I agree that Jeff was underscored under PCS. He was 3rd in the short, 3rd in technical, but 4th in PCS behind Lambiel (fair), Joubert (ridiculous) and Plushenko (unfair, but expected). Here are the SP marks:
Program Compnents
PCS+ SS TR PE CH IN
1 Stephane LAMBIEL 37.72 7.61 7.36 7.61 7.50 7.64
2 Brian JOUBERT 37.71 7.54 7.32 7.64 7.57 7.64
3 Jeffrey BUTTLE 36.89 7.36 7.21 7.39 7.43 7.50
4 Evan LYSACEK 34.71 6.96 6.71 7.04 7.00 7.00
5 PLUSHENKO 38.29 7.75 7.32 7.79 7.57 7.86
I am stunned by the PCS Joubert has received so far in this comp. In fact, his PCS was only .01 below Lambiel which is unexplainable to me seeing the way Joubert skated, with slow spins that got even slower when he went to an inside edge and simple Yagudin steps that he has been doing all season without the musicality and expression of Yagudin.
1. Skating Skills: Overall quality of edges and flow over the ice. Plushenko was 1st followed by Lambiel and Joubert. I do not agree that Plushenko has the best edge quality, but it seems like a pretty fair result to me.
2. Transitions: The varied movements that link all elements. Lambiel won by .04, Joubert and Plushenko tied for second. I agree with this result for Lambiel because he actually had very few transitions and moved directly from one element to another, which was amazing to see. However, Buttle should have been second.
3. Performance/Execution: Defined by ISU as "the involvement of the skater physically, emotionally and intellectually as they translate the intent of the music and choreography" (interesting). Plushenko was 1st, Lambiel 2nd, Joubert 3rd, Buttle a distant 4th. Again I think Buttle was underscored. How the judges can say Joubert had a better emotional connection with the music is a mystery, unless they judged his roar at the end.
4. Choreography: The arrangement of movements. Plushenko and Joubert tied for 1st! This is simply an outrage. No way is Plushenko or Joubert's choreography anywhere close to Buttle or Lambiel, but Joubert in particular had choreography that was very simple and uninspired. I don't see how the judges can call his SP the best choreography in the world.
5. Interpretation: "the personal and creative transaltion of the music to movement on ice" including "the nuances of all the fundamentals of music." Plushenko won, Lambiel and Joubert tied for 2nd. Again, it escapes me how Joubert is judged to have better interpretation than Buttle.
What is going on here? Could it be that the judges don't care what each PCS category means and are just giving high marks to the skaters they want to win (Plushenko, Joubert) at the expense of skaters who truly excel in the defined areas of skating (Buttle)? So far Lambiel has managed to barely stay on top because he has skated 100% and has gone for everything. However, these marks reveal that the judges are ready to forgive mistakes of their favorites and reward their mediocre skating. Sonia Banchetti revealed in her book that this type of collusion and holding up has always existed in skating, and nothing has changed under the new system.
At this point, I see the quad being necessary for Lambiel, but not for Plushenko. If Plushenko takes out his quad and skates like he did in the qualifying, I predict he will be on top. I don't think it would be smart for Buttle to add in the quad, but I will be thrilled if he lands it and delivers the rest of the program to the high level he has all season. Right now Buttle is within 4 points of 2nd, and if judged fairly I think he could overtake Joubert for bronze, but I do not expect to see that.
1 Stephane LAMBIEL 118.28
2 Brian JOUBERT 112.66
3 Evgeni PLUSHENKO 111.26
4 Jeffrey BUTTLE 109.39
5 Evan LYSACEK 105.55
6 Chengjiang LI 104.84
7 Johnny WEIR 102.70
8 Daisuke TAKAHASHI 102.31
9 Andrei GRIAZEV 100.23
10 Emanuel SANDHU 97.03
11 Frederic DAMBIER 96.58
12 Kevin VAN DER PERREN 96.43