- Joined
- Jan 17, 2014
Very important.
So I am proposing whoever wants to watch skaters from Bahamas to travel over there on their own expense. It's really nice over there. It's worth the trip.
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Very important.
How important is it to figure skating to watch skaters from Solomon Islands and Bahamas?
Because if a sport is not actively looking to grow its participant base, it faces great risk in losing the athletes with the most potential to other 'trendier' sports that come along. The UCI is now pushing hard into the newly middle class parts of Africa to try to build cycling there and is starting to see results from those development efforts.
How much do they care about ski jumping in Bahamas or Indonesia? Or cross country skiing? Cross country skiing is no more than maybe four countries, with one (Norway) dominating much more than 3A dominates ladies skating. How much do they care?
If you look at practically all sports, all of them, maybe except no more than ten, they are seriously practiced and dominated by a tiny handful, with the rest barely doing any insignificant background.
We've had this discussion before. And I say it again. They should increase the number to at least 4 per country. In alpine skiing and in cross-country skiing, there are 4 + the reigning champion so there could be a max of 5.
I think that's reasonable in figure skating too. When you think about it, there is not many countries that will come up to that quota anyways. For Russia, maybe in Ladies and Pairs but not in Men and Ice Dance. And over time this will change between countries.
There is something wrong with the system when countries like Kazachstan gets three spots for Worlds in Ladies this year. When they probably have none to send.
Qualification for Worlds should be the best from the GPs and Challenger events in the autumn season. And throw in the champion from last year as well.
How important is it to figure skating to watch skaters from Solomon Islands and Bahamas?
I would not separate GP and worlds, but why not to transform GP into qualification for the worlds. Who qualifies he qualifies, without the limit of entries per country.
To be honest, figure skating is completely dominated by several countries even now, which is not rare in many other sports as well. My propose could work with the details like this to provide some "diversity". But look at Europeans, where for many skaters 3S+2T was nearly impossible combo to do it clean, while there are numerous skaters who are much better and can't go because of the max. 3 entries quota. More diversity was possible just because some 5 or 6 russian skaters represented another flag, of which most still train in Russia, Ekaterina Kurakova is an exception. Where is the sense in the system, where countries don't train their own skaters on the necessary level, just buy some "mercenaries" from elsewhere do defend their national pride.
That's an interesting question and the key to the whole discussion. I think we could also ask, "how important is it to watch skaters from Russia, orfrom Japan, orfrom the USA, or from Mars?"
As unfair as it might be that more Russian girls can’t compete it is as unfair that other skaters don’t have the same funding, quality and availability of ice/coaching and bonus points from the judges due to their federation so until skating is equal in these aspects I don’t think the country quota is unfair.
We've had this discussion before. And I say it again. They should increase the number to at least 4 per country. In alpine skiing and in cross-country skiing, there are 4 + the reigning champion so there could be a max of 5.
I think that's reasonable in figure skating too. When you think about it, there is not many countries that will come up to that quota anyways. For Russia, maybe in Ladies and Pairs but not in Men and Ice Dance. And over time this will change between countries.
There is something wrong with the system when countries like Kazachstan gets three spots for Worlds in Ladies this year. When they probably have none to send.
Qualification for Worlds should be the best from the GPs and Challenger events in the autumn season. And throw in the champion from last year as well.
Judges are apparently complaining about events being too long as it is, I don't think they're going to want to add extra spots or opportunities to earn more spots.
Get new judges and get rid of the dinosaur judges.
We've had this discussion before. And I say it again. They should increase the number to at least 4 per country. In alpine skiing and in cross-country skiing, there are 4 + the reigning champion so there could be a max of 5.
I think that's reasonable in figure skating too. When you think about it, there is not many countries that will come up to that quota anyways. For Russia, maybe in Ladies and Pairs but not in Men and Ice Dance. And over time this will change between countries.
There is something wrong with the system when countries like Kazachstan gets three spots for Worlds in Ladies this year. When they probably have none to send.
Qualification for Worlds should be the best from the GPs and Challenger events in the autumn season. And throw in the champion from last year as well.
Very important. Who knew that we would have such charming and wonderful skaters from Mexicowhat if they could grow the sport in that large and important country:scratch3:
But of course that has little to do with the Russian Ladies. Folks can complain about the make up of Worlds until the end of time and it won’t change. So best to cheer for the lady of your choice in whatever competition they compete in!
We've had this discussion before. And I say it again. They should increase the number to at least 4 per country. In alpine skiing and in cross-country skiing, there are 4 + the reigning champion so there could be a max of 5.
I think that's reasonable in figure skating too. When you think about it, there is not many countries that will come up to that quota anyways. For Russia, maybe in Ladies and Pairs but not in Men and Ice Dance. And over time this will change between countries.
Did you watch the same Europeans I did—it was pretty much necessary to have a triple triple to qualify for the free skate only 3 out of the twenty four qualifying didn’t. Moreover if you actually watched the competition you might have seen how all of these skaters fought so hard regardless of their country and deserve to be there. Similarly Dasa’s fight to get to worlds after the isu increased the tech minimums after she thought she’d achieved them you might find her to be as inspirational as the Russian skaters who are also fighting to go to worlds. For me at least the best skates of Euroes surprising weren’t by any of 3A or the ‘Russian mercenaries’ but Eva Lotta Kiibus’s free and both of Emmi Peltonen’s programs because of everything that they brought to the ice. As unfair as it might be that more Russian girls can’t compete it is as unfair that other skaters don’t have the same funding, quality and availability of ice/coaching and bonus points from the judges due to their federation so until skating is equal in these aspects I don’t think the country quota is unfair.