- Joined
- Sep 23, 2020
I am sorry but it is simply not true, and in more ways than one.The skater who fell on two quads and won the Olympics wasn't Patrick Chan who himself landed his two beautiful quad toes.
In Sochi FS, as that's what is being referred here, Patrick Chan did land beautifully one quad toe and had two hands down on the ice on the other quad toe which can hardly be considered a beautiful landing - and so thought the judges handing him negative GOE of -1.57 on the +3/-3 scale. He also almost fell on his 3A, saving his buttocks from touching the ice by a nail with his two hands on the ice again, hardly a beautiful landing either. He got -3 GOE - that is the maximum penalty, just like for a fall - from 5 of 9 judges, and -2.57 in total.
The "skater who won the Olympics" - that is, Yuzuru Hanyu - fell on 4S indeed but landed 4T beautifully with GOE of 2.14 on the +3/-3 scale.
He fell again on 3F - in a manner very similar to what Patrick did on his 3A, with two hands on the ice, but here it was considered a fall - but, unlike Patrick, Yuzu landed his both 3As - one beautifully, one just ok.
In the end of the day, Yuzu won the Free Skate with 2 falls - one on a quad and one on a triple - for which he received -3 GOE and 2 points deduction - over Patrick's skate with two hands on the ice twice, once on a quad and once on a triple - just because he had better overall TES on the remaining elements and these remaining elements were more difficult.
That was not the greatest competition segment from either of them but Yuzu won this segment, too, adding to his decisive win in SP with a program which has become legendary - and winning OGM at 19 against the 3-time World Champion.
The rest is history.
https://www.isuresults.com/results/owg2014/owg14_Men_FS_Scores.pdf
ETA It would be just fair to add that Patrick himself had won competitions with falls and multiple falls earlier on, both on quads and triples, once he had even 3 falls in SP, 4 in the whole competition, and won anyway.
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