Lu/Mitrofanov look more grown up. She has also grown quite tall, and fortunately for them, so has he. Skating-wise they look about the same as previous years. Their jumps are far superior to their other elements. Not everyone will like their Toxic+Survivor SP, but it's a different style for them. They started out the season extremely rough, but look better now.
Good for Balasz Nagy for taking advantage of his Hungarian citizenship. I didn't know the US would release him that quickly, but he has sat out of international competition for a year.
The Jr pair that won the US Qualifying Series has a huge age difference ( a grown man who will turn 20 by the end of the season paired with a young child), which made it easier for them to do things like the twist and the lifts than the other Jr pairs who are more similar in age and further along the puberty road. I don't know how long they will last especially since the girl is also doing well in singles and they can't compete internationally this year, but for now I enjoy them. It's become rare to pair adults with tweens, for good reasons, but it's safe from a sports perspective, you don't fear the man dropping the girl.
Update: After seeing how small the total Championship Series numbers (Henderson + Norwood) have been for Juvenile/Intermediate/Novice pairs, I still think that it is a chicken-or-egg situation that the numbers who will advance to National Development Camp also are small.
The number of spots for Development Camp was published in July, before they would have known exactly how many Juvenile thru Novice pairs exist in September. But they must have had an idea that the number of pairs would be low.
Eliminating Nationals for Juvenile-Novice had to have eliminated many pairs at those levels. This isn't an entirely bad thing as next to none of those pairs ever became Senior pairs (because of different skill levels, puberty, height/size difference issues, geography, partners wanting different things, big age differences leading to partners being at different places in life, skaters choosing another discipline, etc).
Juvenile/Intermediate pair skating is like a different universe -- they do lifts at shoulder height, modified death spirals, no twist, the throws barely leave the ice, etc. Doing well at these levels doesn't mean you'll be good at pairs. Skaters used to partner up for what was essentially an easy trip to US Nationals. Now that that path to Nationals has been eliminated, there's less incentive to bother with pairs. It's a lot easier to skate by yourself than deal with another person. It can't be as fun to skate with your brother if you don't get to go to Nationals lol. Now you have to do it for love, not because there's a reward at the end.
Also, pair skating has gotten harder and it's shedding its label of the "easier discipline" in the US. You can't automatically excel just because you can do a 3T or 2A. It involves a different skill set that some skaters will be good at and many won't be, regardless of if they can land a jump by themselves. And in pairs, you're only as good as the partner you skate with. And the girls will always drastically outnumber the boys. The stars really have to align to do well in pairs (a reason why there are so few pairs worldwide compared to other disciplines), and skaters must be realizing that more now. It's easier to focus on yourself.
I look at the recent crop of pairs, and many of them came up the Juvenile-Novice pairs ranks (with different partners). So it's interesting that Juvenile-Novice are becoming more extinct.