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Is it just me or half the people that want the 6.0 back just want an easier system to b***h about the scores/placements? 0_0
Is it just me or half the people that want the 6.0 back just want an easier system to b***h about the scores/placements? 0_0
As a skater I prefer skating under IJS because I know where I lost the points. I know what I did right and wrong.
That is what was so great about the good old days. Everyone got to be a judge, and we were all experts.
Now we are cowed into silence. One skater got 125.29 points, the other skater got 126.96 points. Well, you can't argue with math.
I agree with this. The new system is better for the skaters, although not quite so much fun for the fans. In so far as figure skating is a participatory sport, the IJS is the way to go. But then we cannot be surprised that figure skating as a spectator sport has taken a hit in popularity.

How the audiences suppose to understand that Gracie despite two great programs at SA lost to a skater who fell and had a stumble? Funnily if Gracie had two falls on rotated triples instead of doubling them she would have won. Does it makes sense? not to me..
Gracie's 2F in the SP was not merely a doubled triple, but a major technical mistake and an invalid element. That she still finished the SP in 2nd place speaks more in favour of the new system than against it.
There is no question that programs today are generally more technical and difficult than under 6.0. That's a good thing for the sport. Generally the results are more fair. And it's possible to redeem oneself in the free after "bombing" in the short. (ie. Mao at the Olympics. Could have helped Kurt or Michelle back in the day.) .
I understand it is essentially an ordinal system. What I don't understand is why apologists for the 6.0 system wax about it being easy to understand "because 5.7 means such and such". As you pointed out, 5.7 was probably more a mnemonic device. The if you shuffle the same skater's start order, their scores would be different! A "perfect" performance that came before 5 other skaters might be awarded 5.8, whereas an identical performance that was skated last would have gotten 6.0 because it brought the house down and judges were riding on the atmosphere.
Remember that discussion about judges being Bayesian statisticians?
The 6.0 judge certainly had to be staunch Bayesians with very strong priors, to work the system!
) Quote Originally Posted by Mathman View Post
That is what was so great about the good old days. Everyone got to be a judge, and we were all experts.
Now we are cowed into silence. One skater got 125.29 points, the other skater got 126.96 points. Well, you can't argue with math.
And you think everyone in the arena understood that?
Probably not, but this has more to do with the poor job most commentators are doing in explaining the system, not with the system itself. This rule is actually very straightforward: it was mandatory for her to do a triple as a solo jump and she didn't.
Since I'm not very familiar with 6.0 technical deductions: would Gracie still have been in medal contention under 6.0 after having an invalid element in the short program? I've always had the impression that these types of mistakes were punished more harshly under 6.0, but I might be wrong.
