Ignatov first got only the host spot. Then he won a CS event, which, according to the rules, enabled him to be a replacement for NHK.
Of course Anastasia and others may be in a similar situation but winning an early CS event may be a tall order because of the presence of somebody like one of the 3A/Rika/Liza/Zhenya.
Anastasia Guliakova may be assigned to some Challengers, but I'm not so sure that for example Ksenia Tsibinova will. Coach Davydov wanted her to get one this season (which means they were willing to pay for it), but she got two events that didn't count for the SB while CS spots went unused.
Not to mention that Anastasia Gubanova – 9th at nationals and with a top 24 SB score – didn't get any Challenger either.
Aren't there ISU challenger events in the second half of the season? At the early events next season they could compete for silver and win something else.
Dragon Trophy? Egna Trophy? Seibt Memorial?
Cup of Nice also top skaters tend to snub.
Also i'm not ruling out Gubanova yet, she should absolutely be in the mix still for an assignment, Cup Final results may give some answers on that regard. (even though it doesn't depend on that entirely)
And it will perhaps appease Sankt Peterburg and #TeamMishin somewhat. From what I've gathered from the e-media, some feel Samodurova was royally screwed over in judging, praise the heroics of Tuktamysheva, etc, but sort of denied the truth. In the women, in general SPb with its older and more experienced athletes did poorly compared to Moscow with all their newcomers, while the SPb men and pairs stood steadfast. Must browse some SPb e-media, where there will perhaps be a little less PC view of the events given, compared to the mainstream media and general press agencies.
I watched pretty much all the Russian Cup, memorial competitions in SPB this season.
There were maybe some less consistent skate here and there, but it has to be said you see more mature skaters, vs juniors from Moscow.
Like i said in my recap post, Davydov skaters, while extremely solid with the jumps, they were all in "focus mode" just doing the job, and not trying to sell the program. Still a bit junior level. I miss Tarusina's personality.
Mishin skaters don't have the best skating skills, but they all have some performance quality at least.
Samodurova is a special case: i think last season she got higher scores only because it was her first year, and she was skating clean every time. The technique has always been the same, not particularly amazing, but this season scores were less favourable cause the early season performances weren't as consistent, so judges were less inclined to reward. Nationals made no difference.
If she wants to get back, she needs that consistency back from the very beginning of the season, a better preparation and perhaps the triple axel.
But between the two, Guliakova has always been a stronger skater: jumps and spins are better.