Personally I think they should've mentioned the average score thing when they announced the BOW criteria. Personally, I think they probably look at three things:
1. Body of Work (Competition results as announced)
2. Average scores from
international judges
3. Consistency/trend of performances (Getting better, getting worse, or staying stagnant good or bad)
I think they should clearly outline this or announce it with the team. If they simply stated this beforehand or emphasized it so that news outlets showed the average scores of the three that made the team and Ross, I think people who didn't follow figure skating would understand the decision more. Or if they emphasized that Nationals were not an Olympic trials but rather another of a series of competitions the committee was considering, and that they were considering placement along with final score. Or if they said they were weighing final score or average international score more heavily than final placement. Or something like that.
I received a text from a friend of mine asking if this is how USFS is trying to create and draw more interest re the sport, by going mob w/ the men's event and making the decision in a smoke-filled back room before the comp has even taken place. I explained to him the criteria - and he laughed... Casual fans, alike, who have been told (in detail) the holy grail criteria used for deciding Olympic teams in the sport are
having negative reactions. Déjà vu all over again. Good luck w/ that, USFS.
Controversies like this help figure skating. When else are skaters names trending, sparking internet debates several days long, instigating flame wars and trolls, and being discussed at length in multiple Washington Post/NYT/Fox News articles?
As they say, no publicity is bad publicity. I bet people who wouldn't otherwise be interested are now tuning into the Men's FS replay to see what happened. I'm sure others are using YouTube to check.
The only other way to get skating trending is with interesting and fun programs. Jimmy Ma was probably the most talked about guy in the mainstream - even getting a trending BuzzFeed article - and he wasn't remotely in the Olympic team discussion. H/D's hip hop short dance was also noted in more than just skating discussion. All because he skated to Turn Down for What. Jason, of course, went viral for his fun Riverdance program (and, to a lesser extent, his Hamilton program). Of course Adam's SP was well-loved in some LGBT forums that saw it. My sister said she'd watch more skating if fewer skaters used classical music. A facebook friend linked me to the Shib Sib's hip hop SD and asked me why she didn't watch Ice Dance. The nerd community loves Medvedeva for her anime-themed exhibition programs.
But, will that change anything? No. Skaters are skating to please judges and maybe themselves, not get themselves or the sport more popular. The fan demographic that cheer for them in the arenas certainly doesn't help. Last night I heard two older fans complain about Nathan's FS music for being "too modern." And although I like it, it in no way sounds exceptionally modern (well, except Rite of Spring, which ironically is the oldest piece of it).
Let's discuss Max for a moment.
It appears that Max did not really have a snowball's chance in hell of making the team either if the rumor going around about Adam and Jason is correct. I've heard from a couple of
saying Dick Button would have been named to the team before Max would have - unless he won Nats which makes the whole comp a bunch of insert one swirly brown emoticon here, please.
Ooohhh do tell...
What I will never understand is why USFSA would want to send Rippon or Brown over Zhou.
I cannot see the Russian fed, the Canadian fed, or the Japanese fed making that choice. They would all pounce on Zhou and want him to have every opportunity to get experience. But the federation didn't even pounce on Nathan till he got a GPF medal. Any other country Nathan would be 3 time National champ.
The big argument is that they need Zhou to get spots for Junior worlds, although with the strong performance of the US Junior men this season I don't think it was as much of a priority. The bigger argument would be his tendency to fall and have a lot of URs/downgrades on jumps and the poor international results this year compared to Rippon and Brown.
Rafael certainly wouldn't like that and as Nathan's coach he probably has more power then Vincent's. Adam having the same coach as Nathan will pay off for him here
Well, some like to think Tom Z has some magical ability to manipulate USFS selection committees. While I don't think that's true, I do think he has a lot more power than Rafael. Rafael runs his operation out of Southern California and didn't grow up in the USFS system. He's also criticized some of USFS's policies regarding training athletes in the past. On the other hand, Tom Z is a major figure at USFS HQ's closest skating club and training center (The World Arena). You would certainly expect that to allow him to get very well acquainted with and endear himself to the top USFS execs much better than most other coaches, which may give him a slight advantage as opposed to coaches working further afield.