I disagree, I don't think it's too harsh. First of all, skaters with lower difficulty already experience this, because they get the GOE deduction and the fall deduction, so for example a 2T is basically worth less than doing no jump at all, so it's already happening. The fall deduction is relatively a lot bigger on less difficult jumps. Second, yes, I think a clean single axel should be worth more than a fall on a 3A. A 1A isn't worth a lot, it's completely unrealistic that a skater with little difficulty would suddenly beat a top skater that way. Third, I think it makes the sport more viewer-friendly and easier to understand. A fall = zero points. If we take Yuzuru Hanyu's Cup of China performance from 2014 and eliminate all points of elements he fell on (and no additional fall deduction), he would have still been in 5th place, but not on the podium.
No, I was just talking about falls.
That Cup of China result was also attributed to ridiculously high PCS — 84.02 (the highest of all the skaters!!!!) with FIVE falls. He got 9’s from multiple judges and scores as high as 8.75 for performance and execution. It was arguably the worst PCS judgment ever.
Also back then the deduction (-3 for a fall) wasn’t as severe. Had falls cost 50% on the GOE deduction his tech score would have been way lower, including mandatory cumulative-fall deductions.
In 2014 for those 5 fall passes Hanyu got 27.65 - 5.0 = 22.65 points (original base value of all of them was 40.71). So his falls got 68% of the base value and a -1 for each of the five falls.
If the 50% deduction off base value and incremental fall deductions (-1 for the first two falls, -2 for each of the next two falls, -3 for 5th fall), he would theoretically got 20.35 (50% - maybe slightly higher because some judges awarded -2’s instead of -3s so they might have given -4s instead of the usual -5). But then a mandatory -9 deduction. So his points would have been around 11-12 points. Which is about half of the points he was given under 2014 CoP… difference of about 10-11 points.
Couple that with the gross PCS judging (also way high PCS in the SP given he did just a triple toe instead of a quad, and stepped out of the lutz and this no combo). Unquestionably his FS PCS should have been sub-80, and if we are being fair to the field and treating him as an absolute instead of a favourite, low 70’s PCS. The falls completely detracted from the program’s interpretation and transitions (no exit transitions on falls), and of course performance and execution. If he was an newbie/unknown skater the judges would have buried him and put his PCS in the mid-60’s.
I don’t think Hanyu should have had zero points on those 5 passes which would have negated a whole 40 points. But definitely his PCS was too high and the fall deductions being not as severe back then (on GOE and there not being incrementally higher deductions after more than 2 falls) did help him.
Under today’s scoring deductions on falls Hanyu would have been 3rd no matter how much the judges tried to save him on PCS. And if the PCS were actually fair (no higher than 70-75 with 5 falls) he’d have been 18-20 points lower, 5th behind Ge, as you said. Which TBH is still a good GP result for any skater with 7 major errors - 5 FS falls, and giving up the equivalent of about 15 points of base value+GOE on the triple quad and the no-lutz-combo SP errors.