sk8fanconvert said:
Yes, I think the wake up call that Yevgeny got at GP final will spur him on. He's been missing Alexei, I think.
I think Plushenko was just as tired as everyone else by GPF, although I agree not having a formidable rival like Yagudin along with an injury must make it hard to be prime for every competition. Had he not violated the rules, he would have won GPF, and that was without the second 3A and the missing 3S. I just can't see him being that worried about anyone else catching up to him with full jump arsenal, especially under the 6.0 system.
Plushenko was superb in the Russian Nationals -- there's a videoclip of it at rinkside -- probably the best I've seen this program performed. With rest I don't see anyone touching him at Euros or Worlds, unless he has an '04 Nationals Goebel-like SP. Abt is out, Klimkin is still (sadly) weak on his toe jumps, the judges are not giving Joubert much presentation credit for his
Matrix program, Lambiel has only one quad on his plate, Li's primarily a technician, and Honda's carriage and line doesn't hold a candle to Plushenko's.
In a feeble attempt to go back to the original topic, I don't think that Weir or Weiss will challenge Plushenko, although Weir's presentation may have a different effect if he skates cleanly: he will be the first male skater with solid technical skills -- US or otherwise -- in a long while to have the style that European judges love to death, and that should put him in good stead for the future. Setting the table for Worlds 2005, which drives Olympics 2006 qualifications, is key.
I hope that Gregory and Petukhov also make a big splash at Worlds. There are only eight teams that scored better than they did in the FD at GP (the usual suspects), and it looks like they have a chance at one of the final two spots in the top ten, along with Faeilla/Scali, whom they beat at SA, Wing/Lowe, Kulikova/Markov, Domnina/Shabalin, and Petitin/Jost. This is critical, especially if Lang/Tchernyshev don't compete next year.