- Joined
- Oct 24, 2014
Or perhaps some judges aren't focused on ordinals gaming as you sincerely believe.... [No winks on my side for this one...]
I laid out my perspective a bit earlier on why different national federations and fans have different ways of seeing and appreciating skating.
Concern that ISU needs to do more to establish consensus and work with judges towards consistent application of the rules seems fair, assuming that judges are playing numbers games based on a single competition in which a particular team was in your view underscored makes me wonder why you continue to watch. [BTW I stopped watching skating after Salt Lake City. Only reason why I gave it another chance was because my kids fell in love with the sport, and I had to figure out how things work now.]
I really see that many judges in many countries have moved on from ordinals and have embraced IJS and COP judging....but I do accept that many GS posters are concerned about persistent tendencies to link PCS scoring to TES or to judge based on past performances rather than the day, especially the components with more subjective criteria [Performance, Composition, Interpretation].
I will note again that a strictly bottom up approach from a Canadian judge is going to produce something that may not overall be the same as the others...But as you note, it's not usually the extreme on any one element or component....Why do you assume it's gamesmanship?
IMO it's not surprizing that Skate Canada has been one of the most committed to the move away from 6.0 given the final impetus for the creation of a new system after Salt Lake City.
But it's also true that there was a longstanding dissatisfaction, and it's not too much to say loathing, by Canadian fans of the lack of transparency of 6.0 as well as the tight linking of the artistic impression ranking to technical performance.
Canadian fans seem to really want to know that their national federation has moved on. Definitely do not hear a lot of nostalgia for 6.0 among the older senior audience here, even among those who don't really understand how the new system generates the scores...
I made a mistake by using 'ordinals' as my base. Actually, it's the raw score given. Ordinals are just their way of ranking the skaters/teams but behind the ordinals are the raw numbers that ultimately decide the outcome.
Why do I assume its "gamesmanship"? It's part of strategizing - I have yet to know a person who is involved in competitions who does not plan his/her strategy. It's in the methodology that they differ.
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. For instance, practically all the scores given by the Canadian Judge to his teams V/M and G/P got retained whereas those from the Russian Judge got dropped. The Italian Judge high scores for his team got thrown, too. And all the high scores given by the Russian Judge to his team suffered a similar fate. Some Judges are either smart (Canadian) or some just not 
In everything else, Canadians are always seen as the nice/neutral/polite group.