Can Kostner hold off Russian babies? | Page 6 | Golden Skate

Can Kostner hold off Russian babies?

minze

Medalist
Joined
Dec 22, 2012
For the last two seasons, Kostner's PCS have been 5-6 points higher than Mao's in the LP alone.
For the current season best, Kostner's PCS is 4 points higher than Mao's in the LP alone.

I say if Kostner is anywhere near clean, she will have at least a triple jump advantage over Mao's.
Kim and Kostner's PCS will have much smaller gap than these two and Mao's.

I predicted Mao would have to out jump these two to place above them.

Last two seasons mao had bad seasons. She was not in form. but if you compare her PCS with kostner this season they are at the same level. So I dont who know is going to win but if Mao loses it wont be because of PCS
 
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vera01

Final Flight
Joined
Jan 6, 2013
Only reason I'd say that Yuna won't have higher PCS than Mao or Carolina:She has no federation support at all! However, she seems to be capable of getting high TES and PCS:) Younger skaters are only capable of getting high TES, whereas older skaters get high PCS, but not TES.
 

venlac

On the Ice
Joined
Dec 22, 2012
Only reason I'd say that Yuna won't have higher PCS than Mao or Carolina:She has no federation support at all! However, she seems to be capable of getting high TES and PCS:) Younger skaters are only capable of getting high TES, whereas older skaters get high PCS, but not TES.

Kim never had won a competition by pcs rank > tes rank
But now she has the Olympic champion title,
and i think she can win by pcs score.. With the Olympic champion bonus.
 

vera01

Final Flight
Joined
Jan 6, 2013
Kim never had won a competition by pcs rank > tes rank
But now she has the Olympic champion title,
and i think she can win by pcs score.. With the Olympic champion bonus.

Hmm, I've never thought about Olympic champion bonus:)

I think she'll manage to get around(for free skating) 70 for her PCS score and also around 70~75 for her TES as long as she skates clean. If Carolina could earn 70 for PCS, I think Yuna can, too.
 

lavender

Record Breaker
Joined
Jul 26, 2003
Not all get that Olympic title bonus but I can see Yu na getting that bonus because she was actually the top skater (along with Mao) at the time.
 

gmyers

Record Breaker
Joined
Mar 6, 2010
Last two seasons mao had bad seasons. She was not in form. but if you compare her PCS with kostner this season they are at the same level. So I dont who know is going to win but if Mao loses it wont be because of PCS

this season has been mao's worst.
 

gmyers

Record Breaker
Joined
Mar 6, 2010
I like the two time world champion and olympic silver medalist and how she skated and won those events. I don't know who is skating this season under Mao's name. It is not the Mao I was a HUGE fan of.
 

Bartek

On the Ice
Joined
Dec 29, 2009
I'm not sure what you meant? Kwan landed 3L/3T-3T(slightly UR)/3Z-2T/3S/3F/2A/3Z... in one of her best programs. Slutskaya had excellent technical content but lost 7-2 to Michelle because she two-footed her under-rotated 3Z-3L, and under-rotated her 3S-3L, but still a very ambitious program. With Asada/Kostner the opposite is happening... a skater with more triples will end up losing or placing only 1 or 2 points ahead in the FS in spite of Asada/Kostner making errors, thanks to PCS disadvantage. At least when Kwan has done poorly (for her) and lands only 4 or 5 triples, she would actually lose to skaters who complete 6 or 7.

Kwan's lutzez were flutzed (as always) so that's already two less triples. Her second 3T would definitely get <, it wasn't "slightly" underrotated. Her triple flip was clearly half a turn short and would very likely get downgraded with << sign. That's only 4 clean triples. What's more, both triple flutzes were very borderline and they could get < as well. Michelle had that ability to cheat her jumps in such a way that it was imperceptible without slowmotion. But, nevermind - Sarah Hughes cheated so badly that you see it with a naked eye and yet the judges couldn't care less about it...
 

Bartek

On the Ice
Joined
Dec 29, 2009
this season has been mao's worst.

This season she has the best free skate of her career and her jumping technique has been improving slowly but surely (flip, salchow, toeloop). Loop and axel have always been first-rate. That's definitely something good.

Lutz is still problematic but she might never get rid of her flutzing habit. In most cases it's impossible as you are so used to this certain movement that is changing the edge. Coach Sato once said that the process of revamping Mao's technique will be extremely hard and long and no sooner will it be completed than just before Sochi.
 

CanadianSkaterGuy

Record Breaker
Joined
Jan 25, 2013
Kwan's lutzez were flutzed (as always) so that's already two less triples. Her second 3T would definitely get <, it wasn't "slightly" underrotated. Her triple flip was clearly half a turn short and would very likely get downgraded with << sign. That's only 4 clean triples. What's more, both triple flutzes were very borderline and they could get < as well. Michelle had that ability to cheat her jumps in such a way that it was imperceptible without slowmotion. But, nevermind - Sarah Hughes cheated so badly that you see it with a naked eye and yet the judges couldn't care less about it...

Hmm, I think Michelle's jumps while sometimes UR'ed or flutzed (which, mind you, wasn't as much of a big deal until the IJS, so arguably she played to her strengths if she wasn't getting deducted), she had a quality of finishing them that didn't disrupt her performance. Slutskaya's errors, as Peggy said, looked sloppy, which detracts from the performance.

Don't get on Michelle's case if you don't also get on the case of the number of World Champions before her who flutzed and UR'ed but still got away with it. At 2001 Worlds LP, arguably Irina lipped her flip, and she certainly flutzed on her lutz.

And yes I said Michelle's 3-3 was "slightly underrotated" as in it would have got the < call, as you yourself said she would. It wasn't under-rotated so much as a downgrade. Her flip would have gotten a < too, but not a <<. Also, I don't see how her lutzes could have gotten <? Both looked within 1/4 turn when her skate hit the ice. The judges gave her 5.7 and 5.8 for that. I think the UR on the flip and toe loop would account for that. Slutskaya on the other hand also got 5.7/5.8/5.9 when she was < on her salchow-loop, and << with a step out on her lutz-loop. Similar errors as Kwan. Really she was given 5.9 for attempting the 3-3's, not actually landing them. But then Kwan won on artistry (which made sense). So I think the competition was correctly called. It's remarkable that Slutskaya attempted two 3-3 but attempts only get you so much credit.

As for Hughes, even though her 3-3 were UR, the rest of her program was flawless when Kwan and Slutskaya both had significant errors. Hughes' errors didn't affect the "look" of the program either as they were subtle UR and not glaring falls or step outs. It was a very good thing for figure skating -- especially with the 2002 scandal -- that Sarah Hughes won the gold medal in 2002. Many wanted Kwan to win, but when both she and Slutskaya erred and Slutskaya performed better than Kwan, the judges had no choice but to put Sarah first. People knock Sarah for underrotating her 3-3, but at least she didn't play it safe and still make obvious errors as Kwan/Slutskaya did. If she had done double loops instead of triple loops, she still would have had a cleaner program.
 
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gmyers

Record Breaker
Joined
Mar 6, 2010
This season she has the best free skate of her career and her jumping technique has been improving slowly but surely (flip, salchow, toeloop). Loop and axel have always been first-rate. That's definitely something good.

Lutz is still problematic but she might never get rid of her flutzing habit. In most cases it's impossible as you are so used to this certain movement that is changing the edge. Coach Sato once said that the process of revamping Mao's technique will be extremely hard and long and no sooner will it be completed than just before Sochi.

Rotated triple flips have been very rare and same thing with triple toe. Since the Japan Open her jumping has gotten worse. To say she is only really having problems with a triple lutz is not what I am seeing in the protocols. Plus you have the never attempted 3A and likely fact that she wont do it ever again and never attempt a 3/3 it is like who is this skater that I was a fan of? You can't just radically change everything about your jumping level and expect everyone will continue to be a fan. Many people act like she is the same skater but she definitely is not in a lot of ways. Mao has turned into Carolina Kostner or something. She's not Mao.
 

CanadianSkaterGuy

Record Breaker
Joined
Jan 25, 2013
I think if you look at her jumping record, you will see that Mao is having one of the worst seasons, technically. But due to a PCS boost, it's not costing her severely. Her loop has been her solid jump this season, and her flip has been less successful than it has been successful -- again, she has yet to land two clean 3F in her FS.

I was always a fan of Mao because she pushed the technical envelope which made her exciting to watch. I forgave her lack of refinement because I was excited to see a hardcore athlete, and not somebody who just does "enough". Now she has nothing technically notable, although the rest of her skating has improved. I know everyone here loves an all-round skater, but I'd rather a skater who's 55-45 (technical-artistic) than a skater who is 30-70. I much prefer the Mao who could reel off 3-3's and 3A's in her sleep. It's her claim to fame, and now she's just an average skater with better artistic qualities. That being said, I do give her credit for re-working her lutz technique and adding transitions, but I still dislike her flip inside-outside-inside edge entry.
 

ImaginaryPogue

Record Breaker
Joined
Jun 3, 2009
I like the two time world champion and olympic silver medalist and how she skated and won those events. I don't know who is skating this season under Mao's name. It is not the Mao I was a HUGE fan of.

Actually, I feel like I need to defend gmyers on this one. He's always been a proponent of jumps and skaters attempting the most difficult set of jumps plausible I expect if Kostner/Asada/whomever get their jumps in order, he'd be quite happy. And I think if the skaters who have their jumps right now lose them/lower their difficulty, he'd be upset if they still scored well. It's not "deranged Mao hate" by any means.
 

Bartek

On the Ice
Joined
Dec 29, 2009
Hmm, I think Michelle's jumps while sometimes UR'ed or flutzed (which, mind you, wasn't as much of a big deal until the IJS, so arguably she played to her strengths if she wasn't getting deducted), she had a quality of finishing them that didn't disrupt her performance. Slutskaya's errors, as Peggy said, looked sloppy, which detracts from the performance.

Don't get on Michelle's case if you don't also get on the case of the number of World Champions before her who flutzed and UR'ed but still got away with it. At 2001 Worlds LP, arguably Irina lipped her flip, and she certainly flutzed on her lutz.

And yes I said Michelle's 3-3 was "slightly underrotated" as in it would have got the < call, as you yourself said she would. It wasn't under-rotated so much as a downgrade. Her flip would have gotten a < too, but not a <<. Also, I don't see how her lutzes could have gotten <? Both looked within 1/4 turn when her skate hit the ice. The judges gave her 5.7 and 5.8 for that. I think the UR on the flip and toe loop would account for that. Slutskaya on the other hand also got 5.7/5.8/5.9 when she was < on her salchow-loop, and << with a step out on her lutz-loop. Similar errors as Kwan. Really she was given 5.9 for attempting the 3-3's, not actually landing them. But then Kwan won on artistry (which made sense). So I think the competition was correctly called. It's remarkable that Slutskaya attempted two 3-3 but attempts only get you so much credit.

As for Hughes, even though her 3-3 were UR, the rest of her program was flawless when Kwan and Slutskaya both had significant errors. Hughes' errors didn't affect the "look" of the program either as they were subtle UR and not glaring falls or step outs. It was a very good thing for figure skating -- especially with the 2002 scandal -- that Sarah Hughes won the gold medal in 2002. Many wanted Kwan to win, but when both she and Slutskaya erred and Slutskaya performed better than Kwan, the judges had no choice but to put Sarah first. People knock Sarah for underrotating her 3-3, but at least she didn't play it safe and still make obvious errors as Kwan/Slutskaya did. If she had done double loops instead of triple loops, she still would have had a cleaner program.

You've missed the whole point of me bringing up Michelle's flutzes and underrotations completely. I do not argue over "who should've won if the competition had been held under CoP". The winner would've been probably Slutskaya, anyway, but it is irrelevant here.

I have all my right to get on Michelle's case if I want even if I don't get on the case of the number of World Champions before who flutzez/lipped or UR'ed. Michelle is not a God, I CAN talk about her flaws as much as I want. Having said that, I do acknowledge the other champion's flutzing and cheating. So what? Hughes and Lipinski flutzed, Hughes and Chen underrotated, the list continues now and so what.

I've brought up Michelle's case because her SOTBS is considered to be one of the best gold medal performances of the last decade in spite of all the technical flaws it has. On the other hand, Mao's brilliant free skate from GPF has been terribly understated and dispraised in this thread because she <'ed two of her jumps, had a flutz and doubled one jump. Applying the logic of some of the posters, this skate has only 3 clean triples which makes the whole performance so atrocious that you can't even manage to watch it till the end. Ok, now, let's apply the same logic to the other performances. It doesn't have to really be Michelle. Any of the champions who underrotated or flutzed would do the job. I've picked Michelle because she is loved (or even worshipped) by so many and therefore her underrotations and flutzes are always overlooked and not talked about.

Both flutzes in Michelle's program were borderline. You need to stop the video the moment her blade has full contact with the ice. I know it's difficult to catch the moment but once you've managed to it you'll be able to see that they were landed on this 1/4 borderline or slightly exceeding it so it would all depend on the celler. Anyway, this is not critical for my point at all because of the fact that they were flutzed which excludes them from the overall amount of "CLEAN" triples. That is at least according to the method you use when you evaluate Mao's program. Even if the flip did not deserve << and I believe it did it was still underrotated and cannot be counted as a "clean" triple wither. The same with the second toeloop. After all is said and done we are left with only 3 clean triples in Michelle's glorious SOTBS which I personally find wonderful performance-wise. Nonetheless, it had only 3 clean triples - the same amount Mao had in her GPF skate. I say it to defend Mao from all those people who claim that she won her GPF title with only 3 triple, not to diminish Michelle's win over Slutskaya or to prove that Slutskaya should've won. My answer is: Michelle Kwan won her 2001 World title with only 3 clean triples too. The small difference is that Mao performed her program with plenty of transitions while Michelle had virtually none, had much more difficult and energy-absorbing spins and way more difficult and energy-absorbing footwork.

Putting the whole thing aside, three judges did give Kwan 5,7's for technical merit that night and the rest gave her 5,8's but certainly not to punish her flutzes and underrotations. They did so in order to leave place for Slutskaya which was a normal thing under 6.0. Irina certainly would get < on her first triple loop and << on her second one however she did not lip. Technically, she did not truly flutz either because flutzing occurs when you change the edge from outside to inside right before the take-off. Irina always took off her lutzes on a flat, neither outside nor inside edge. Michelle took off hers more on the inside edge than flat. Thus, Michelle would get "e" while Irina "!" should we use the rules that were in force until 2009/2010 season.
 
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miki88

Medalist
Joined
Dec 28, 2009
I was always a fan of Mao because she pushed the technical envelope which made her exciting to watch. I forgave her lack of refinement because I was excited to see a hardcore athlete, and not somebody who just does "enough". Now she has nothing technically notable, although the rest of her skating has improved. I know everyone here loves an all-round skater, but I'd rather a skater who's 55-45 (technical-artistic) than a skater who is 30-70. I much prefer the Mao who could reel off 3-3's and 3A's in her sleep. It's her claim to fame, and now she's just an average skater with better artistic qualities. That being said, I do give her credit for re-working her lutz technique and adding transitions, but I still dislike her flip inside-outside-inside edge entry.

I disagree. Although the 3A was her trademark, Mao has always been an all-around skater. She has beautiful lines and flexibility that are evident in her spins and spirals. And she is also one of the few skaters nowadays who seem to pay attention to hitting beautiful positions in her programs. I think what made her special was not only because she was reeling off those difficult jumps in her prime, but also because she didn't seem like the type of skater (powerful and fast skaters like Ito and Harding) who would be able to pull them off. It was that contrast between her soft, almost ethereal style and her ability to do a powerful jump like the 3A that caught people's attention.
 

prettykeys

Medalist
Joined
Oct 19, 2009
Bartek, I agree with your post #115 completely, but I find myself agreeing with CanadianSkaterGuy's main argument: that champions should have SOME minimum/basement level of completed jumps to be eligible or respectable in a win. His viewpoint has been miscontrued in various discussions as "other skills in figure skating are not important", when in fact he is simply stressing that without enough jumps, it's rather lame when someone beats, for example, younger and less polished skaters who ARE reeling off say, 6-7 jumps in their LP's.

Beautiful positions, artistic refinement, divine skating skills, etc. are all very important aspects of figure skating, but without the "meat" of a competitive program (i.e. jumps), I can't feel satisfied when someone wins gold over others who brought more of the sporting aspect in the SPORT of figure skating. I say this without picking out specifics in Michelle Kwan or Mao Asada or Carolina Kostner or whoever. And I don't nitpick so badly in whether it is "clean"; flutzes, lips, <'s, if they are landed I will preferably count them in the total tally (albeit less valued, of course.)

The opposite argument, that "oh yes I am totally a fan of a 'COMPLETE skater' and someone who does 3 triples is an acceptable winner for me if they have great footwork, great engagement, great choreography, great positions, etc." is the one I completely disagree with. Keep those to Exhibitions, please.

In the modern age, if you don't do at least 5 triples (in my view, that includes <'s, and edge calls if they are still landed relatively cleanly and non-disruptively) in a FS + 2 in the SP, then pass the gold to someone else who has, even if they are weaker in other areas.
 
Joined
Aug 16, 2009
Well, Bartek, you know that I will always revere Kwan, especially in Black Swan, no matter how anyone explains it, but I also root for Mao. Can you tell me what you feel about her prognosis for the future, considering the stage she is at right now, a year before Sochi? I'd love for her to be a contender for gold, though I've learned to live with disappointment, and I won't love her skating any less if it doesn't win the ultimate prize. (Remember Janet Lynn!) But I'd like to see her succeed with her bold and grueling plan to rebuild her jumps. I'd like for both Mao and Mr. Sato to have that feeling of satisfaction. And I'd like for us fans to have it also.

So I repeat my question. What is your take, Bartek, on Mao's progress?
 

Cherryy

On the Ice
Joined
Aug 27, 2012
I think Mao may still surprise us, just like she did in the past olympic season. In 2009 worlds was her first international competition where she did not place on podium. Talking about her freeskates in olympic season, at Trophee Bombard she landed 4 clean triples, at Rostelecom Cup only 2 clean triples. 2009-10 was her first season when she did not qualify for Grand Prix Final. At her nationals she landed 5 clean triples, at 4cc 6 clean triples. Now that was a huge progress from her 2009 worlds ap to 4cc and then winning a silver medal. I'm not saying I'm satisfied with her progress after Olympics because there is almost none but I just wanted to point out Mao can do wonders in short time and surprise everyone.
 

Li'Kitsu

Record Breaker
Joined
Dec 29, 2011
ImaginaryPogue said:
Actually, I feel like I need to defend gmyers on this one. He's always been a proponent of jumps and skaters attempting the most difficult set of jumps plausible I expect if Kostner/Asada/whomever get their jumps in order, he'd be quite happy. And I think if the skaters who have their jumps right now lose them/lower their difficulty, he'd be upset if they still scored well. It's not "deranged Mao hate" by any means.

But using every opportunity you get to post in every single thread how a skater is completly "atrocious" is deranged hate (and after NHK/GPF in really every therad I read was a negative comment from gmyers about Mao).
Maybe it's not mainly Mao-hate, but whatever kind of hate, it's useless, exaggerated and insulting.

If a skater changes, nobody says you need to be a fan - but that doesn't mean you have to become insutling towards a skater. Just leave them alone and that's it. All of those skaters are working hard, one can dislike them all they want to, but you need to keep a certain amount of respect.
I'd rather say Minze2001 has said the exact right thing.


Oh, and Bartek, thanks a lot for all your lovely comments and analysis about Mao. I always enjoy reading them very much :)
 
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