Yes, and those errors are supposed to be penalized in the GOE. And in the base mark in case of underrotation.
Nothing to do with the program component scores, except maybe Performance/Execution if the error is disruptive.
Well, I didn't mention PCS...so no, it has nothing to do with PCS.
You don't know for a fact that rules weren't followed.
Did the technical panel see the jump from the same angle as the video circulated online that shows an edge change?
If they were watching live from an angle from which neither the edge change nor the underrotation were apparent, they might not even have called for a review on that element. No review, no < or e calls.
If they reviewed the element and the angle of the video they used for the review was inconclusive, according to the rules the panel is supposed to give the benefit of the doubt to the skater.
And the judges also just mark what they saw, from their angle.
For all we know the element look just fine in real time from the angle of the tech panel and most judges. Or inconclusive upon review. We can speculate as to whether that was the case, or whether officials chose to ignore obvious flaws, but without knowing for sure we can't make accept accusation as fact. We're just guessing either way.
gkelly, I admire and respect your commitment to defending the judging system, explaining it, and support of its integrity, but it's clear we won't see eye to eye on this.
If the technical panel didn't have a good view of the jump to see the edge change, didn't review it, and did not give the skater either an edge call or UR call that is visible with other angles, then the technical panel and the equipment and the system
failed. It simply defies belief that that could happen at the Olympics. If that's what happened, that's still a failure for the technical panel, and it's also
embarrassing.
This competition was the
Olympics. It is the most important competition for figure skating of the last 4 years. The scores and the technical calls given should be defensible for posterity. They are not in the case of Adelina's 3Lz/3T.
And while I can't prove that the rules weren't followed, neither can you prove that the rules were actually followed. But when a skater who has gotten called on her flutz in her career at most every ISU competition manages to not get called on it at the Olympics in Russia, I'd say there's more evidence on one side of the argument than the other that this was not just a bad call, but a deliberately bad call that favored one skater over another.