In the case of Korea's #5, I would guess. But Park did defeat Tarakanova in the free as well as the short.
In the case of Korea's #2? I don't know. Valieva & Khromykh will have already done their second event before she skates. I am waiting to see the other Russian girls. Wi's technical mark was good in both portions of competition in France, and of course sometimes winning a medal helps one bring in higher scores the next time around. She has a very tough field in Poland, with both Liu & Sinitsina there, so coming out of it with a result higher than bronze will be very tough. However, if Russia moves Sinitsina away from Liu in order to try to get Sinitsina a win, then Wi's odds of making the final go up.
And then there is Haein. Haein is scheduled for Croatia. With who? Kanysheva who is now a question mark. And Tarakanova, who is also something of a question mark & just lost to Park. So, really, we don't know what to expect with the Russian lineup there. As I said earlier, if Kanysheva is not in the lineup, Haein's odds appear to go up. Maybe not if Sinitsina gets moved there, but she, alone, cannot keep both Korea's #2 and #1 out of the final. Perhaps neither. (Haein's difficulty is probably on par with the other Korean ladies, but her PCS is higher so her ceiling is higher. Her competitive experience and recognizeability with the judges are also higher. And, of course, the pressure may be higher. This will be a new experience for her coming into the JGP as the leader among the Korean ladies. She's done pretty well under pressure though. Won the Korean JGP qualifier with two very nice skates and won the bronze at Korean Senior Nationals last year).
And if Kanysheva does skate two events late on the JGP, well, that makes for deeper fields & makes things interesting. As far as the new Russian JGP junior ladies are concerned, I look forward to seeing them skate.
The junior ladies field feels very unpredictable this year.