Here is a pretty simple question:
Let's say Mao and Caro K are competing at an event.
Mao does a big beautiful 3 Lutz, lands cleanly and flows well out of the landing. But her take off edge is wrong - she flutzes. But everything else was good even some nice steps on her approach to the jump.
Let's say Caro telegraphs her entrance but uses the correct edge for her take off, complets her 3 rotations, but has an awkward landing, and loses a little balance and has no flow out of the jump.
In the old 6.0 era I know which jump would have been considered better.
How about under Cop. Who would get more points as I described - Mao or Caro?
Thanks for any answers.
Mao. Assuming the edge was bad enough to get an “e” call from the technical panel, the deduction in is –1 to –3, depending on the judges’ evaluation of the severity of the wrong edge. Also, the overall GOE on the element must be negative no matter what extra good features the jump had.
She would probably get –2 for the edge, mitigated by +1 for the positive features, for a total of –1 total GOE. (Let's give her the bullets for "clear recognizable steps immediately preceding the jump" and "superior flow in and out.") This gives her
5.0 for the element. 6.0 base value – 1.0 GOE.
Without the positive features she would probably get 4.0 for the element.
If the technical panel gives her a “!” (questionable edge) instead of “e” (definitely wrong edge), then the judges are on their own. They can disagree with the tech specialist and say, “I didn’t see any wrong edge,” and/or they can factor positive features in with the negative to end up with a 0 or even positive GOE overall. Most likely: -1 GOE for the edge, +1 GOE for the good stuff = 0 GOE overall.
6.0 for the element.
By the way, last season Mao worked hard on her Lutz and improved from an automatic “e” to a “!” or maybe no edge call at all – but at the cost of entering the jump overcautiously and making other errors based on mistiming.
Carolina Kostner. Penalty for telegraphing is –1 GOE (but this is a judgement – sometimes the judges let it go). Penalty for “awkward landing and no flow” is trickier. The no flow part is not a specific error and does not by itself carry a penalty. For awkward landing, there are specific penalties for “stepping out of the landing,” (-2 GOE, negative GOE overall), for touching down with one of both hands, for landing on the wrong foot, etc. But just your run-of-the-mill shaky landing would not warrant a penalty in GOE.
She might get –1 GOE overall for a total of
5.0 for the element.
(You professional judges out there, how did I do?

)
Here is the main document for all of these numbers.
http://isu.sportcentric.net/db//files/serve.php?id=934
Edited to add: It is not so obvious to me what would happen under 6.0 judging, because everything is lumped together into just two overall marks. Sometimes it seemed like skaters could flutz merrily away and nobody cared. Other times, they got dinged for it. Tara Lipinski took some serious hits for flutzing in the 1997-98 season, even though she was the reigning world champion.
Generally speaking under CoP the skaters do not get marlked down in GOE just because the judges thought the element wasn't very pretty. There has to be a specific error.