My objection to this approach is that, depending on the weight you gave to the rest of the season, and previous seasons, relative to Nationals, it could make it almost impossible for a newcomer who has a breakthrough performance at Nationals or a veteran who had a bad year last year and a strong comeback this year to make the team.
Then such a system would need to factor in that likelihood and give them at least a fighting chance. Thing is, if you had an option between a skater who faltered at a big event in the past, and a skater who is yet unproven, what would be your choice?
Suppose a skater didn't qualify for Nationals last year, didn't skate at Nationals last year because of injury, or was sick/slightly injured at Nationals last year and placed poorly.
This year, they had no fall international assignments.
But they did well in summer nonqual competitions. They did very well at regionals/sectionals.
And they come to Nationals and blow everyone away, including a skater who qualified for the Grand Prix Final, defending national champ, etc. Should the committee take regional and sectional results as well as fall internationals into account when considering "the ENTIRE season"?
That's a good point. That may be the one weakness of such a system- how to deal with this, and also how to deal with skaters who "come back" after some years off. Inherently the skaters who have been competing throughout will have the advantage because we've seen what they can do, and once you go back further than about a couple of years, those results don't mean much any more.
Sectional/regional results may hold different weights than GP results because competition on the GP is typically much stronger. Even if you use point totals, there may be inconsistencies between national and international scoring.
Again, the solution here might be to use another competition, such as the 4CCs, to determine who gets that last spot. The more established skater can earn her spot based on Nats and what she has done so far; the comeback skater gets another chance against some of the others at 4CCs to earn the second Worlds spot. Say, I dunno, Meissner or Hughes (take your pick) chose to return, got through regionals/sectionals and somehow miraculously found her way back into the top 3 at Nats. One of the skaters who has been competing all this time (say, Nagasu) wins, and has had a decent GP. You give Nagasu spot #1 and then send the others to 4CCs to fight for that second spot. Allows you to get a second look at them and evaluate them under real international scoring rather than relying on regional/sectional results. Also gives the skater a fighting chance to prove herself once again.
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), say, USFS had told Flatt and Zhang that 2009 Four Continents would determine the 2nd ladies spot to 2009 Worlds, would the outcome have been different? ETA: And would it have been fair on such short notice?
