- Joined
- Mar 23, 2010
Ran the "corridor" numbers. First observation, really really wide corridor for GOE. For example, Adelina scored 22.78 total GOEs (best of night i think). Judge is allowed to be off by +/- 12. In other words, judges can be 50% higher or lower than everyone else and still be in "corridor". For PCS, "corridor" range is 7.5 points, which given total PCS (pre 1.6x multiplier) can be ~45 (assuming 9s), only allows judges to be about ~17% off from average. Perhaps this is why GOE stdev is so much wider than PCS.
No judge tripped "corridor". Closest for GOE was one judge's scores for Caro which totaled 11.2 off average (just below the 12 cutoff). Closest for PCS was one judge's scores for Yuna which totaled (4.4) off average (versus cutoff at 7.5).
Interesting analysis. A couple of things come out of this
A. Did Adelina receive the the highest total GOEs EVER in the history of this sport based on that performance? Surpass anything by Chan, Takahashi, Hanyu, Kim, Mao, Kostner?
B. If so, it seem to indicate GOEs is more vulnerable to manipulation than PCS, because the point variation from PCS at elite level are usually between 8 to 10, roughly 2 points separation and 10 is a rarity. They are Factored differently for short and long which makes FS a far more important event. With GOEs scale of +-3 can be a matter of up to 6 points differences, with 30% reduced GOE since Vancouver reduces the advantage of superior execution. This actually made the Adelina's GOEs scoring even more incredible consider it has been reduced by 30% since Vancouver. At Vancouver, that'd be worth 29.614
(22.78 *1.3) .C. What also struck me about Adelina's PCS is that it beat Kim's at Vancouver with a inferior program and performance and no precedence in PCS to justify these marks. How is it fair for someone like Kim/Mao/Kostner to take 7/8 years of world championships to earn their PCS, a young skater with no major podium finish (WC, GPF) can gain in a matter of few weeks?
D. The fundamental flaw of all the number crunching analysis is that it assumes people's marking are genuine fair across the board based absolute scale instead of abusing it like ordinal scale of relative scoring. That all judges are marking skaters with the same degree of good conscious and impartiality. That they have no agendas to prop their own skaters while repress their direct rivals? It ultimately shows why anonymity must go, if agenda can not be erased under the COP system.
A useful analysis is not possible without taking account of past judging history, the variance in scoring trends and who they marked.
For example here are the facts.
Despite Adelina and Yulia's young and short careers, why are the judges who gave their most important wins in their young career are on the same Sochi FS panel
Some of the judges that sticks out are are
1. Alla SHEKHOVTSEVA of Russia
- Other than her personal conflict of interest married to the director general of Russia Federation.
- She were at the panel of every single one of Adelina's competiton this season. She is practically her personal judge.
- Marked Adelina and Yulia's at European Championship which saw her PCS rise by 9 points in her FS even though she was 2nd in the FS behind Yulia.
Adelina coming 2nd at that FS received the 7th highest PCS of ALL TIME then. Is this unusual or merely accidental?
- Marking the Russian skaters, at home. She shares no same agenda as her husband I presume.
2. Helene CUCUPHAT of France
- Responsible for 3 of the most important win in Sotnikova's career.
- Marked Adelina at Junior worlds 2012 (Where Yulia was 1st, Adelina 3rd)
- Marked Adelina at European Championships which saw her PCS rose to the 7th highest of all time despite coming 2nd.
- Marking Adelina again at Sochi.
3. Zana KULIK of Estonia
- Responsible for Adelina's most critical win up to date, 2011 Junior world championships.
- Judged here at Sochi which makes a nice Eastern bloc judging if skating history has proved to rear its ugly head again here in Sochi.
4. Can a panel consist of an Italian judge and a Japanese judge and no Korean judge in the FS affect the scoring for Kim? We simply don't know under anonymous judging.
5. Yuri BALKOV of Ukraine.
- Should have been banned for life from his cheating ways at 1998 Winter Games in Nagano, Japan.
Balkov was taped by the Canadian judge Jean Senft explaining what order the competitors would finish in the ice-dancing competition before it took place. He was suspended for one year. He returned to judging and is certified by the international federation next year.
- Yet he judged ice dance panel of judges at Salt lake.
- He is here again at ladies event, does he even have the experience to judge the ladies? Why is he here? Why wasn't he vetoed by ISU's internal Quality control?
Consider all the above, what are the chances they all come together on the same panel on the most important event in Russia ladies figures skating since Salt Lake 2002?
I did wonder what happened to that incredible whistle blower Canadian judge Jean Senft, so I googled and found this old article of her from the TIMES
http://content.time.com/time/arts/article/0,8599,203274,00.html
This bit caught my eye and made me loled since I have been saying the EXACT same thing on Gkelly's judge selection thread. It would be wonderful if this can be adapted as part of the reform process.
TIME: What kind of action would you recommend the ISU take?
Senft: I think they should move to having judges who are part of an independent association. They should no longer be assigned to judge these events according to their national federation. I also think judges should be hired and fired on the basis of competence.
A reform is really necessary to protect the judges as well as the skaters and the sport. For example all the above judges mentioned could have been completely innocent despite what their profile indicate a clear conflict of interest to impartiality to the competition to treat ALL skaters equally, but there's just no way to prove it under anonymity.
They should just reveal all the marking of all the judges and simply let the mark speak for itself. If there are indeed deliberate biases or sabotage then these judges should be penalized, end of. Without removing this shield of secrecy, it encourages all sort of speculation that does the reputation of the sport, the skaters involved no good and it is simply unfair to them all.
Few rotten apples and incompetent governance of this sport should not ruin the great work of every hard working judge who dedicate their life uphold the integrity of the sport with honesty and compassion. Remove anonymity, improve transparency and accountability. Make the ISU judges a professional organization, well run and governed with strong ethical guidance in place. Without it, the sport is sham and will only ever be a tug of war among the old boys' club.
) Now, if money is a factor any more, it would be Japan that benefits.
I don't know who was the first to coin that verb.