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You are posting these things as if a Patrick fan would be oblivious of his favourite skater's faults. It's not the case. Pretty aware of his lows but also very aware of his best skating. There is no need to try to show that Patrick wasn't perfect. He wasn't Yet, what he achieved was a turning point in men's skating. Tracy Wilson said it herself : Patrick was the first skater who combined the beautiful skating with the quads. She knows one thing or two about that.Just to stick to facts.
I'm not sure what you mean here.It's true that with the number of jump passes in the Free, and the total number of available Quadruple jumps, even in the times when Ilia Malinin would rotate his regular Quadruples and practice 4 + 4, he was barred from putting one such combination in a layout because he would lose on TES; yet I do believe that he would have been able to have it in competition.
What do you mean about 4+4 being inaccessible?But now I don't think that he would be able. Maybe the suggestion came from people believing that he would still be able, and be the only one to benefit of such change of rules; or maybe it came from people willing to advantage other skaters because they haven't thought of that or know that a 4 + 4 would be inaccessible to him now;
Yes, undoubtedly there will be some unexpected results with any major rule change.maybe it simply came from someone feeling a lack of balance and willing to redress it with a new rule, which rarely gives the expected results?
That's not so terribly outrageous, though. What with GOE swing (say. +2 for fully rotated versus -2 for <. that brings it down brings in down to 60%, plus the under-rotation might cause a fall and will also be reflected in PCSs.The Base Value of underrotated jumps is 80% of the full base value. Just saying.

While I do respect some of Mr Button's opinions, I venture to suggest that this one is rather more sweepingly soundbitey than seriously heartfelt, given he never to my knowledge suggested one of his own OGMs was dubiously won or demurred at the accolade for having two.Well. it's ancient history now and memories fade. What I remember of figure skating discussions of that era there was a feeling among fans who considered themselves "purists" -- Dick Button was one such -- who felt that a fall should get 0 points because if you fell, you didn't really do the element. (This sentiment has not entirely disappeared, as some of the posts of this thread attest.)
you are welcomeA Patrick stan and Yuzu stan beefing, it's like I've been transported back to 2015!![]()

He didn't turn down the 1952 OGM, but he did feel kind of bad about it.When he was asked point blank, which of your two Olympic experiences were you most proud of, he didn't have any hesitation in saying, "Oh, the first, of course. In the other one I fell."While I do respect some of Mr Button's opinions, I venture to suggest that this one is rather more sweepingly soundbitey than seriously heartfelt, given he never to my knowledge suggested one of his own OGMs was dubiously won or demurred at the accolade for having two.
That's why they are being paid the big bucks, to come up with details that work. T-current-PTB are not really earning their keep, are they?The devil, of course, is in the details.

Ice, ice, ice. I like gliding moves better than steps. Why? Because gliding is what you can do on ice. You can step on dry land.
Well, yes, but you can't jump higher and farther AND rotate 3 or 4 times in the air at the same time on land. Unless you have some other equipment to facilitate the process.Spins are more icy than jumps. You can spin on ice better than you can spin on land, whereas you can jump higher and farther on land than you can on ice.
Yes. That is something of an exaggeration, but sarcasm aside it is essentially correct. The tech panel determines what elements are performed, and the judges exercise their judgment on GOEs and PCSs, subject to ISU guidelines and mild oversight. This is the IJS. It was explained quite clearly back in 2003. Why are we still pretending to be gobsmacked by such a concept?
As a mum, I do not agree. It might be true for US, this I do not know, but city rinks here are full of music, fun and people in winter, many kids have skates, or just rent them, and "going for a skate" is still a popular pastime here, both for kids and young adults. Still, somehow it does not translate much to watching, neither figure skating, nor speed skating. Figure skating used to be popular on TV but it is not anymoreWell, that's just me. But if the ISU can't sell ice, then I am not optimistic about its ability to compete with other sports and with other entertainments for audience share. In the olden days ice skating was a popular pastime for children and for recreational and social skaters. That era has slipped away. Not enough people skate any more, and this translates into shrinking audience interest.![]()

If you wanna sell things to the general public, you go where the general public goes.And, of course, "the people" consists of numerous different audiences who have different priorities.
You've got arts fans who enjoy figure skating for the beautiful musical movement (including beautifully done jumps but not messy/failed ones), sports fans who are all about the jumps and want to see obvious difficulty like extra revolutions rewarded and obvious errors like falls severely penalized, casual fans who like the human interest drama (including faces they recognize from the last Olympics 4 years earlier) and politics, serious fans who are more knowledgeable and like more than one of those things, as well as less obvious aspects of skating technique in some cases, but may have different preferences from each other (as seen in this thread).
And then, of course, the skaters themselves, who know which skills they like best to do and which they think are most worthy of being promoted.
Skaters and some serious fans care very much about jump technique such as takeoff edges and rotation, but casual fans usually just care whether the jump looks good to them in real time or not.
On-ice techniques such as steps and turns may have an even bigger difference since new fans may not realize that how you get from one end of the rink to the other, from one element to the next, is a big part of what matters. If they're used to sports where only getting the ball in the goal earns points and there are no points from how you get from one end of the field to the other does not earn points, it won't seem intuitive. Even for gymnastics or diving fans, how you climb and walk to the end of the diving board or how you run up to the vault are not part of the scoring, so understanding that how you skate between elements may not be something they'd consider important.
Etc.
With all these different audiences, how should the ISU choose which ones to prioritize?