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It's early morning here and I don't have the time to read and digest all of it, but it gives me a few chuckles at this hour. And no one should take him seriously. They are a mixture of facts turned into fascetious (sp) fun.It's obvious author is not a Lysacek fan.... so Johnny fans will agree with what he writes there.
I like both Johnny and Evan, each for their own styles of skating. I agree with some of what the author says, but not all, and not the tone of the article.
There seems to be a universal belief among skating fans that USFS instructs their judges to inflate Lysacek's scores. The purported intent is that if black-wearing, Tanith-dating Lysacek wins a championship, then more American men will take a sudden interest in figure skating, boosting ticket sales and television viewership, thus making USFS rich.
This hope is absurd on its face. USFS officials -- not being idiots -- can't possibly believe this. I think the judges did the best they could, and this is how it happened to turn out.
True. Michelle has taken run-of-the-mill political correctness and transformed it into an art form. Go Michelle!American athletes [at the Olympics] are taught to display “good sportsmanship” at all times. Michelle Kwan is an international icon for integrity and classy behavior. The figure skating legend has made a career out of attaining levels of political correctness political strategists salivate over.
False. This is the real Michelle (she is not that good an actressBut Kwan is boring; and probably fake.
There seems to be a universal belief among skating fans that USFS instructs their judges to inflate Lysacek's scores. The purported intent is that if black-wearing, Tanith-dating Lysacek wins a championship, then more American men will take a sudden interest in figure skating, boosting ticket sales and television viewership, thus making USFS rich.
This hope is absurd on its face. USFS officials -- not being idiots -- can't possibly believe this. I think the judges did the best they could, and this is how it happened to turn out. If there were conspiracies going on, they would have put Kimmie higher (one extra point and she would have finished ahead of Hacker, relieving USFS of any awkwardness in chosing the world team), and they would also have done better by darling-du-jour Caroline Z.
Are these people ruling the outcomes of competitions?However, the fact that people were unhappy with how Weir placed really goes to the heart of the current with figure skating.
Fans don't get to vote for the winner of a competition. But they do get to vote -- with their feet, their pocketbooks, and their TV remotes -- on the sport itself.
To me, it is not good for the sport when the audience feels that one person clearly outskated the other, then some mathematical mumbo-jumbo comes up on the screen and they give the medal to the other guy. This will not encourage people to learn more about the new judging system, it will just make them think, same old same old, figure skating judging is a crock.
But worse than that, I think is becoming harder and harder to turn a blind eye to the direction that the CoP is pushing the sport. Johnny Weir is the poster boy for the sad fact that the more points a skater gets, the less interesting, the less beautiful, the less unique, the less satisfying to the viewer his skating becomes.
I can not say the audience in St. Paul was not in favor of the result. Evan's fans backed him and Johnny's fans backed him. The majority of 'who are they?' fans didn't give much of a hoot. The results were verbal and I don't think any but the ardent fans remained for the victory ceremony.To me, it is not good for the sport when the audience feels that one person clearly outskated the other, then some mathematical mumbo-jumbo comes up on the screen and they give the medal to the other guy. This will not encourage people to learn more about the new judging system, it will just make them think, same old same old, figure skating judging is a crock.
The article writes : The international judges love Weir and awarded him two Grand Prix victories, while Lysacek couldn’t even win Skate America (Figure Skating’s version of the American Cup a.k.a. SCAM Cup). It sure is convenient to ignore the track record - Evan with two World medals, always in top 5; Johnny without World medals, and not always in top 5. Now, I infinitely prefer Johnny's skating to Evan's, to methinks that if there were preferential treatment by USFSA (a huuuuge if), it would have more to do with the medal count rather than image and all that.