Woah, it looks like the 4CC guys took a look at Europeans and went, "Oh no, we don't want to be like that!"
D. Ten: I admit I'm not the big fan like everyone else seems to be, but he does have many great qualities: airy jumps, wonderful flow and speed, and a true donut spin (not the cruddy catchfoots done by the other men). The lyrics work when he actually hits the elements.

I hope he wins a World title sometime in his career, because he totally deserves it.
Uno: Surprised by how much the judges went with him! I thought he'd get the newbie PCS, but he received high scores--well-deserved, as his speed and SS are top notch despite his size. I guess beating Kozuka, Machida, and Mura at Nationals does have its benefits.
Yan: So happy for him!

Mistake on the quad, but it didn't look too bad in the air. On another day, he would've landed it. I also loved how much ice he covered, and how he gained speed effortlessly, on the step sequence. Music is still hard to swallow; hair, um, might need fixing... but he does sell the program to the best of his ability.
Mura: Almost the opposite of the D10 situation for me. So many things I dislike about him (music cuts, choreography, poor timing)... but for some reason I like him anyway.

Maybe it's his presence and
huge jumps--that quad looked like it was going to fly over the boards. Maybe he needs to tone it down a little, the big jumps do seem hard to control.
Farris: If Mura is about power, then Josh is about ease. His timing is impeccable, and with every bit of choreography, he gives the sense that everything is
easy to him. The judges really got behind him too! If he adds a quad to the SP, considering the corresponding PCS boost, he could be fighting for World medals. Only slight issue is that he does seem slower than the Japanese men, D10, and Han Yan.
Murakami: He skated really well. But 4S-2T is just the kiss of death when other people go clean. He won't have such a handicap in the free though, so I'm curious what he'll bring.
I'm happy for Misha and Jeremy, who both received well-deserved SBs. Jason, Nam, Adam...

Well, it's the price you pay. The quad should be high-risk, high-reward (even if I'd weigh the risk more heavily on falling, rather than rotation). Of the three, I actually think Adam performed his SP the best and didn't let his mistakes ruin the routine... but again, rotation killed him.