there is no reason why an Adam rippon or joshua farris or max aaron should be losing to a Nam Nguyen or a Sergei voronov or even misha ge (who I love).....
Of course there is a reason. It's a high risk sport based on performance, execution, and technical difficulty. Nam and Sergei have rotations up the ying yang. Misha is a gorgeous performer. But this is the men's event. The results are highly varied because the risk is incredible. And the pressure takes its toll. Ross defeated Shoma this season as well. As did Timothy Dolensky of all people. And Josh defeated Murakami last season. In this discipline most guys are finishing somewhere between 4th and 29th. And the distance isn't
nearly as far away as many people think. Peter Liebers went from 5th in the SP at the 2014 Olympics to 29th in the SP at Worlds in 2015. Misha Ge went from 27th in the World to 6th. In one year! And he certainly isn't the most cataclysmic skater I can think of. Takahiko Kozuka from 19th in the SP to 9th in the LP at last year's Worlds. Mura from 23rd to 12th (this is a guy who won SC and defeated Fernandez and Hanyu last season). Voronov from 4th to 17th. Kovtun 16th to 6th. Han Yan from 5th to 13th. The Japanese
team did not qualify three members last season. They had 4 winners on the Grand Prix! (And don't tell me it was all because Machida retired. If he'd had a great skate at the GPF or Nationals, he might have felt like seeing where that gorgeous LP could take him).
The top U.S. men have been very close internationally. If anything, they seem to be getting closer. And the young kids have moved up this season with lots of difficulty. This happens every generation,
especially during the second year of a quadrennium. The younger guys see what the top athletes are doing. They start training those skills at a younger age. And then they move up--with a lot to prove and absolutely nothing to lose--and we get to watch. We get to see who steps up. Who gets out. Who crumbles when the pressure is on. Who turns out to be just as much headcase material as the previous generation. Which experienced guys have the performance skills and competitive goods to make the young ones look
young. And who--wonder of wonders--defies expectations. Max did it at Skate America. Jason did it at Worlds. Josh did it at Four Continents. Nathan has won everything he has competed in this season. I LOVE watching the U.S. guys. They are very competitive with each other.
Will any of them step up and crack the top six this season at Worlds? It will take a miracle. And, yes, I think a miracle is possible.