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Cough cough! I am so proud and honored to be part of the vulgus that admires, loves , adores legendary Dai and that thin boy with an angelic face and flapping wings …:shocked:
Honestly I was not aware some skaters are so sophisticated and intellectual that Kant’s categories and trascendental idealism are required to catch their superior artistry![]()

Rumors are he may replace the 3F with the 4Lo and have 4 quads...I can't see Brian allowing that though.
rumors?
As said, earlier, for some people interpretation is having an arm movement or a facial expression or a jump on a precise point of the music.. creating a higlight in choreography... for me, interpretation is not shallow mimicking as described... it's really about seizing the meaning, the emotion of a piece and transcend it... it goes through a deeper rendition of the music... a global interpretation....

Well not a rumor. Essentially a casual comment by a reporter that traveled with shows in Asia. It was a 40 minute discussion solely about Yuzu, his mentality, what coaches think of him. Even so, it wouldn't be surprising if he did want to do this. One of the things that pushes him is adding more difficulty...
I don't know if this makes sense to anyone but personally, I always thought Chan's skating is postmodern deconstruction figure skating. It's not about representing music.
Anyways, it will be a great dissapointment if Chan doesn't attept three quad in SC.
4everchan, whilst perhaps your intention was not such, phrases such as 'shallow mimicking' and 'appealing to the masses' have negative connotations even to the extent of maybe making people think of cheap hacks. So that description will be somewhat provocative, shall I say. Anyway, I will leave it there.
Hanyu will be not doing definitely 4 quads FS, his next step will be 2 quads SP
really? I thought he would do 2 quads SP before 4 quads FP... is it because he doesn't often land 4-3 that it is safer to only do one in sp for him?
Honestly Takahashi was one of the greatest artists on the ice maybe of all time and for me Yuzuru has much more personality than Patrick ...that's for sure. Watching Patrick from the beginning of his career to current times leaves me nothing but cold, I am like "hey Patrick, I know you have outstanding edges but I have seen this performance from you 3 years ago, what is new? show me versatility" .and yes, I get pleasure from Patrick's skating when I only watch him below ankles because of his (edges, ss) the rest nothing exciting for me![]()
Honestly I highly doubt it will depends on Borser if Yuzu decides to train the 4L season time or not, primarily because Yuzu said 4L helped him to stabilize his 4S .
I have a very different opinion of Hanyu's journey as a skater. Watching the World's 2012 was amazing, but he's faster now, with better posture, more stamina, better jumping technique and better programs and better control over his arms and hands in time to the music.
In 2012-2014 he had Parisienne Walkways, electrifying and energetic, and now we have the Chopin program which is full of his own personal musical interpretation. He changes the choreo with Jeff and also on his own each time to convey something different.
Now with Seimei it's even better.
Patrick too has programs this year that are better than any I have seen from him before.
But if, as you say, Patrick does not compromise art for sport...is he compromising sport for art?
Makes me think of Machida who did everything for the music and for the integrity of the program as an art-form but it proved an extremely risky strategy that only worked once that season before he retired.
Hanyu says he wants to show certain things in his program, (delicacy, strength, music) but he never said he wants to be an 'artist' which I agree with...because that's something he will have ample time to tackle in exhibitions and after he retires. Since figure skating is a sport, after-all. If art is achieved as a side-product, then its a bonus we can all enjoy.
After he retires he intends to have a long pro-career and work with as many skaters as possible (according to the Nobu-Yuzu-Shoma tea-party interview).
I really like Hanyu's Chopin and raved about it since the beginning, but I see it as something that is Patrick Chan influenced, perhaps because it is a style Patrick has dominated and made such a strong and indelible impression. (or the fact it happened to be choreographed by Buttle too)
Artistry is under valued under COP anyway. It is practically a luxury where some of the best work are from those who made it, who can afford to develop it vs a strategy focuses entirely on chasing for points. Those who are successful in it are rarely justifiably awarded consider the amount of effort put into it vs just having another favorable competition/judging panel to bridge the gap. So perhaps it is natural then for Patrick who can afford to develop it now because he is more advanced in his career.
Same with Hanyu, it is only now he got the OGM, he can now afford to experiment more, like with Seimei (which I sort of see it as his 'homage to Korea' post Olympic Yuna Kim program. Something from his own culture, rarely seen globally, more of himself in it, the progress of developing it is more satisfying than winning another medal, or pleasing the judges). My first impression of Parisienne Walkaway was actually that it was 'too trying' and 'objectifying' rather than felt like a natural progression. That program is 2 years too early for him I think but then I suppose the team's strategy is forcing him to make the leap from seen as a manchild to a man readying for the Olympic season to compete with the big boys including Plushy. The thing is the technical arsenal Hanyu has, he could have skate to anything and would have worked. Not a fan of repeat programs, nor a fan of inflation, and as much as I really love Hanyu, I definitely felt 2012-2013 season was inflated and gearing up to the Olympics with massive helps and support from Japan federations, at the expense of some of their own best skaters include Daisuke at home events.
He was doing 4-3 when he was 15 and he is doing it in practice sometimes. I just said he will NOT be doing 4 quads fs ever. That's just too much in his program that is packed with choreography, and backloaded triple axel combinations.
3 quads in enough. I guess it is going trough his mind to do 3 diffrent quads in future, but we will see.
His 2nd half 4T in SP is preparation for 2 quads sp I guess in next season as he was doing 4-3 in autumn classic practices too
Am I missing something? I can't understand why every skating fan in the world doesn't at least have a HUGE appreciation for Patrick Chan. He's so talented and the boy has serious skills. He may not "ring your bell" but, come on, he's one of the greatest skaters of all time.
why so much banter? oh well.. thanks for your comment! it's refreshing!Am I missing something? I can't understand why every skating fan in the world doesn't at least have a HUGE appreciation for Patrick Chan. He's so talented and the boy has serious skills. He may not "ring your bell" but, come on, he's one of the greatest skaters of all time.
hehe i misread you.... i didn't see the NOT in your sentence... my bad.... so how consistent is his 4-3?
The most recent one is in the same practice where he did the 4Lo - at Autumn classics, its in one of the videos.hehe i misread you.... i didn't see the NOT in your sentence... my bad.... so how consistent is his 4-3?
I guess the answer is in how many times he will land good quad toe. If landing is good he will have no problem adding 3t on it