Hello! I'm new to GoldenSkate but I've been following the rivalry between Hanyu and Patrick for a while

It's nice to see them progress over the years but I've noticed a significant difference in their philosophy in skating. Here are my 2 cents on Hanyu vs Patrick.
Patrick believes that skating is not just about the jumps - it's everything including the movements, from his core to his fingertips and every little details. His emphasis is on the expression through body movement on ice. Also judging by the way he reacted to the quad controversy during Plushenko's olympics, he definitely believes that figure skating is an art itself. There is an interview video on youtube where he said "there is a limit to how much you can jump, but movements are infinite". Very very beautiful and I think that's why he chooses a dance instructor as his coach.
Hanyu, on the other hands, likes the technical part. He likes to challenge his body's limit and bring it to the next level. To me, that sounds more like a remark from an athlete. But he is also very smart to know how to work according to the rules of his sports as well. He KNOWS that there is an artistic sides of figure skating, and that Patrick has the upper hand. So in addition to his jumps, he works on transitions and difficulty of his program to compromise the gap between his component scores and Patrick's. He frequently mention Patrick as someone who made him have the desire to work on more quads, and improve more on his skating skills because otherwise, it is impossible to beat him.
I do admire Patrick's skating. His use of edge and his body movement is definitely one of the top. But in figure skating, there is a max on the component scores - 50 in SP, 100 in FP, whereas the bound for TES is just going to keep being raised in the future.
Figure skating is an interesting sport because it combines the arts and sports. But having beautiful skate can only get you so far. Beyond that, you need to have the jumps. The Chan-Hanyu rivalry exactly reflects this. In other words, in figure skating you can't be a top skater if you don't have the component scores. But once you've reached the top, it is the TES and the consistency that determines the podium placement.
Patrick's contribution to push the artistic side of figure skating is something that we have to acknowledge. But unfortunately, Patrick was too stubborn with his philosophy and he only focused on one of the two sides of the sport.
From this perspective, Patrick needs to change the way he sees figure skating now. He can't be relying on his artistic side anymore to get him to the top of the podium. I think he has realised this after GPF. And I'm excited to see his progress on his jumps in the future. After all, figure skating is a sport. You can't ignore that. Hanyu and Javi have improved their PCS and established themselves as the top skaters. The judges know where they stand in the component sides. They're on par with Patrick, and now, what the figure skating demand from these top skaters, is the quad. And that, means a test of your physical limit.
Their rivalry has so much impact on the sports. Before Hanyu and Javi reach this level of skating, Patrick has been leading the sports with his superior skating skills and mesmerising body movements on ice. The 3 years when he was the World Champion, everyone worked on the PCS to catch up with Patrick. But that was then, this is now. At this stage of the sport, Patrick now has to do the catch up.
I'm excited to see how this rivalry will end at Pyeongchang.
