- Joined
- Jan 1, 2013
And yes, I do think some people can't get their heads around the fact that as far as getting IJS points goes, there are, as my grandpa used to say more ways to kill a cat than by choking it to death with butter. Jason's way is both legal and admirable, IMO. So is Max's.
OT, my parents used to say "more ways of killing cat than choking it with cream".

Re Jason not being in ice shows, maybe he prefers to train as Rohene's new programs for him may have a high degree of difficulty.
I think perhaps it could be a resting issue as well. He basically went straight from the Olympic season to Stars on Ice last year and then into the next season. They may have decided to trim back the shows this summer so that he can actually get a break in.
Sometimes before the start of the new semester, I look on ratemyprofessor to see the overall reviews of the professors I'm going to have.
I would suggest not doing this. I mean, some of the reviews will be genuine analyses of how the professor did. But the majority of them will be heavily coloured by how someone did in that class. A student who was slack and got a poor grade as a result, but does not want to accept responsibility for this, might lambast the professor on such a site, for example.
Also, Doris is correct there are multiple ways to kill a cat than choking with butter, however, that doesn't mean that choking with butter is suddenly an invalid choice. The fact is that Yuzuru, Patrick and Javier are all World Champions (and have multiple World medals). Jason is not (nor does have have a World medal). Yes, the falls/errors are not endearing, but they do enough outside those errors to get on the podium. At Worlds, Yuzuru may have missed his quads, but he basically does Jason's program content in 5 jumping passes in the halfway mark. The fact is these three (and on-the-mark Denis Ten) are the next targets, the people he still needs to beat.
Well, the butter being a valid choice is an enditement on the scoring system, but that's a discussion for another thread.
I'd still rather watch Jason over those three any day.
Absolutely! Jason has a dauntingly large amount of work to do on jumps. I hope he will get at least one quad this summer to the point where it is usually called rotated!
*mutters* Flip, flip, flip, flip...

We will have to see a quad at the jump competition anyway. It's a required element in the Championship Senior Men's event! My biggest interest is which one it will be. I am sure that he is closer than has been publicly known.
I was rewatching some of Jason's performances over the weekend and thinking how far he's come in the last two years. His success as a senior was so sudden that I've wondered if that's why some people have had issues with him (not having paid his dues and all that).
Someone on FSU had, at one time, a signature line that said: "The Junior Grand Prix: Where skaters who 'come out of nowhere' come from". I loved that line because it was so perfect. Really, when you consider all of it, Jason's rise hasn't really been that "meteoric". It just followed a steady upwards trend - a trend slightly masked by a surprisingly poor Nationals result. He had his first year as a Senior at Nationals in 2011 at 16, where he was 9th and got his first standing ovation there. The following season he won a gold and a silver on JGP, won the JGPF, and was then 9th again at US Nationals. (For comparison, Joshua had been 21st the year before and was 19th here. Max was Junior champion the year before and 8th here.) He then went to Junior Worlds where he won bronze behind Joshua and Hanee. The new season started again with a silver and a gold in his JGP events, then a 4th at the JGPF (first 3A landed). He had a stumbly kind of Nationals, and finished 8th (Joshua had gone up to 4th and Max, of course, was Champion that year). He and Joshua went off to Junior Worlds together where they finished second and first respectively, and so then we come around into the new season and Jason is at Nebelhorn and then Skate America.
Really, his rise was not all that unexpected, if you were paying attention. Nor was Joshua's. Both of them had been garnering the sort of marks and feedback internationally as Juniors that suggested they would succeed as Seniors (in fact, that 4T landed at JGP SLC is still Joshua's only clean quad in competition). I don't think that anyone sensible could suggest they hadn't "paid their dues". If anyone "came out of nowhere" and didn't "pay his dues", it was probably Max, who went from almost-retired, aged-out-of-Juniors, Senior Bs to National Champion.
I suspect any suggestion of "paying of dues" comes from that quarter regarding skaters who continually mess up chances, only to come good every so often.


(That's the quote, right?)
:hopelessness:.