- Joined
- Jun 10, 2016
If Hanyu gets silver next year, won't he have the same olympic - world medals as yuna kim?
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Lol, no, it's not controversial.
I so hope that this second bronze for Boyang will finally show the judges that he is no fluke. I hate how he basically became from wonder to loser the minute Nathan Chen arrived on the scene. Good for him!
I'm just seeing a few strange posts that make no sense to me.

I would like to declare that, like Sushi, the quadruple loop jump is now a Japanese heritage.
finally, kevin reynolds, oh look another canadian attempted the quad loop many in 2013.... without much success... but if i am not mistaken, he would have been the first to attempt it
Happy that Yuzuru Hanyu won a second world title, and I marvel at his SP repeatedly, though his FS didn't thrill me as much. He's too great a skater to have "only" one world title. A bit weird coincidence that in both of his world wins, he needed a PCS advantage over a fellow Japanese teammate who skated brilliantly enough to win. Given his amazing technical arsenal, it's just surprising that his wins came down to PCS. (I am not saying he doesn't deserve the higher PCS advantage. Just surprised that he wasn't able to win on technical merit alone either time.)
Yuzuru's TES was in FS was 6 points higher than Shoma's. He made up for the SP difference as much in TES as in PCS. But it must be said that an on-point Shoma is not easy to beat. Boy's got the tech with the best of them - at least in the eyes of the judges.Well, judges significantly lowballed his GOEs but I guess the skating gods were watching. I don't know, what does he have to do to get +3s? Tano everything? Can anyone else pull that kind of landing and flow for every jump at that difficulty right now?![]()
Yuzuru's TES was in FS was 6 points higher than Shoma's. He made up for the SP difference as much in TES as in PCS. But it must be said that an on-point Shoma is not easy to beat. Boy's got the tech with the best of them - at least in the eyes of the judges.


hwell: I am only writing my personal preference. 

I was making an observation based on facts. I'll repeat myself and say that I'm happy that Yuzuru won and that I believe he deserved higher PCS than Shoma.
But Shoma had the higher technical score overall, across both segments combined. Yuzuru had the higher TES in the FS but it didn't actually make up the bigger gap in TES in the SP. He needed PCS to make up the gap.
Shoma Uno's SP TES (59.16) + FS TES (120.03) = 179.19
Yuzuru Hanyu's SP TES (52.04) + FS TES (126.12) = 178.16
Yuzuru's overall combined TES is 1.03 points less than Shoma Uno's.
Shoma Uno's SP PCS (45.7) + FS PCS (94.42) = 140.12
Yuzuru Hanyu's SP PCS (47.35) + FS PCS (97.08) = 144.43
Yuzuru's overall combined PCS is 4.31 points more than Shoma Uno's, making up the TES differential.
Yuzuru did not beat Shoma based on the technical scores. He beat him with PCS. I myself don't have a problem with that, but I did observe that it was a weird coincidence that it has happened twice now, both times against his country's #2 skater.
Look, in any competition, ideally, the goal is to win with the highest TES and PCS. No one wants to skaters win with just TES or just PCS. It didn't happen this time but that does not mean that Yuzuru did not deserve to win. He did. What it means is that this worlds win isn't as strong as a win as say, his historic 2015 GPF win, where he won all segments unequivocally.
Yuzuru's overall combined TES is 1.03 points less than Shoma Uno's.
Cheers to the judges and the announcer who didn't leave out any syllables in the skater's names:clapper:I was making an observation based on facts. I'll repeat myself and say that I'm happy that Yuzuru won and that I believe he deserved higher PCS than Shoma.
But Shoma had the higher technical score overall, across both segments combined. Yuzuru had the higher TES in the FS but it didn't actually make up the bigger gap in TES in the SP. He needed PCS to make up the gap.
Shoma Uno's SP TES (59.16) + FS TES (120.03) = 179.19
Yuzuru Hanyu's SP TES (52.04) + FS TES (126.12) = 178.16
Yuzuru's overall combined TES is 1.03 points less than Shoma Uno's.
Shoma Uno's SP PCS (45.7) + FS PCS (94.42) = 140.12
Yuzuru Hanyu's SP PCS (47.35) + FS PCS (97.08) = 144.43
Yuzuru's overall combined PCS is 4.31 points more than Shoma Uno's, making up the TES differential.
Yuzuru did not beat Shoma based on the technical scores. He beat him with PCS. I myself don't have a problem with that, but I did observe that it was a weird coincidence that it has happened twice now, both times against his country's #2 skater.
Look, in any competition, ideally, the goal is to win with the highest TES and PCS. No one wants to skaters win with just TES or just PCS. It didn't happen this time but that does not mean that Yuzuru did not deserve to win. He did. What it means is that this worlds win isn't as strong as a win as say, his historic 2015 GPF win, where he won all segments unequivocally.
So... Shoma wuzrobbed?
I can't tell if you are sincere or sarcastic. Have you watched the competition? Specifically the pre-rotations and scratchy landings?
People seemed to forget that this experience of Nathan skating against the best of the best should have happened last year but he didn't get the chance. This will be a learning experience. He knows what he needs to work on and expecting him to medal against this field was expecting a lot. Next season he will know how to pace himself better he was in such a hurry to make a name for himself that i think he burnt himself out especially with all the focus he had on the quads. Hopefully now he works on his 3axel and maybe less on quads. If Adam who used to have a bad axel can make his better there is no reason Nathan can fix his too.