- Joined
- Nov 19, 2017
No, that would be a bad idea, IMO. PCS are a joke, but even now we see programs with just jumps and crossovers in between winning titles. What would happen if PCS were made insignificant? I personally want to see programs with actual choreography, transitions etc.
I disagree. Let's take a women field for example. Most skaters there have very similar set of jumps, very close TES scores - and each point is really matters. Sometimes especially after SP first 10 or so skaters are in 65-70 range and differs from each other just by mere couple of points. What one can do to outscore others with similar TES scores and elements? Right - work on artistry. To win - you have to be consistent with jumps AND be artistic. What's bad with it?I disagree. The judges may have misused the component scores but that does not mean they have no value, decreasing their value will definitely make it a jumping competition. When PC is used as it should you get huge improvement in performance like what happened with Boyang. He was given correct feedback by the judges through his low PCs and he is now a much better skater thanks to that.
PC should always matter even if only to few skaters because those are the special ones who want to give a complete performance and improve all skills equally and should be rewarded for it. If PCs were devalued those skaters will be pushed into improving jumps only because they want to be competitive.
In men while I agree that there is much more difference between TES due to big dispersion between diffent skaters having many quads, few quads or only triples - what's wrong with it? Even now, with huge PCS oversoring to so called "artistic" skaters - they can't be competitive anyway - only technicians are really can be expected to be on podium. Nathan, Shoma, Boyang, Yuzuru, Fernandez are all really technical skaters despite some of them having artistic qualities as well. Anyway even those of them who aren't excel in artistry - are getting similar pcs due to equalization with high TES. So, in the end I think men skating gotta be about TES anyway - this is fundamental difference between men and women skating and I don't see this as something bad, really. On the contrary it seems quite natural.
Making it irrelevant will only push programs in a bad direction and the manipulation will just move to GOE, which will be more significant than ever.
Ok, DECREASE GOE's values then. To -1/+1 range.Also, why is the solution to the judges misusing PC is to punish the skaters who worked hard on it while the judges can just move on to misuse GOE or whatever other tools offered to them by the ISU ?
1) 0.5 factor to PCS
2) -3 or -5 deduction on each fall
3) -1 GOE to stepouts, scratchy landings, +0 to most elements, +1 to difficult and great execution
4) BV and UR penalties stays same as they were before
...
Profit. Fair sport. Problems solved. Skaters winning by their current skate - not by reputation, nationality or judges bias. PCS still matters, but main focus is on stable, technical and clean skate. New skaters/dark horses has equivalent chances to win. What's wrong with it?
Well, considering recent quads revolution made by Trusova in women skating - it's not really the case now. If you are gonna get rid of extra jump and half minute in men skating - why wouldn't do all steps to equalize them fully? I think - like women receiving usually lower TES scores - men gotta receive lower pcs scores as well.. Tbh, I never considered most usual splatfests in men skating as something worthy pcs higher than 60+ anyway )(Also considering the fact that men and women reach very different numbers in TES, having the coefficient the same for both disciplines would make it more significant for ladies. Thought who knows how TES will look like after the rule change)

