- Joined
- Mar 23, 2014
I think both examples that you give should be punished. A fall is obviously the worst mistake on the scale of mistakes. Actually, I think falls should be worth a drop in BV too. So, the Lutz on the correct edge but fall should score less - but both would lose points, and both should be discouraged.
I do not like the suggestion that the ISU floats every now and again of "call it on the edge" (meaning if your flutz is bad enough it gets called a flip etc). I think - I'll correct that to "I know" because I, myself, actually, shamefully, have the beginnings of a Lutz that is ! on a good day and e on my bad days - there are differences in the mechanics of the jump that are overall significant enough that a flutz is NOT the same as a flip, and should not be counted as such. So, a flutz should be counted as a poorly-executed Lutz, and -GOE is necessary, as it would be for a fall.
I think I just talked myself in circles but I would like to see tech panels be stricter about the correct edges at the lower levels, so that the problem can be corrected earlier. For me, I do a lot of Lutz-entry exercises with my coach in an attempt to correct the edge problem before I even rotate the jump (which I can't do - yet). I have seen others at the rink working on corrections. It is something that CAN be fixed, and it is better, IMO, to fix it early, at the beginning, then try and fix it later.
Thank you for explaining! So I think we largely agree. Because, IMO, it's a shame to see a nicely-landed flutz score less than a lutz fall. My only problem with the previous mandate for -GOE on edge calls came from how wrong-edge jumps would ultimately be worth less points than a correct-edge fall when I feel that a fall is a worse, more disruptive error.
By the way, I've seen you talk about your adult skating before...I'm so jealous! I'm hoping once I finish my MA and (fingers crossed) get a real job with a grown-up salary I can do it too!
That is, it gets more mathematically interesting. 