My point is . . .
When school figures were part of the equation, there were many many many examples when the best freeskate of the final night, in the opinion of most fans AND JUDGES, did not win the title.
Fans who had actually followed all phases of the competition -- even sitting through the figures competition at the competition venue even if they couldn't see the details that the judges on the ice could see -- had a much better understanding of the final results than fans who just showed up for the final freeskate or who were limited to whatever the TV networks chose to show them at home.
Some potential fans undoubtedly turned off the TVs fed up with the sport when they didn't understand the result; others enjoyed the skating enough to start paying attention to more of the sport than the tiny tip of the iceberg shown on TV and learned to understand more about how the results were arrived at. They still might not always agree.
Eventually, the ISU took the figures out of competition, in large part probably because too many potential fans weren't making the jump to being real fans because of that discrepancy between freeskating results and overall results.
So let's look at the 1990s and early 2000s, no figures, ordinals and factored placements.
Sometimes the free skate that most fans and most judges agreed was best did not win because of short program placements. Anyone who really followed the standings as the event unfolded, especially if they had actually watched the short programs and understood how factored placement works, would understand why the results came out the way they did. Anyone who was sitting at home relying on TV commentators to explain it would be at a loss if said commentators didn't bother to do so or did a poor job of it.
A few examples where significant titles were lost in the short program:
Lu Chen, 1991 Junior Worlds
Alexei Urmanov, 1995 Europeans
Michelle Kwan, 1997 Worlds
Todd Eldredge, 1998 Worlds
Other results where factored placements may have confused viewers by giving the better medal to the skater with several blatant errors:
Nicole Bobek (4th in LP) over Michelle Kwan (3rd in LP) for bronze at 1995 Worlds
Michelle Kwan (3rd in LP) over Nicole Bobek (2nd in LP) for silver at 1997 US Nationals
And then there was the infamous place switching at the 1997 European men's event, that would take pages to explain exactly what happened to a fan (or ISU president, as the case might be

) not already well versed in how both ordinals and factored placments worked.
There's also the situation that mistakes that are obvious to fans aren't always as significant to judges as other technical weaknesses or as the artistic impression/presentation side of the performance.
Some examples of performances where a superficially cleaner program lost to one with more or more visible errors:
Petrenko vs. Wylie, 1992 Olympics
Baiul vs. Kerrigan, 1994 Olympics
Gordeeva/Grinkov vs. Mishkutionok/Dmitriev, 1994 Olympics
Eldredge vs. Weiss, 1998 US Nationals
Kwan vs. Hughes, 2000 and 2001 Skate America (IIRC)
Butyrskaya vs. Sokolova, 1998 Skate America
Slutskaya vs. Sokolova, 1998? Cup of Russia
etc. etc.
We won't even get into examples where the skaters have similar numbers of errors, or lack thereof, and the results come down to subtler details or to personal preference. Any individual fan or judge might feel strongly on one side or the other in controversial close contests, but when a similar number feel just as strongly for the other side, the results are obviously not indisputable. Disputing them is part of the fun.
