Mao skated a phenomenal SP in the Japanese National's, but once again there're whispers that she 2-footed her combo. Rewatching the slow-mo several times, I have to say that either she lightly brushed the ice or she barely escaped it, but in any case this seems like a perennial problem for her. It possibly cost her the WC title as well as the recent GPF gold.
It occurred to me that her tendency for "incidental" 2-footing may be related to her not pointing her toes in the air. Obviously one lands much lower on a flexed than on a pointed landing foot, and therefore it's also easier to brush the free foot on the way out. Also, pointing your toes allows you to pull the two legs/feet closer in together, as well as creating more rigidity/tension in your legs, both allowing faster rotations in the air. As a comparison, Caroline really points her feet in the air, especially the landing foot, which gives her the amazingly fast rotations in the air, as well as the ability to pull out a tidy landing with her free foot well off the ground even when the jump lands slightly under-rotated. Probably she was forced into these good habits because she never could generate too much height on her jumps.
OTOH, Mao had amazing jump height as a young skater, and her thinness gave her naturally fast rotations; so she got away with relaxed legs and ankles in the air and never had to worry about pointing her toes. Now that she has a more womanly body, her rotations are slower, plus her jumps have lost some of their height, so 2-footing's becoming a perennial problem for her. It's curious that she didn't learn to always point her toe while skating since she had substantial ballet training and even danced en pointe.
I wonder how easy it is for her to learn to point her toes mid-air -- hopefully it's not as hard as fixing a leg wrap. OTOH, I've never seen any lady skater transform an ugly layback into a beautiful classical one either, and she somehow managed it this season.
So maybe she can learn to point her toes in the jumps quickly too. I feel like it would really improve her jump GOE's, and it may be something easier to fix than the flutz.
It occurred to me that her tendency for "incidental" 2-footing may be related to her not pointing her toes in the air. Obviously one lands much lower on a flexed than on a pointed landing foot, and therefore it's also easier to brush the free foot on the way out. Also, pointing your toes allows you to pull the two legs/feet closer in together, as well as creating more rigidity/tension in your legs, both allowing faster rotations in the air. As a comparison, Caroline really points her feet in the air, especially the landing foot, which gives her the amazingly fast rotations in the air, as well as the ability to pull out a tidy landing with her free foot well off the ground even when the jump lands slightly under-rotated. Probably she was forced into these good habits because she never could generate too much height on her jumps.
OTOH, Mao had amazing jump height as a young skater, and her thinness gave her naturally fast rotations; so she got away with relaxed legs and ankles in the air and never had to worry about pointing her toes. Now that she has a more womanly body, her rotations are slower, plus her jumps have lost some of their height, so 2-footing's becoming a perennial problem for her. It's curious that she didn't learn to always point her toe while skating since she had substantial ballet training and even danced en pointe.
I wonder how easy it is for her to learn to point her toes mid-air -- hopefully it's not as hard as fixing a leg wrap. OTOH, I've never seen any lady skater transform an ugly layback into a beautiful classical one either, and she somehow managed it this season.
So maybe she can learn to point her toes in the jumps quickly too. I feel like it would really improve her jump GOE's, and it may be something easier to fix than the flutz.
