- Joined
- Nov 13, 2012
Those things were a factor, sure. And I'm definitely not saying it's ALL Kori's fault either or that Jason is blameless in the situation either.
That said, I do question the constant layout switching last season. And the fact they waited to change the choreography of the FS (or that they didn't go back to The Piano FS) until U.S. Nationals. Everything just felt really reactionary last season.
But i don't know, maybe everything had to happen the way they did so Jason could realize it was time to make some major changes.
ETA: Sorry, I didn't mean to bring up a debate with that post -- I just felt a certain sentiment, which is why I brought it up.
I think we're all glad that Jason seems to be in a good place now and we have things to look forward to as fans.
I've felt for a long time that if one puts in and takes out a jump difficulty - in this case the quad, but could be something else - depending on anything other than injury or illness (those are entirely different circumstances) chances are that that difficulty becomes a bugbear in the skater's mind. I've seen it with multiple skaters who do that - they never seem to develop consistency with that jump.
Note: Of course putting in an element that the skater has not mastered, at all, is also something I'm against, as that too will play havoc with the skater's confidence. But if an element has been deemed good enough to put in - then keep it in. Don't try to "protect" the skater from it, or keep them "safe" from failure. It then becomes this Terrible Thing that should be avoided if at all possible - and it's not a good thing if the skater gets the sense that he's almost expected to fail at it.


