I copy a part of the post from another Thread:
. Maybe it was the time zone which made it impossible to watch the FS live, and watching after the fact all the emotions were kind of dulled. I'd assume that's it. Same for me. When I cannot watch live, it's not the same. That's why I get more into events in Asia and America and not so much...
www.goldenskate.com
BACK FLIP:
Personally what I mind on the first place...
Figure skating is a dangerous sport: acute and chronic injuries thanks to falls and body overloading, cut wounds from blades and so on. Still there are not that many craniocerebral traumas in comparison with other traumas. I am talking about craniocerebral traumas leadings to surgery (I don't mean brain concussions which are quite frequent).
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Warning - vulnerable and sensitive ones should rethink whether they will continue reading informations written below.)
1) Falls on the ice usually leads to injuries or at least to haematomas. You can fall on every part of your body, you can hit the board with any part of your body head including. You can fall on your back and then hit the ice with you head.
BUT there are just few elements which lead to
DIRECT FALL ON THE HEAD. Which is my problem with back flip.
If you make mistake which will lead to bigger underrotation - the head will get the biggest blow.
We all remember October 2022 when Solene Mazingue fell directly on the head during the lift. Craniocerebral trauma...coma...an emergency craniotomy...titanium plates. She was happy one, she survived. And not only. She was able to speak, walk, she even came back on the ice.
Not every craniocerebral trauma has happy ending. Medicine is on high level, but there can be complications, prolonged recovery and partial recovery only. Not everybody learns to walk, speak, think in a way they did it in past. Some patients never learn it again. You can get seizures. And of course you have symptoms like in case of concussions - depression, headache, loss of concentration.
In 2005 Russian former skater Alexey Vasilevskiy was learning back flip for the show, he fell on his head and the rest of the story you already know from text above: craniocerebral trauma...an emergency craniotomy...titanium plates. I do remember that he needed to undergo another surgery after some time. Daniil Barantsev created funding to get money for his treatment. Another happy ending. He survived and came back on the ice. He is working as a coach (training Veronika Zhilina I believe).
In my opinion direct fall on head always means very high probability of craniocerebral surgery.
2) Direct fall on head may also lead to cervical fracture. Depends on the place of fracture and if the broken piece pressures spinal cord - surgery is sometimes needed as well. If spine cord is damaged you can finish with quadriparesis or quadriplegia, damage between C1 and C4 spinal cord segments - active breathing can be affected as well.
3) If back flip becomes eligible... big number of both junior and senior skaters will want to learn it. Because it is new element for competitions. The same thing happened with new element in Ice Dance - Choreographic Hydroblade. About one third of couples chose this element because it was innovative in free dance's elements.
So probably we will get quite big number of skaters (high level / low level) practising back flip. Which will probably increase the number of skaters with craniocerebral injuries.
4) If it becomes eligible skaters will execute back flip in the second half or at the end of the program. Even Adam's back flip at the end of the program was underrotated and landing was so so. Skaters are tired at the end of the program, their concentration and strengthening may go down...which increases a possibility of mistake in any element. And in such conditions they will attempt back flip...
5) Who is educated and qualified to teach back flip?
Coaches? I am almost sure that coaches are specialists as to spins / jumps / skating skills. But back flip?
Acrobats? But things are working differently on the ice than on the floor.
On ice acrobats? Skaters who perform back flips? Do they have coaching licence?
This point is not that important like previous points.
6) Back flip with bend knees is not elegant. But PLEASE, keep bend knees to avoid fall.
7) Like
@moonvine mentioned...there is difference between unsupervised children practicing backflips on their own...and ISU making this element eligible for competive programs.
8) IF back flip will become eligible...and number of concussions and craniocerebral traumas will increase...what will ISU do next? Make it illegal again? How they would explain that they allowed performing the element?