I'm ready for that! Let's blame these off-season craziness on sunspot activity peak in 2012.
So Takahashi is having a second thought on choreographer for this coming season after listening to Morozov. Sounds like Morozov will do his choreograph in Olympic season, just like what I've thought.
I don't understand why so many people forgot all about Morozov's brilliantness in the past? Maybe Morozov and Takahashi could bring out the best for each other again. At least Takahashi thought so. Otherwise, he wouldn't have decided to go back to him.
Good, so now I know if Chan won over Takahashi, Chan earned it. If Takahashi won over Chan, it will be the result of politiking and conspiracy.

I like that!
I agree with everything above, in its context, except that I am not sure that Takahashi will let Morozov do the choreography. (Bluebonnet, you are usually right though and nothing surprises me anymore.) Takahashi always struck me as a skater very astute as to what works and what doesn't, and he is of unusually strong spine for a skater. That Morozov is not going to be his coach, but an adviser, suggests that Takahashi is still in the driver's seat and up to form. I give one to Takahashi for putting limits on Morozov. As well, knowing how well Takahashi can skate to the audience, I think if anyone does, he of all people knows that Morozov's choreography comes off as a little too (okay, perhaps a way too) cheesy. I can't believe that Takahashi would let that happen.
Another aspect of the coaching modification by Takahashi is that Takahashi's competitive skating career has to entering its sunset phase. Patrick Chan is young, and Yuzuru Hanyu is barely out of being a toddler. Dai knows that he has to work really hard over the next couple of years to be competitive with those two, but he does not have as much of a safety net for mistakes as do the kids (if either Hanyu or Chan have a bad year, as unlikely as that may be, both can bounce back for Sochi). If Takahashi has a bad year, it could be more devastating and possibly the end. I got the impression from Takahashi's interviews (his saying that if he didn't improve, Hanyu would be better than him), he is pulling out all the stops to do whatever it takes to end at the top of his own game and the sport as a whole.
I suspect that the real showdown over the next two years is going to be between Chan and Hanyu, and I think that a lot of other people suspect the same. Takahashi wants to and is determined to prove everyone wrong, and will take whatever he can get, even from Morozov, to do that. And he might because he is one tough competitor.
The other factor, as alluded so wisely by OS168, it cannot help but be thought that outside influences (including money) probably played a big role in this re-union of forces. Reading Morozov's interviews, one certainly gets the impression that this is a guy who has never been one to eat crow on the basis of anything. He kind of appears to be eating crow here so we are all left wondering what the secret ingredient is.
Still, Takahashi and Morozov having any type of skating relationship again has to set a new high achieved on the wonky scale.