- Joined
- Jun 21, 2003
IMHO the same is true of the sport. Figure skating must find a way to put something before the public that they want to watch, or fade away.Survival of the fittest.
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IMHO the same is true of the sport. Figure skating must find a way to put something before the public that they want to watch, or fade away.Survival of the fittest.
FYI, Scott Hamilton complained that Kulik's footwork wasn't difficult enough.
In general, CoP has influenced footwork in a GOOD way. We are seeing more and more footwork that is worth taking note of.
But, there is room for improvement. The rules need to make sure that good-looking footwork is rewarded and that people can choreograph TO the music, rather than just putting extra brackets into the footwork sequence because it's needed to get that higher level.
Thanks GKelly and GSRossano.
IIRC it is the clear and express intention of the CoP not to allow the GOEs on easier elements to bring them up to the value of the next level.
I believe that they specifically had to modify the pairs base values last year to make sure that a double twist with positve GOE could not earn as many points as a triple twist with 0 GOE. (In fact, if I remember correctly, some of the big twisters on the competitive scene complained to the ISU that they weren't getting enough reletive credit for their triple (or quadruple) twists).
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But, apparently the judges do want to see just exactly that.
So true! The things that separate Figure Skating from Diving, Gymnastic, Snow Boarding or other sports based on Tricks however ballet-like form (Diving) is the Flow on Ice together with the sharp execution of basic turns with proper posture and arm positions. It is indeed the big difference between figure skating and all forms of stage dancing.CoP just lost any bellief and support I had in it. In any artistic sport (diving, gymnastics, even half-pipe snow boarding) quality is > or = to difficulty as being an important facter in rewarding points. Just tell skaters to wave there arms wildly, have seizures, throw in as many rotations possible. Don't worry how it looks or about technique. If I want to see fugly skating I'll watch America's Funniest Home Videos and It comes on every week at a convient time.
That's not true. Many of her short programs (Rach, East of Eden, Rush, Spartacus, Dream of Desdemona) had difficult step sequences. Aside from the sequence in Bolero, the ones in her long programs may not have been that difficult though.Tinymavy15 said:Michelle Kwan won 9 national titles and 5 worlds titles and 2 olympic medals without ever having a dfficult step sequence.
All the programs look alike --- Men and Ladies. And all the Pairs programs look basically alike. Dance too.
I don't mind the "idea" of CoP. It just isn't working.

Just about all of the skaters under 6.0 skated the same program, if you actually went to the competitions. Same non-existent footwork, same sloppy sit-change-sit, same godawful spirals. Just because US audiences saw four or five of the best skaters on TV doesn't mean that this was representative of the general competition.
Sadly, I agree with Gio. This is the price we have paid for wanting to make figure skating more like a "real sport."
Yes, under CoP judging figure skating is more like a "real sport." And less like performance art.
Only time will tell whether this trade-off will increase the popularity of skating or kill it off once and for all.
...IMO the main difference between 6.0 and CoP was that under 6.0, skaters could do little badly and in a shorter amount of time, while under CoP, they have to attempt a lot and have incentive to do a lot badly for a longer stretch.
Kind of a left-handed compliment to the good old CoP.Not at the system as a whole, though. The incentives from the points standpoint can be fixed, as gkelly has pointed out so well.Kind of a left-handed compliment to the good old CoP.
I just don't get all the COP bashing. I think COP has just made things LOT better. No more super sloppy spins and non-existing footwork. Before COP, it was just jump after jump and so on...
Now skaters are training spins and footworks. I think BOTH diffuculty and quality are better these days. Atleast on average...
Btw I loved Mao's SP footwork. Nothing overdone, she made it look so easy.
Spins and footwork have nothing to do with PCS marks, they get scored in their own right and are part of the TES mark. PCS is still subjective.
As for L4 spins, it's the same as last year with the addition for the solo spin to have 8 revs in the basic position as a feature. The same people are still getting L4 on the CCoSp, CoSp and flying spins. The nice thing is that they can't do 2 CCoSp's anymore. 8 revs in the basic position as a feature is actually easy to use to get at least a L2 because you can also use that to gain a "clear increase in speed" feature once your 8 revs is complete.
That's the very question. For a decade lots of people spent their money to come out and watch Michelle Kwan perform, boring sitspin and all.And if you talk about figure skating fading away... I am sure most of people prefer to watch Zhang's amaizing and fast layback spin rather than Kwan's boring sitspin which rotated like one revolution/minute.
8 revs in the basic is harder than you think. It can easy to get the 8 revs bullet for a level but it can be difficult to complete the other bullets from slowing down doing the 8 revs. Personal expereince