Skating well at Nationals influences just one thing: getting international assignments. But ISU judges are not impressed by National placement. They score based on what they see at an international event. Although they appreciate Samson's presentation, they have to mark based on what she actually delivers in performance. And Myriane just does not deliver in international competition.
I am not naive about that chuckm. I am only responding to your assertion in a much earlier post from you in this thread that older JGP ladies who have not delivered the big scores internationally ( in your opinion) should be replaced by younger skaters for the experience.
Well , there are 2 big problems with that tactic.
1. The lack of spots: Canada has only 7 slots compared to the 16 that the top 5 finishing JW countries have. That leaves less room for blooding new talent in the first place. Also with ISU ranking determining skater order at JW, one must give our potential JW competitor as much of a chance to build up that ranking. Skating early in the JW short will lower the PCS since the judges will figure that you must be one of the lesser skaters. And as JW results determine slots, it is imperative that whoever we send does well there.
2. The talent is not there in sufficient numbers - Our top junior lady would have finished dead last at US junior nationals and that is even with a clean skate from her ( which she did deliver at nationals). She would have been in the bottom half of th US novice field as well and her real novice score would have been lower than her score at nationals due to lower multiplier for the PCS and less elements allowed in novice than in the junior competition.
Last year , we sent 3 skaters to the junior ladies NACS. They finished in the bottom 3 with none of them even scoring a combined score of 90. Yet one of them got a JGP that season.. This shows you the straws we are picking at.
Basically the selection has been based on who has ever landed the big jumps even once in a national or summer competition since the ladies who stick with just salchow and toe are even less consistent than those who land the big jumps inconsistently. Chuckm, face it the cupboard is bare.
It is easy to talk about younger talent when you have a lot of skaters to select from
Skate Canada has to look far more at skater development and that is the bottom line. SC did admit that they did neglect development for a while. We are paying the price right now for this neglect and it will take a while to right the ship.