- Joined
- Jun 21, 2003
Actually, there is a nice point there. Without a quad combo, a skater pretty much has to do all six different kinds of triples whether he wants to or not.
Here's a short program question that came up in this event. Lysacek did a 4T+2T for his combination. Then he did a triple Lutz out of footwork. Would he be better off to have done a triple Lutz-triple toe for his combo and a quad for his solo jump? Or is it too hard to do a quad out of footwork.
Also, IIRC Jeremy Abbott intended a quad combo for the first element, but barely got his quad off and could not add a second jump. Then he improvised a 3Lz+3T. Do the judges go back and redo the GOE for the quad, since now the quad counts as the solo jump (no footwork), instead of the original combo score (no combo)? It seems like either way that should be a -3 GOE, but then he got negative GOE anyway for a bad landing. (The actual GOEs were -3s and -2's).
Here's a short program question that came up in this event. Lysacek did a 4T+2T for his combination. Then he did a triple Lutz out of footwork. Would he be better off to have done a triple Lutz-triple toe for his combo and a quad for his solo jump? Or is it too hard to do a quad out of footwork.
Also, IIRC Jeremy Abbott intended a quad combo for the first element, but barely got his quad off and could not add a second jump. Then he improvised a 3Lz+3T. Do the judges go back and redo the GOE for the quad, since now the quad counts as the solo jump (no footwork), instead of the original combo score (no combo)? It seems like either way that should be a -3 GOE, but then he got negative GOE anyway for a bad landing. (The actual GOEs were -3s and -2's).