- Joined
- Jun 21, 2003
About the original topic -- does the CoP "reward failure" and does this diminish the sporting aspect of figure skating --I think the ISU is trying to walk a tightrope.
GKelly and others have emphasized that evaluating a performance has two components, reflected in the roles of the technical panel and the judges. The technical panel says yes or no, you either did it or you didn't. Then the judges chimed in with their opinions about how well you did it.
Yes or no, you either did it or you didn't.
1. If you attempt a jump but fall on the landing, yes or no, did you do the jump or not?
2. If you attempt a Lutz jump but go off the wrong edge, yes or no?
3. If you are short of rotation, yes or no, did you do a triple jump or not?
4. If you attempt a combo but are unable to get the second jump off, yes or no?
In these instances the tech panel does not say yes or no, they say halfway and maybe.
The only time they say no, no, no, a thousand times no is when someone does an Oda and tacks an extra jump on to something. One could argue that the skater ought to get some credit for the legal first jump, which credit cannot then be rescinded by subsequent action. But I guess that would be unsports-like by ISU reasoning.
With respect to #4, I don't see why the argument doesn't go as follows. Each jumping pass is required by the Zayak rule to display a different skill from all the others. Just like you get 0 credit if you do a spin with the same letters attached as a previous spin.
So you do a triple flip. What you are demonstrating is, "I can do a triple flip." Later in the program you attempt a triple flip/double toe combination. The skill you are demonstrating, and wish to receive points for, is "I can do two jumps in combination." If you don't, you don't. 0 points for failing on that skill.
I do not buy the argument that we should reward risk-taking. We should reward successful risk-taking. (Sport imitates life.
)
GKelly and others have emphasized that evaluating a performance has two components, reflected in the roles of the technical panel and the judges. The technical panel says yes or no, you either did it or you didn't. Then the judges chimed in with their opinions about how well you did it.
Yes or no, you either did it or you didn't.
1. If you attempt a jump but fall on the landing, yes or no, did you do the jump or not?
2. If you attempt a Lutz jump but go off the wrong edge, yes or no?
3. If you are short of rotation, yes or no, did you do a triple jump or not?
4. If you attempt a combo but are unable to get the second jump off, yes or no?
In these instances the tech panel does not say yes or no, they say halfway and maybe.
The only time they say no, no, no, a thousand times no is when someone does an Oda and tacks an extra jump on to something. One could argue that the skater ought to get some credit for the legal first jump, which credit cannot then be rescinded by subsequent action. But I guess that would be unsports-like by ISU reasoning.
With respect to #4, I don't see why the argument doesn't go as follows. Each jumping pass is required by the Zayak rule to display a different skill from all the others. Just like you get 0 credit if you do a spin with the same letters attached as a previous spin.
So you do a triple flip. What you are demonstrating is, "I can do a triple flip." Later in the program you attempt a triple flip/double toe combination. The skill you are demonstrating, and wish to receive points for, is "I can do two jumps in combination." If you don't, you don't. 0 points for failing on that skill.
I do not buy the argument that we should reward risk-taking. We should reward successful risk-taking. (Sport imitates life.
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