Regarding PCS and Grades of Execution, I believe that each judge should submit a grid of appreciation for each season and discipline/category, and hold to it for all competitions.
How would this work?
I fully support increasing the value of PCS, but only if it’s judged accurately. What’s the point of a masterpiece program—like Kagayama’s, with intricate edges, transitions, skating skills, interpretation, speed, and expression—if it earns only 2–3 points more than Malinin? Ilia’s technical superiority deserves high marks, but the current system lets skaters make up for artistry with one extra jump. The value of a double axle, which even pre-novice or juvenile skaters can land, shouldn’t outweigh the difference between Kagayama’s program and Malinin’s.
PCS spreads are far too narrow today.
The system needs recalibration. PCS must reflect real differences in skill and artistry, giving top skaters mid- to high-nines for exceptional programs and lower scores to less accomplished skaters. There must be a way to give Kagayama 9.5 in skating skills and edge quality, Ilia 7.0, and scale other categories so differences are clear and properly rewarded.
So if Malinin gets 7.0, what would you give to the skaters who are currently earning 7 (i.e., the lowest score currently defined as "good" rather than "above average")?
And then if you lower those skaters' scores into the above average and average range, what scores do you give to skaters who are not at average senior skill level?
Considering that the vast majority of skaters in the world are not senior level and do not deserve 5s and higher. What scores should below-average seniors, average juniors, and below-junior skaters of all qualities earn if many skaters who deserve to compete at Worlds and Grand Prix are earning 5s on your scale?
Personally, I'd rather just increase the factoring of the PCS so that, e.g., for a senior men's short program the difference between 8.00 and 9.00 for skating skills would be more than 1.0, and for senior women at least 1.0, and double that for free skates. The current PCS factors were set 20+ years ago when two 4T and one 4S (or vice versa) was cutting edge jump difficulty for a men's FS. There needs to be room for potential differences in PCS totals to be more commensurate with potential differences in jump content, but not by stretching the meaning of the different scores at the upper end of the 0-10 range that covers a few hundred of senior skaters so far that the lower end of the range has to get compressed while covering many thousands of non-senior skaters around the world.
Should there be different PCS scales for different competition levels?
Especially when we're talking about Skating Skills.
Performance and Composition may need to be more strongly separated from the SS score when applicable, and have clearer standards that apply across all skill levels. But to the extent the execution of choreographic choices relies on control of the blades and vocabulary of blade-to-ice movement, they will remain fairly closely related.
And when it comes to evaluating artistry (i.e., the current Performance and Composition components), there need to be ways to reward creative and musical use of the blades regardless of the style of a particular program.
It could probably be possible (though not necessarily affordable) with today's technology to measure average and maximum ice speed throughout a program. Should be relatively easy for AI to count percentage of forward and backward, clockwise and counterclockwise skating. If there were technologically assessed scores for those aspects of skating skills, without judges knowing what the measurements/scores were, would that give more powerful and more multidirectional skating higher scores regardless of judges' opinions about the artistry or the jump content?
What about technological measurement of edge depth and security, and cleanness of turns, throughout a program? Efficiency of acceleration?
Not to mention "effortlessness." We're probably many years further away from technological assessment of those more subjective aspects of skating quality being a feasible addition. Maybe someday...
Would anything machine measurable end up being scored on an open-ended scale rather than being capped at 10.0?