it. And it felt as political as anything from the 6.0 era
Yep. I’m totally ducking the question. I’m goosing it out of existence, turkeying it into my oven, and chickening out. And other bird references.
But more specifically.... of the teams in 3-6, I thought Faiella/Scali skated the best. They had the best free dance of the four teams (F/S, B/A, D/S and D/S) by far. DelSchos had the most intriguing OD, but it wasn’t as well skated as it could’ve been (nor as complex. And those twizzles.... sigh). B/A had two uninspired dances and didn’t really commit to either (though in their defence, skating on the ice after V/M had melted it with their blazing flamenco couldn’t have been easy). If you forced me to choose, I’d say F/S deserved it, with the caveat that she really needs to learn more than one expression. But I’d also mention that DomShabs were definitely top three after the CD (I’d have them in second behind... take a guess .... so that means first was reasonable, I’d have them in seventh in the OD and probably fifth in the FD).
The IOC ordered the ISU to clean up the Dance or it would be gone from the Olympics. So grudgingly the powers that be have become less political. No credit goes to CoP for that and it is silly to blame 6.0 for the same problem.
My understanding was that they ordered it 1998. It was not much cleaner by 2001/2002 (to whit, Vanagas/Drobiazko)
Now that we have the ten per cent bonus, all the programs have their biggest point-getting jump right at the mark of one second past half-way.
Rochette, Kim, Ando, Lepisto, Nagasu, Flatt, and Suzuki all have their hardest jumping pass as their first one in the LP.
gmyer said:
Well the next time a skater wins worlds while doing a quad this whole thought of mine goes right out the window! But the way COP is configured will the person who feels they can win go for it?
Brian Joubert fell on 2A at Worlds 2009. Tomas Verner landed all his jumps but Verner ended up off the podium whereas Joubert won bronze.
At the Olympics, Daisuke Takahashi fell on his UR’ed quad attempt, so according to the protocols, he fell on a triple toe. Stephane Lambiel landed his quad toe. Takahashi ended up on the podium; Lambiel didn’t.
Brian Joubert fell on his triple lutz at Worlds 2010. Michel Brezina landed his. Joubert ended up on the podium, Brezina didn’t.
Therefore, and based on the evidence, to earn a bronze medal, it is better to fall on a jump then land them all. Anyone spot the flaw in the reasoning? There’s more than one. But the big one is that it only makes sense in a vacuum - all other things being equal. Obviously, they weren’t here. Not only do I neglect to mention that two of the three examples actually earned the podium spot on the basis of the short program (Takahashi, Joubert 10) and finished behind the example in the long, it pretends that there is nothing else to mitigate these errors. Verner doubled a few jumps, Lambiel’s weak landings, etc.
But that’s an extreme example, so lets examine the case that triggered this discussion: Lysacek vs Plushenko. This was the closest situation of the four people discuss and brings up a few issues.
a) Structure vs Application
It doesn’t help to be reductive here because these are separate issues with separate solutions. If I broke my leg and suffered a deep cut in the arm, I’d hope that the doctor wouldn’t put a cast on my arm and stitch up my leg, you know? So if you hate how UR’s are marked (lowered to the lesser jump, mandatory negative GOE as well), that’s structure. That’s not the judges, that the system; or if we hate the fact that transitions are a separate program component. However, if we think that Lysacek’s triple axel isn’t a good one and should never get a positive GOE, that’s application. Some can be both: PCS for example. I might dislike that XYZ gets too high transition scores, so the judges can be at fault. But they also have the corridor to deal with, and that’s structural.
b) It happened; therefore it will always happen
In blowouts, this is true. With close contests, it’s rarely so. Lets use a different example. Davis/White lost bronze in 2009 to Virtue/Moir by 0.04 points. For those who don’t know, this is one judge changing ONE GOE by one level or one PCS by one level. It’s the closest medal loss in COP history. Does anyone think that every judging panel would see it the same way? What if instead of a Canadian judge, there was an American judge on the panel?
So to me, saying that the system is broken is saying that “9 times out of 10, this result will happen” which I don’t think is true.
c) It argues that there’s no way to change the result within the skater’s strengths
This is a little vague. To argue that it’s nonsensical to do a quadruple jump as opposed to work on everything else only stands to reason if you can’t work within your strengths to pull of the victory/medal/etc. I think it’s fair to assume that someone who can land a quad would be a reasonably good jumper (despite whatever demons they may have on specific jumps: Kevin Reynolds and the triple axel, for example). And I think we can argue that Plushenko is a strong jumper. Lets focus on the triple axel. He landed three (one in combination, of course).
SP: GOE 1.8
LP solo: -0.36
LP combo: 1.00
So if he had landed the LP solo 3A at the level he’s shown he’s capable of (go with the median of 1.00) he would’ve won and this is without focusing on the spins/footwork/choreography/transitions etc.
I'm tired now.