He doesn't flow out of jumps though for 4T and 3F -- if he did great flow, triple should be no problem according to my understanding of jump mechanics, which I admit is low. From what i gather, great landing means good speed on exit and an effortless triple on this level of skating. The extent of my knowledge is limited to Mozalev, who specifically can have very beautiful textbook 4S and 4T, but only if he gains enough height. Which he has troubles with. If he doesn't, he URs and falls. Yuma's knees are softer, so sometimes he doesn't fall, but I think it might also be the same problem so he maybe very well q or even UR. He definetly didn'thave any flow on 3A. Is the narative that he landed it fully rotated, then tripped somehow? How can he be a great textbook jumper and do that all the time? Something must be not right.
I don't think you need to tell DizzyFrenchie about the issues with Yuma's jumps sometimes. I think a lot of discussions were held regarding the GOEs he gets sometimes (while when solid, his 4S is solid, the axis is just... horrible). While I am also in the camp that Ilias programs can be quite empty at times, I will acknowledge that he does have the best 4Lz, 4F and Loop in the game right now. Never have to worry about edges and excessive prerotation with him. Him doing skid takeoffs might be why I find his Axels to be wonky sometimes, nonetheless, again. Indeed the best jumper out there. And when he does bring out the livelyness, the skates are entertaining. Ilia for me is just someone who has taken the current rules to their absolute Limit (and if he wins like that, fine.)
He could take out two quads and have to worry less about possible qs and underrotations overall- and we would get a more balanced program for him. He has the stamina for that, if he wanted to. A 5-quad program could score 225+ as well, if composition etc. are improved.
My issue with this entire thing is the fact that you either judge everyone according to the same standard, that being one of the two
1) Lots of good (! highlight on the good) quads, good landing, good edges, flow in and out of the jumps, but less transitions= high PCS
2) Less quads (still of good quality), but a more artistic and complete program = high PCS
My example for this would be the 2025 WC, where I personally believe that what Ilia delivered, if judged to the 2nd standard that more people would like to see, did about 5-6 points more in SS,PR,Composition than Mikhail Shaidorov, who got 82 in PCS. Ilia got 91.
Yuma, with falls and obvious mistakes, got 87. 5 points higher than a clean quadster. Shouldn't this new set of rules be standardised across all skaters competiting ?
When you have obvious PCS caps for those who deliver the technical AND improve in the artistic because they would come out ahead of
artistes who don't deliver... That is where I disagree. Judge how ever you want, but if the system is not consistent, that is what we have a gripe with.
Does Ilia have off days when he does't fully rotate his jumps? Yes! And then they should get calls like everyone else, not a glossing over because quads are so hard anyway. But really, my issue is not with him. I would like him to win the Gold very much and see how the Sport develops from there. What will also be interesting to see is how long he can maintain his physical peak. The current US skaters after him don't seem to have the mix of exceptional athleticism paired with passable skating skills and very good presentation (say about his costumes what you will, at least we are getting backflips
with sparkly costumes and Gen Z snark now). And when Ilia retires, you will soon see the pendulum swing in the other direction, with big federation
artistes winning events unless they are beaten in a technical margin again.
To conclude: Limiting quad jumps isn't the issue, Limiting bullshit judging is.
When Skaters like Vasilievs, Tomono and cohort don't get the cushy PCS margin a Jason Brown or Kevin Aymoz gets even with mistakes, that's where the issue is. Either you reward one type of skating equally or penalise it. If Shaidorov was French, he would be seeing other scores. And that's the issue with figure skating in general.
Sincerly, someone who starting keeping up with this mess because of Yuzuru Hanyu.