chuckm said:
The rules are more flexible for the host countries, it seems. According to the rules, after each federation picks its own skaters, the seeds are selected. Then after the top 12 at Worlds have received 2 assignments, those who finished 13th-24th are assigned IN ORDER of their finish. So we had:
13 Mira LEUNG (CAN) - got two events (one from SC)
14 Elene GEDEVANISHVILI - got two events (note: she was also #20 on the Seasons Best list)
15 Idora HEGEL - got two events
16 Yan LIU - got two events (one from CoC)
17 Amanda NYLANDER - got one event
18 Tugba KARADEMIR - got one event
19 Arina MARTINOVA - got two events (one from CoR).
Except the rules for 2005-6 aren't based on Worlds, unless the skater places 1-12 at Worlds.
The rules are:
1-12 at Worlds: guaranteed two events. Mao Asada replaces Cohen, because no one in the top 6 at Olympics who didn't skate at Worlds (Slutskaya, Arakawa) is coming back, and Asada had a PB higher than anyone at Worlds except Meissner.
Anyone not included above who was top 24 in ISU Worlds rankings (and not retired/non-competing) is guaranteed one event: Ando (6), Kim (10), Czisny (15), Sawada (16), Liu (17), Sebestyen (18), Leung (21), Gedevanishvili (24).
Anyone not included above with a top 24 Personal Best is guaranteed one event: Taylor (15), Liang (18), Hawker (24).
Anyone not included above who is skating seniors this season and who medalled at Jr. Worlds or JGPF is guaranteed one event: Xu (bronze JGPF), Zukowski (bronze, Jr. Worlds).
Each one was given two spots.
Discretionary: anyone not included above who was top 25 in ISU World rankings:
Got none:
Kitamura (27*), Takeda (30*), Efremenko (35), Lepisto (42*), Choi (45*), Kropotkina (47*), Lacoste (49*), Pfaneuf (50), Glebova (53*), McCorkell (54), Cantu (58*) Shin (59*), Vahamaa (60*), Hou (61*), Hyatt (63*), Kahle (65*), Gerboldt (66*), Timoshenko (69), Isabelle Nylander (70*), Suizi (71-no bio link), Cannarozzo (73-no bio link), Marchei (74), Radeva (75)
*Eligible for Juniors
Dytrt (skating pairs), Manzano (retired), Corwin (retired), Drei (retired), Kwan (not skating), Kettunen (retired), Kirk (retired), Maxwell (not skating singles), Nikodinov (not skating).
Got 1:
Mai Asada (29), Carter (37), Chae-Hwa Kim (39), Pavuk (41), Nylander (51), Karademir (56), Gimatzetdinova (64), Paulinius (68), Nylander (70), Bobillier (72)
Got 2:
Duhamel (33), Volchkova (38), Hegel (43), Fang (46), Martinova (48),
Not ranked in top 75, assigned: Luca, Calvez, Lacour.
My questions are: Why did Duhamel and Volchkova get two when better-ranked Mai Asada and Carter got one? Why did Duhamel, Volchkova, Hegel, Fang, or Martinova get two when Efremenko, Pfaneuf, McCorkell, Timoshenko, Marchei, and Radeva got none? (Could be that Efremenko, Timoshenko, Marchei, and/or Radeva are no longer skating or opted out of GP; I don't know their statuses.)
chuckm said:
The problem is that skaters from host countries can be assigned an event as a host skater, while non-host skaters do not start out with this advantage.
Two skaters without top 75 ranking were assigned to the host nations' discretionary spots: Calvez and Lacour. A third, Roxanna Luca, ranked 96th, was also selected by China.
Oddly, China got three of the top 12 skaters and the US got five.
chuckm said:
The rule should be administered in such a way that if a skater has been selected as a host skater, then that should be counted as the first go-round, like Amanda's and Tugba's first assignment. SECOND assignments should be subject to the same set of rules as the first, and be assigned IN ORDER OF PLACEMENT at Worlds.
Under that scenario, Nylander would receive a 2nd event, not Martinova.
The ISU obviously doesn't agree, because the selection system they put in place gives precedence to higher-ranked skaters and skaters with higher-ranked personal bests from the strongest nations -- most often the host nations, but not always -- who have more overall depth in their programs, as well as the three completely discretionary picks for the host nations, since they're paying for it, and have to draw the local crowds. Martinova is higher-ranked than Nylander, despite their relative placement at Worlds.