Along this line ...then after all the base value of the technical points added up. Chan had 83.75. Takahashi had 78.79.![]()
But his quads weren't well done at all.
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Along this line ...then after all the base value of the technical points added up. Chan had 83.75. Takahashi had 78.79.![]()
But the favorite pets get higher points. The inflation in skating scores is reaching hyperinflation and often means nothing. Did he really deserve the 10 point spread? Gee, he ran out of room on an Olympic rink and smashed into the boards with that Oh, well, look of his. Yes, more points for Patrick. CoP needs to be overhauled. I'm sure people will say they just love his speed. Isn't control a desired quality? Speed is useless without control. It reminded me of Midori ito when she jumped out of the rink. They didn't reward Midori for that!.
But his quads weren't well done at all.
When I say "casual fans", I mean:I have to call out Mathman and skatinginbc...as masquerading as "casual fans".
I never argue that a flawed element (e.g., hand-down, two-foot) should not receive a partial TES credit for its technical accomplishment. My concern has always been about its impact on PCS. Due to my lack of skating expertise, a "casual fan" like me trusts the calls of technical specialists and judges in the TES department. However, when it comes to performance or artistic impression/presentation, I do have a voice.the biggest misconception and misconnection with casual fans about COP is spelled out in the thread title - Rewarding Failure.
I hope I wasn't included in your reference of "some fans". As I told Wallylutz in the GPF Men FP thread, "I don't think many people questioned Chan's SS and TR." I have said it million times and I feel like I have to say it again: Doesn't a fall influence Performance and Interpretation to a certain degree? My argument about falls and other observable hiccups has always been about their influence on the 2nd mark (artistic impression), whether in this thread or others.some fans insisted any fall disrupted the program and should be reflected in skating skills scores.
Who is my favorite skater? Who am I devoted to? I haven't figured it out yet, but I don't mind other people telling me. I thought what I devoted to was "fairness" of the sport, not a particular skater. I know Mathman likes Michelle Kwan. Is Michelle still competing? I guess Mathman's criticism on IJS comes from his devotion to the sport, not to a particular skater.Mathman and skatinginbc, two very articulate skating fans with strong interest and devotion to their favorite skaters
Has ISU been doing validity studies on its judging system?
Is it not favoristism- I have not read this thread so excuse me- that Patrick won over Daisuke with what happened in PC's SP and LP? How many here felt Dai deserved the gold? Or is PC the 'pet" here at GS with all the Canadian members?
Guess I should head to the poll folder to see what is the consensus about GP Final....
The other view is that, in sober reality, Chan’s remarkable blade-to-ice skills, not to mention two quads, are just what the CoP is designed to reward. Chan is going to score a bunch of points no matter what because he does all the things that the CoP gives out points for. You can’t out-CoP Patrick Chan. That’s just the way it is, whether you are from Canada or Timbuktu.
Chan also did one more Triple-Triple than Takahashi, a difficult 3Lz+1Lo+3S. Plus, the Japanese skater didn't do a Double Axel while Chan had enough room, due to his extra 3-3, to include a 2A, which is worth almost as much as a standard 3T due to it being done late in the program. Not to mention the less visible errors that Takahashi made such as dropping the level on one of his spins to a Level 2. All things considered, Takahashi made enough mistakes such that Chan's demonstrated fuller content in jumps and everything else - thus higher base marks, compensated for poorer GOE on jumps.
Always reserving the right to be wrong, I think the consensus is something like this. The long program could have gone either way. Some people are frustrated with Chan’s errors and think his program component scores are too high for a performance that was far from his best. Many people thought Takahashi’s performance was a delight and would give him the nod on the basis of the emotional satisfaction that his program brings. If Daisuke had landed his quad cleanly I think he would have won the LP.
The other view is that, in sober reality, Chan’s remarkable blade-to-ice skills, not to mention two quads, are just what the CoP is designed to reward. Chan is going to score a bunch of points no matter what because he does all the things that the CoP gives out points for. You can’t out-CoP Patrick Chan. That’s just the way it is, whether you are from Canada or Timbuktu.
But of course Canadian skating fans in general love their Patrick, just like Korean fans are enthusiastic about Yu-na Kim. Why wouldn’t they be? :yes:
The other view is that, in sober reality, Chan’s remarkable blade-to-ice skills, not to mention two quads, are just what the CoP is designed to reward. Chan is going to score a bunch of points no matter what because he does all the things that the CoP gives out points for. You can’t out-CoP Patrick Chan. That’s just the way it is, whether you are from Canada or Timbuktu.
, Yes.
, and see if you can still keep the same qualities on the rest of the PCS. Chances are you cannot! 
If the purpose of CoP was solely to produce identical results as the ones under the old system, then there was indeed no point for ISU to implement the new system. Yet ISU went ahead because it is a system more than just about the results. It gives feedback or detailed explanations about the scores. Also, it was based on the assumption that the old system was not perfect and therefore needed improvement.In the formative stages of the CoP the ISU certainly did a lot of retro-scoring of past performances to see whether the new scoring system matched the actual results....Your post is quite interesting because if what is desired is a close match in terms of placements between a gut felling gestalt opinion of experts and the actual sum of point values, then why have the CoP in the first place? Why not just go with the experts opinions, as in 6.0?
.If there is a big difference, who is right, the consensus of experts or the arithmeticians
Mathman!:thumbsup: I love your clear summery!
That's where the controversy begins.
1. Have the judges marked Patrick wrong? - generally speaking, according to CoP, No.
2. Were the judges' views far apart from "casual fans" - as Skatinginbc defined, views? - many times, especially when Patrick Chan is in the picture, Yes.
How is that?
I think Mathman pull the bull by the horn. I've said it in GPF men's LP thread, a performance in a slow speed or standing still is different from a performance constantly on the edges of the blades with fast speed. What the skating experts valued and marveled are not necessarily what casual fans focused. People watch the whole performance, no doubt with some consideration on speed and blades, but the whole body are the center of the focus. The judges might consider the blades more than casual fans do. The judges focus on both blades and the whole body with the expertized views on how difficult it is to perform on Patrick's level in PE, CH, and IN with Patrick's level of SS. It could be that Patrick's PCS marks if skated perfectly would have been higher than any other skaters because of his SS. Therefore, I said it seemed that SS has priced in the rest of the PCS marks.
On one hand, if you don't like it, I'll say, go for the SS like Patrick has, and see if you can still keep the same qualities on the rest of the PCS. Chances are they cannot!
One the other hand, I do agree that starting from this very view point, it has devided experts from casual fans. Also it has made casual fans hard to understand the scores. As the result, some fans jumped up and brought out all sorts of scadalous far cries, like politics, nationalism, corruption...
How to smooth and minimize the gap between the expert's views and the casual fan's views has become the center of the task.
Surely there is a way for the system to find a balance between rewarding difficulty and execution. I've said this on FSU, but maybe there should be a seperate point system for this level. I'd be all for saying no points for solo doubles, singles etc. If people really wanted to encourage the quad, one could say a quad attempt leads to an extra jumping pass and leave it at that, but the person who fell would have to actually complete the other pass to get points. There's tons of ways to reward difficulty/taking the risk, without also rewarding people for failure on that risk.
Invisible to trained eyes or invisible to untrained?![]()
This is actually an interesting point. In Canada, I believe they have taken away the fall deduction at lower levels, in order to encourage harder triples. I'd be interested to see what shifts to the rules could be made in order
Untrained. The idea that Mathman et al are promoting is that the sport/entertainment is weakened because it is unable to appeal to the casual fan. My question is how can you create a system such that the fan can enjoy it while not disrespecting the sport/athletes itself. People say common sense, but at the same time run rougshod over the details.
Just kidding!Is it correct under CoP to give a skater 9's for P/E when he had many visible errors in his jumps? Or is it just me who think that a skater who fell shouldn't get 9's for Performance and EXECUTION? I think the judges should give Patrick 8s and 9s for SS, T, CH and I because they are all first rate even when he falls but his P/E mark should be lowerd when he makes three visible mistakes on his jumps, oen of them being huge crash, to 7's. This would give a chance for clean/almost clean Takahashi to win if Patrick makes mistakes on his jumps (and he usually makes a lot of them).
What are you jingling, juggling about? As you said, he dropped the ball.Just kidding!