Kecasyl
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 946
He wasnt a regular medalist yearly if that is what you mean. He didnt medal at 2005, 2006 Olympics, 2007 worlds, 2008 worlds, at the 2006, 2007, or 2009 grand prix finals (he didnt even qualify for some of those). And he only was better than bronze twice- 2009 worlds and 2010 Olympics. And just emerging on the scene in 2005 and retiring after 2010, he doesnt have the longevity of many of his peers either.
A better example of a regular medalist outside the dominant skaters like Plushenko, Hanyu, and Chan, would be Brian Joubert who has 6 world medals, 4 of those gold or silver, along with numerous 4th place finishes, and TEN European medals/3 European golds against stellar competition (he has a far better record at Europeans skating against Plushenko, Lambiel, Verner, and others than Evan has at the way weaker U.S nationals skating against against only Weir and Abbott, heck he has a weaker record at Nationals than Weir and Abbott). Evan is far more similar to Lambiel, not a very long career, not even a regular medalist in big events, never dominant even in his own part of the world let alone global, very few international wins even on the regular grand prix circuit, not even a Europeans title which is about on par with Evan having a mere 2 U.S titles. Even Stephane though outside of Olympic Gold vs Olympic silver (and silver is all Evan would ever get vs 2006 Plushenko too) eclipses Evan every other way- Grand prix finals, worlds wins, world medals success, overall internationals, National wins, and far greater artistic and even technical impact on the sport; and missed podiums far less often when he competed than Evan from 2005-2010.
You want to try again?!? And maybe fact check when you do? He won gold at the 2009 GPF, and he won bronze at the 2007 one and was credited with quads in both his programs. You can sit down now.