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Yeah, I get that, but I thought the reigning Canadian Junior National Champion would by this point have enough reputation in Canada to pull of an Adam Siao Him Fa and get on the podium. He also should not have been in the first warmup group.i think Grayson often gets the favour of Canadian judges.. I have no idea why.
For the low PCS of Bondar, it may have had to do with the relatively earlier starting order ? I mean, it's not supposed to happen that way, but it does.
I would also add that if you look at the scores from Cranberry Cup that happened 1.5 weeks AFTER NextGen, you'll see that David Bondar got 4+ points higher in PCS in each program at Cranberry Cup and that's with a free program that had a fall in Cranberry Cup and some q's and < whereas in NextGen it was clean. Then you look at what the Canadian judge gave him at Cranberry Cup (52.45) compared to judges from other countries (69.10, 63.27, 59.94, 62.45, 69.93) and one can't help but wonder. Granted, there is no footage of Cranberry Cup, but you cannot improve the PCS in 1.5 weeks by 4-5 points. In hindsight, he was underscored at last year's NextGen as well.With LPFSC, his 2024 PCS from there was more in line with what he got at 2024 NextGen (26.01/58.27 at LPFSC). So last year the American judges were in line with the Canadian judges, but not this year.
I'm expecting most of the men here to compete at Cranberry Cup, so that should be an interesting point of comparison with international judges.
David B should have gotten higher scores at last year's NextGen as well, as I explained why to a response above. His Lake Placid PCS from this year are also on par with his JGP China scores from last year (32.84 in Lake Placid vs. 32.45 in JGP China for the short and 66.44 in Lake Placid vs 65.20 in JGP China for the free). While I would say his Lake Placid score may have been overscored, his short program was very fair.Just as Canadian judges are not the objective authority, neither are the judges at Lake Placid Champs or Aqua Cup. Both of these competitions were judged by domestic judges raised within the Japanese and American systems, respectively. American judges are used to a variety of skaters, but tend to be quite generous, sometimes unfairly so, while Japanese judges tend to be quite strict, again, sometimes unfairly so.
David Bondar's LPFSC PCS are higher than his highest international PCS, which might be warranted in the Short but not in the Free, and his NextGen PCS are in line with his NextGen PCS from last season. On the other hand, Grayson's PCS at NextGen are on par with his highest internationally in the Short, which again, might be warranted, and on par with his 2nd highest PCS in the Free, which I think is not warranted.
Realistically, David B was probably a little overscored at LPFSC and a little underscored at NextGen, while Grayson was a little overscored at NextGen and a little underscored at Aqua Cup (especially in the Short, as he was competing against Rio).
I said that his SP score was fair at Lake Placid (though I don't think we can argue about his SP PCS at NextGen either), but that his FS PCS were too high. There's no way a early season skate with a fall and an aborted spin should score higher PCS by over a point than his JGP China skate.David B should have gotten higher scores at last year's NextGen as well, as I explained why to a response above. His Lake Placid PCS from this year are also on par with his JGP China scores from last year (32.84 in Lake Placid vs. 32.45 in JGP China for the short and 66.44 in Lake Placid vs 65.20 in JGP China for the free). While I would say his Lake Placid score may have been overscored, his short program was very fair.
For one., Japanese scoring is not somehow by default less biased than elsewhere, just because they're stricter across the board. Anyone who follows Japanese skating knows that some skaters have certainly been judged unreasonably harshly compared to others, and they are not unwilling to hold up some skaters in this way.I don't think the reigning Junior World Champion, Rio Nakata needed help from Japanese judges to get a higher score than Grayson. And the Japanese would never do something so dishonourable and they had no problems giving Grayson the gold in the free program. In the Aqua Cup short they gave him 1 point less in the PCS than he got at his 2 JGPs last year (Slovenia was a clean program). 1 point difference is not considered an underscore in my opinion. For the free, I only have speculation, not enough data to comment on since there was no video of Aqua Cup.
Oh Calissa... you did a beautiful 3Lo, which was the tricky jump, then completely screwed up the ones you can normally do easily...