- Joined
- May 15, 2009
No, no, please don't start North America vs. Erope war again! It'll make the discussion go sour.
You prefer the 6.0 vs CoP war
I thought we had enough of the Johnny vs Evan war already

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No, no, please don't start North America vs. Erope war again! It'll make the discussion go sour.

You prefer the 6.0 vs CoP war
I thought we had enough of the Johnny vs Evan war already![]()
Oh, well, your choice. Who am I to tell anyone what to do?I much agree with you, and/but what you say does sometimes happen sometimes in GPs (not Final) or international B's...... Everyone should be rewarded solely on what they do and judges need to objectively assess everyone's talent and performance. Obviously people want to see their favorites deliver, but that doesn't mean they deserve extra credit for their performances solely because they are considered a favorite.
There should be no such thing as "waiting your turn" or "being due". If you skate with great technique and artistry you deserve to be rewarded for it, period. I'm completely fine with seeing entirely different people on the podium every single year if that's how the performances shake out.
But at Worlds and Olys (and maybe at GP Final) things are very different it seems.
IMO these are the games where political tradings are sometimes done hidden from the eyes of the public.
Or more probably, these are the games where the judges become dependant on the skaters reputations and the expectations of the judges themselves. Sometimes these expectations fall similar to what the results should really be, but as we all know, sometimes way different.
Here is another Canadian view. Elvis Stojko (my hero) says Lysacek should be ashamed of himself for skating a long program that was no better than Brian Boitano's in 1988.
He thought Plushenko should have won handily, that Takahashi should have got better marks for at least trying a quad, and that Weir skated great and should have been placed ahead of sissy-boy Chan.
http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/vancouver/figure_skating/news?slug=es-thoughts021810
I used to thought about it that way. But he said himself about his 2007 year's skating that he didn't feel the connection, along with his subsequent years performances, it has indicated that he doesn't have the abilities to jump out of his comfort zone and start of a new direction skating. His programs after 2007 are actually shrinking into his most comfortable core with fewer new movements and even similar musics and similar costumes. Seeing one, seems to me, is like seeing them all.

That Worlds was when Shizuka or Irena were out of the competition, but still, '06 seems to have been a year in which the Worlds stayed out of preoccupations, comparatively.As much as I wanted to stay away from this topic... Kimmie Meissner did win Worlds in 2006, didn't she? She also placed 6th in Torino despite being 5th in her two only GP assignments that Fall.
It wasn't that bad but the performance wasn't anything specific to match the exact nuance of RiB ....I liked his Rhapsody in Blue.
All of the skating experts in Europe thought Plushenko should have won.
Evan wasn't cleaner than Johnny. Johnny made a small error on one of his spins and Evan made a small error on his second Triple Axel. They were equal in terms of "cleanness."
After Plushenko skated and hit his quad I remember thinking, well, "that skate was pretty sloppy and Evan was better but Plushenko will win anyway because he did the quad and he stayed on his feet and he is Plushenko."
You could argue that with Evan, that's not even what happened at the Olympics. After Plushenko skated and hit his quad I remember thinking, well, "that skate was pretty sloppy and Evan was better but Plushenko will win anyway because he did the quad and he stayed on his feet and he is Plushenko." And I was wrong.
No, they were not equal, Weir had a more costly error in his triple flip (-1.20), altogether he got -1.74 for his errors. Lysacek´s errors were altogether -0.96, so Lysacek was cleaner than Weir!
Lysacek also got more technical points for his spins and footwork than Weir: spins 11.80 (Lysacek) against 9.30 (Weir) and footwork 9.96 (Lysacek) against 8.00 (Weir).
http://www.isuresults.com/results/owg2010/owg10_Men_FS_Scores.pdf

All 3 of the medal winners at 2002 Olympics were superior to the entire field at 2010 Olympics.
Actually it was a planned 2axel.T After his sloppy, but fall-less performance with only (1?) doubled jump
Each one listens to broadcast that is convienient
Well eurosport, british, french , italian, spanish, greek thought the contrary so that was convenient for me. Goebel's program was such a joy. Far more subtle details and far more exciting highlights, all of which had an actual purpose in relation to the music. Doing 3 Quads (one of which was very deep in the program) is 100x harder than a few extra spin positions and convoluted footwork too.
Hey, but you're not American. Maybe that's where the confusion comes from.![]()