- Joined
- Mar 23, 2014
That would just make the junior worlds a far more exciting event to watch as well as the event with far stronger performances... Which is probably not how it should be. In my opinion, the best in the world should be in seniors and personally I'd rather lower the age limit than increase it. If you are good you are good, whether you are 12 or 30 years old. And it should be purely up to how good the skater is.
Junior ladies might have stronger jumps, but aside from an occasional artistic prodigy (like Kostornaia), the performances will not be stronger than those of most senior ladies. Performance ability and skating skills are not dependent upon having a teeny tiny prepubescent body, but generally upon years of hard work and training and experience.
If PCS were evaluated more fairly, this wouldn't be an issue, but it's obvious that high TES = high PCS right now, which is why we see Alina Zagitova and Trusova receiving PCS only a tiny bit lower than Medvedeva and Kostornaia, when the gap between them should be larger. Of course, Trusova in particular had more than enough of a technical advantage at Junior Worlds to beat Kostornaia anyway, but Kostornaia should not be additionally disadvantaged by Trusova's generous PCS.
I'm fine with a technical skater winning over an artistic skater, as long as their technical skills are enough to outweigh their opponent's better presentation.