Had gkelly and more experts given the gold to Kozuka or even Hanyu, I would have known that being able to carry a huge lead from the short is a legitimate concern of CoP, not just a chronic complaint from a casual fan.
BTW, I didn't give the gold to Kozuka. I gave him the long program on my card.

I made no commitment as to what method should be used to combine the short and long program standings. Nor did I watch much less "judge" the short programs.
If I thought Takahashi's superiority over Kozuka in the short program was greater than Kozuka's superiority over Takahashi in the long, then I would have wanted Takahashi to win the whole thing, but since I haven't watched their SPs yet I have no opinion.
And if I thought Hanyu's superiority over Takahashi in the long program was greater than Kozuka's superiority in the short, then I would have wanted Hanyu to place higher overall, regardless of how many other skaters placed in between in either program.
I was thinking more along the lines of the former system of carrying over placements rather than points. You wouldn't be disqualified from skating the final, it's just that if you were in tenth place after the short it would take a miracle for you to make the podium.
Obviously if there are 50 entries or even 30-some, the field needs to be cut down. So some initial phase to weed out who are the best X skaters this week to qualify for the final makes sense. What that phase should consist of is open to debate -- same as the final? subset of the same skills used in the final? completely different skills?
I don't like the head-to-head approach used in some pro-ams and the Grand Prix Final ca. 2000 where the skater in third after the first phase was skating for bronze no matter how much better s/he was than the top two from the first phase.
I also don't like the setup that you can move ahead of anyone one or two places ahead of you just by beating them in the final, and you can be overtaken by anyone one or two places behind you just by losing to them in the final, regardless of
how much better or worse you were in each phase, but to overtake or be overtaken by someone three places ahead or behind the other skaters had to finish in just the right order even if none of them were close to the person you were trying to overtake.
When the rankings were purely comparative, that was the best system available for combining results from the two phases. But it led to paradoxes and was often counterintuitive.
Again I was comparing the 6.0 model with the CoP model. All skaters have to go all out in the short program. The top skaters would have to go all out so that they would enter the free skate with a high enough placement to give them a realistic chance to win.
But if it's possible to quantify, even roughly, the differences in quality between skaters in the first phase, why carry over placements at all? If skater A places 1st in the first phase by a landslide, and skaters B and C are 2nd and 3rd but virtually tied (on points or ordinals, as the case may be) with D, E, and F in 4th, 5th, and 6th, then why should C have a chance to win the whole enchilada and not F?
The lower-rank skaters would go all out because -- well, what are you there for, if not to go all out?
Well, if they're trying to qualify for the final, of course they'll aim to do enough to qualify, which for a mid-ranked skater might mean going all out. A lower ranked, lower skilled skater may have little hope of qualifying, so this first phase would be the whole competition for them and they'll want to place as high as possible, even if that's next-to-last instead of last.
But for a skater who is pretty sure to qualify for the final, pretty sure not to medal there, it might make more sense to save themselves in the semifinals and go all out in the final aiming for top 10 or better in the phase that means more.
Passing on to plan B...
I was thinking more of the Grand Prix events than the World Championship.
Ah. Well, that has been a place for the ISU to experiment in the past, as have the ISU "opens" (which are really invitationals even less open than the GP).
Do whatever you want with those. It would be nice if they're meaningful in some way, but ultimately they're footnotes in the record books that will focus on the championships.
And national championships will probably follow the format of ISU championships to the extent feasible.
The Title Sponsor Made-for-TV Extravaganza can make up its own rules and maybe earn higher TV ratings and offer bigger prize money. I'd hope the ISU would allow top skaters to do these in addition to or instead of the championships and to go back and forth based on their individual needs at the time.
How is it chosen which skaters qualify for or are invited to the Extravaganzas?
I'm still more interested in how to equitably measure the best all-around skater in the world (the purpose of championships and events by which one qualifies to compete there) and what subsets of skills might be worth their own competition phase or own separate championships.