These remembrances of
Janet and Karen, are interesting. Skating fans (me included) like to fall back on the general statement that Janet was a poor figure skater, but an excellent free skater. It fits nicely into the analysis of
Magnussen (balanced and good at both disciplines) and
Schuba's skating (invincible figures and really weak free skating). However, it is worth noting some of the other facts and not just established memories of that time.
First, you can't remember those years (69-73) accurately without including
Julie Lynn Holmes and Gaby Seyfert in the conversation. Julie was Janet's great domestic rival and a bit of a Peggy Fleming clone who was also coached by Carlo Fassi. From 69 to 71 they routinely split their results at Nationals and Worlds. Janet won at home, while Julie placed higher abroad. Part of the reason for that was that Julie could build up a larger gap in figures between her and Janet at Worlds because there were other skaters who could squeeze in between them. Under the standards of the time, Holmes was the more well rounded skater, very strong at figures and a solid free skater. She moved up the ranks at worlds each year from 4th to 3rd to 2nd routinely placing ahead of both Lynn and Magnussen. It was entirely reasonable to expect that she would be favored to medal in Sapporo as much or maybe even more so than Janet or Karen based on that track record. Unfortunately for her, she had a very poor showing in the free skate at the Olympics, placing behind even Schuba in that segment. She fell from 2nd to 4th and retired immediately afterward.
Part of the assessment of
Holmes is that not only did she place well in figures, but she also
scored well relative the Schuba. For those who don't know, scores under 6.0 in those days were converted to point totals. That fact combined with the high number of figures being performed, allowed those who excelled at them to build up huge leads heading into the LP or SP (post 72). She was able to score well enough to stay within striking distance of Schuba. Unfortunately for her, that striking distance still required a spectacular free skating performance which she often fell short of delivering. Had Julie not competed, Janet and Karen would certainly have moved up the ranks a notch or so and would likely have won at least one more world medal each.
That brings up
Gaby Seyfert: Peggy Fleming's rival, 68 Olympic silver medalist, three time world silver medalist and 69-70 World Champion. She was very solid at figures (usually second to Fleming) a fine, athletic free skater (first female triple loop) and ironically somewhat similar to Magnussen in both build and skating style. When Schuba really started to ramp up her performance in figures, Seyfert was still able to win for two years by being very strong at both segments and by staying close enough in figures totals. She was assumed to be the favorite for Sapporo in 72, but retired early and started a family, unable to pursue a pro career due to communism. That retirement threw skating into a bit of an unexpected mess. Suddenly and really for the first time, you had the top ranked skater winning because she was so strong at figures that her free skating was almost immaterial. Combined with the new presence of skating on TV, and there was a sudden and serious problem facing skating.
Seyfert's retirement also opened the door for both Janet and Karen to move up if they improved their figures. One overlooked fact is that Janet worked extremely hard over the course of her career to improve her figures and was rewarded for that work by the 72 and 73 seasons. She moved up several spots in her placement compared to prior years and in fact was 2nd in figures at 73 Worlds. She lost that event due to her meltdown in the brand new SP, not because of her figures. (Still she beat Karen in the LP at Worlds every year from 70-73 and also at the Olympics) It's also worth noting that Magnussen was not always strong at figures either. She usually placed ahead of Janet, but not necessarily higher than their other rivals. Like Janet, she improved her placement over time.
So as you can see, that period was not nearly as cut and dried as we recall. But as the clips I posted showed, there were other worthy names from that period who helped shape the skaters Lynn and Magnussen became.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1969_World_Figure_Skating_Championships#Ladies
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1970_World_Figure_Skating_Championships#Ladies
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1971_World_Figure_Skating_Championships#Ladies
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1972_World_Figure_Skating_Championships#Ladies
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1973_World_Figure_Skating_Championships#Ladies
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Figure_skating_at_the_1972_Winter_Olympics#Ladies