She didn't dominate womens skating 2 seasons in a row. She was beaten by Midori Ito and Tonya Harding multiple times each.
She won Worlds 91, Olympics 92, Worlds 92, U.S Nationals 92, Goodwill Games 1990. That is dominating womens skating like it or not. And her record vs Ito those 2 season was 3-1 and vs Harding was 4-2. Except for U.S Nationals 91 she won all the biggest events she was in. Nobody cares if she lost to Harding at Skate America or Ito at Trophee Lalique when you win all the events that matteer. You dont have to win every single event you enter to be dominant. Otherwise Michelle Kwan would have never dominated womens skating since the only season she was ever undefeated was 02-03 where she didnt even do the Grand Prix.
Midori Ito was the favorite going into the Olympics, in fact.
Probably but it doesnt matter. What matters is what actually happened. And what actually happened was Kristi winning 91 Worlds, 92 Olympics, and 92 Worlds. Midori 4th at 91 Worlds,a distant 2nd at the 92 Olympics, and withdrawing from the 92 Worlds.
And, no we aren't going to agree to disagree, because your assertions are very annoying and incorrect.
OK so you wish to continue to force your own stupid and false viewpoints on others even though nobody intelligent will ever come over to your side. Fine your choice.
Kristi was not considered an all-time great going into the Olympics. Her level of skating reached higher than Witt's TECHNICALLY, yes, but she was not considered nearly as good of a performer. She was seen as the most artistic within the field of skaters she was competing against and whoever is seen as the best of the field automatically gets 5.9's on the second mark.
No the best in a field at a given time does not automatically get all 5.9s on the 2nd mark. In many of the years of womens skating from 77-84 there were World events without nobody getting 5.9s on the 2nd mark, and even when someone did it was never unaminous.
The only thing that seems to matter to you is the results of competitions. Sad. Yuka Sato is a better skater than Kristi Yamaguchi outside of the jumps. Given that the technical requirements of profession skating were lower, and that Sato had been continually improving in her jump consistency, it's not surprising that she would be able to challenge Kristi.
Yes Yuka is a better competitive skater than prime Kristi on the planet you live on which is not Earth. Next.
The judges dreaded anyone but "the person who is worthy of the title" winning. Midori and Kristi were the favorites and then Tonya was seen as a dark horse and Nancy was seen as Bronze at best. Since Midori and Tonya blew it in the SP, Kristi was the only person the judges wanted to see win. She was already considered the most artistic, so the more technically gifted top contenders failing to deliver was their death knell, unless Kristi seriously blew it in the LP (which she didn't and hence her scores).
Oh but wait apparent skating queen Yuka Sato was in the field (she finished 7th) so I guess Kristi wasnt really the most artistic skater that year.
Incorrect. Joannie had momentum as the reigning World Silver Medalist and her choreography was seen as better than Mao's. Not to mention her mother dying and creating sympathy. She most certainly would have won the Bronze even if the Olympics had been held in Nagasu's home town. Nagasu was seen as too immature, even if incredibly talented.
She would not have gotten as high of scores as she did nor would she have even been close to Mao in scores had the Olympics not been in Canada, had the performances been the same. Fact. I really dont care about your delusional viewpoint on the matter either.
Nope, Michelle's program was renowned. 5.9's across the board at Olympics and the most 6.0's ever for a performance by a singles skater at Nationals is not "based on very little". It's very safe to assume that Kwan would have been rewarded in the PCS.
Scores at Nationals are meaningless to a serious discussion. Sorry.
As for 5.9s across the board at Olympics let me remind you of your own words: "whoever is seen as the best of the field automatically gets 5.9's on the second mark." Kristi getting straight 5.9s (except for Japan) for even a flawed LP for her standards at the Olympics apparently didnt impress you.
That was Kwan's worst program ever from 1996 onward, even before converting it to CoP at Worlds. Terrible example.
Yet that same program was given 4 6.0s at Nationals even not skated that well anyway. I guess that already dispells the significance of how many 6.0 received at Nationals which you were using as your "proof" of something higher.
No, she DID objectively need a Triple-Triple in 2004 to ensure herself a 1st in the LP if everyone else skated their best. Miki Ando was capable of a Quad + multiple 3-3 combinations. I'm sure Kwan knew that her program without a 3-3 might not be good enough to beat that.
You really look more clueless by the minute. Miki Ando in 2004 was a horrible skater outside of her jumps, and even her jumps were mostly pitched forward and not very good quality. In the LP at Worlds she nailed everything except her quad including multiple 3-3s and barely held onto 4th place. Kwan lost the LP to Shizuka by 1 judge with a doubled 2nd triple lutz. With it she would almost certainly have won the LP over Shizuka, and the performance Shizuka did at those 2004 Worlds was 5x superior to anything Miki Ando of 2004 was ever capable of putting out even with her quad salchow. Kwan's competitors at the 2004 Worlds for gold were Shizuka and Sasha. Miki Ando was a sloppy and unpolished newbie jumping flea who could medal if the big guns crashed and burned.
More jumbled synthesizing of my points. The fact is that Cohen's LP in 2004 simply didn't have the same impact as Kwan's LP. Kwan was still artistically better than Cohen. She wasn't past her prime in 2004 because of deficiency in her presentation, she was just past her prime because of the lack of a Triple-Triple. Cohen DID skate that program her very best in the competition after Worlds and the reception for the performance was not nearly as thunderous as what Michelle received (nor were there a string of perfect 6.0's across the board).
It really shows your complete ignorance that you call Cohen's performance at Worlds (or Nationals) her very best.

At Nationals she fell and missed another jump. At Worlds she had a major error, many shaky landings, left out a combination, and was tenative. Cohen's best performances were during the Grand Prix circuit (except for the Grand Prix final) and unfortunately at Cheesefests. Best of all at a Cheesefest right after Worlds which she would have easily won Worlds or Nationals with had she duplicated it.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o2s-lm0mhbM
And you really think a prime Kwan, except for her very pre pubescent years, was some sort of triple-triple Queen? How many triple-triples did she land after the 96-97 season? An average of about only one per season up until her final World title in 2003. And the only one she ever landed was a triple toe-triple toe, the easiest one out there.
Lastly any 6.0 that was awarded at the 2004 Worlds was a joke. Given your being obliviousness to facts I am sure you arent even aware 43 6.0s were awarded at those Worlds including perfect 6.0s to the likes of Winkler & Lohse, an up and coming Pang & Tong for artistry, 11 perfect 6.0s to the then #1 but none legendary Navka & Kostomarov, Plushenko falling on his rear entering a jump and getting 6.0s. And Cohen in the short program of those Worlds when she did actually skate her best unlike her tenative and flawed LP received multiple 6.0s for presentation herself. Cohen skating subpar in the LP is likely the only reason the slew of candy bogus 6.0s they had probably reserved for Cohen went to Kwan anyway.