Yes, they would have to be trained in why skaters do the things they do the way they do them.I think that this is the big question. If the prospective "artistic judge" comes from a ballet background would hat judge mark a skater down for, "Can you believe it? She had to use a hand assist to get her leg up into that standard position. Any child in my ballet class knows better than that."
Would a musician or music critic roll his eyes and say, "Those 7 quads didn't capture the spirit of Schubert. -7 deduction points."
Some is just skating tradition and there's no reason not to do it a different way.
Some things are easy on ice that are difficult on the floor, and other things are easy on the floor that are very difficult on blades.
Some things are required by the technical side of the sport. Both what kinds of elements skaters need to include to earn TES points, and also what kinds of skating skills they need to demonstrate to earn higher Skating Skills scores.
We want to make sure that any artistic skating judges learn that basic knowledge before they try to judge the artistic aspects of skating. They won't be asked to judge the technical side, but they'll need to understand how the techniques influence what's possible, what's worth rewarding, and what's negligible.
Also learn something about the history of skating and skating choreography, so they'll get a sense of what everyone has always done, what people are doing now because it's trendy or because it gains technical points, what's truly innovative, what's retro.
I think it has to be love of skating, same as with any other judge. Even if only as a casual fan before learning that there was an opportunity to volunteer as an artistic judge.The other thing is, what would we offer to entice an expert from another field to become a figure skating judge?
From an audience/marketing point of view, bringing in celebrity performing artists would attract audiences and would bring some different kinds of expertise.
However 1) celebrities will probably expect to be paid, possibly big bucks, to judge a skating competition; 2) if they're still actively performing otherwise have demanding full-time jobs, they may not be available to judge multiple competitions per year or to go through training to understand the sport they're signing on to judge; and 3) they will be biased toward skills rewarded in their own discipline/genre, as you point out above.
RETIRED professional performers (or choreographers, directors, composers, etc.) who love skating and want to commit themselves to judging it would be great additions. So would people who have flexible jobs (in the arts or elsewhere) (or are independently wealthy and don't need to work) and also have deep knowledge of one or more art forms either as fans, scholars, or amateur participants.
And who may not know much about skating yet except that it has interested them when they happened to come across it on TV etc., but they're willing to learn as much as they need to know to do a good job evaluating all the different programs they're asked to judge.
And be willing to go where training is (at their own expense, unless a national skating federation wants to fund them) and then to go where they're needed to judge, with all expenses paid but no salary. Subject to their availability.
The other thing to keep in mind is that if we split the panels, that probably means more judges total. For major events that already have 9 judges, there could be two panels of 5 judges each, so that's not much difference.
But for less important events that typically use 5-7 judges, or even 3-5 at lowest levels, we wouldn't want to double the number of officials needed, or close to it. Lesser events can't afford that. So you might see some countries still using combined panels even for qualifying events, let alone more recreational competitions.
In that case, you might need even more total judges, which means more expense. Or would you want elite events to use 3 judges for each of these 3 panels?My idea was really to have 3 separate judges/panels to focus on different things:
- 1 for individual program elements (TP to call and judge to assign GOE)
- 1 for technical skating aspects of overall program (skating skills, transitions)
- 1 for performance aspects of overall program (expressiveness, quality of overall movement, projection, musical and/or story interpretation)
I don't think that judges' scoring of the GOEs is much influenced by orI think being assigned to only judge GOE would be better for the judges because they don't really have to think about the overall performance, and hopefully it makes the GOE assigned for each element more objective.
Jumps only take a few seconds, even including the approach and the exit. Judges can decide what the score is within 1-2 seconds after the jump is over. Maybe they'll make a note to wait to see if there are any edge or rotation calls, or even to check a rule if it's an uncommon situation. But in general, once the jump is done,
Spins and step sequences last longer. So judges have more time to think about the element while it's in progress and to consider the various positive bullet points and potential reductions, and then arrive at a score by the time the element is over.
Once it's over and the skater is moving on to the next thing, there's no more need to think about the element that has completed.
If the next thing is a jump at the far end of the ice, or some choreography that is not part of the choreo sequence, do you expect them just to turn their brains off until the next element starts?
It's easier to stay more engaged if they have something specific to think about. Like the quality of the skating between the elements. (And also within the sequences.)
I doubt it.If they also have to judge skating skills, it can impact their perspective on the elements themselves.
True.Some skaters can have a higher level of skating skills overall but have a bad day and fumbled their step sequence. That has nothing to do with their actual skating skills level, and more about element execution.
The Skating Skills component covers the whole program. One stumble, or repeated struggles throughout step sequence will have a negative effect on the GOE and will generally have a slight effect on the Skating Skills component. Maybe enough to make a difference of 0.25 or 0.5 in the SS component, maybe not, depending how severe it is and how different the quality of skating in the sequence as a whole is compared to the skating in the rest of the program as a whole.
If there are Skating Skills-only judges, they will certainly pay close attention during the step sequences and take into account the quality of the skating, along with the quality of the sequence before and after the error(s) and the quality of the skating throughout the rest of the program. If they're judging SS only, they wouldn't have to worry about how well the skating matches the music or how creative it is, but they will notice. If they're not judging those things, it shouldn't affect how they judge the Skating Skills.
Similarly, if they are judging the step sequence for GOE, they can note the quality of the skating throughout the sequence, both the positive aspects (deep clean edges, effortlessness, acceleration and deceleration, size and complexity of the pattern) and also any errors. Then they'll weigh those pluses and minuses to come up with a GOE. If they have a positive impression of the quality of skating in the step sequence before an error in the sequence, they will weigh that against the error to come up with a GOE. They won't be thinking "Oh, they were skating so strongly 2 minutes ago, I should start with a higher GOE for the step sequence before I deduct for the stumble." If they're going to start the step sequence GOE in the positives before deducting for the stumble, it's because the step sequence had positive aspects, not earlier parts of the program.
(Of course their evaluation of the step sequence GOE will not be affected by the quality of skating that happens later in the program after the step sequence -- it hasn't happened yet.)
It's not necessary, but it's more cost effective for the organizers than splitting the panel further, and will actually probably keep the judges more focused than encouraging them to zone out between elements.So I don't think it's necessary to have the GOE judge also judge skating skills.
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(This in fact is the thrust of the multiplication idea raised by