Some of y'all are being very harsh about what everyone had to know ahead of time. For the Olympic team, a silver medalist has never been dumped before the bronze medalist, and never for a non-medaling GP finalist. I agree with the committee's Olympic team decision (but not the alternates) but I could see how a former world team member like a Miner or Hochstein could have thought there was hope coming into nationals. Particularly hope for if a silver medal was earned.
It wasn't clear in 2014 that the choice was between Wagner and Nagasu or Edmunds and Nagasu. If Edmunds had been dropped, the outrage would have been higher then, aside from the people who thought it was a racist move to drop Nagasu, because the silver medalist had been dropped.
Actually, you don't EARN GP events at all. Federations can pick as they wish and often deliberately select skaters ranked lower so they are less competitive with their skaters. GP selection is entirely variable and they can pretty much do what they want. You might qualify for 2, but that doesn't mean you'll get 2 offers.
I don't know where you're getting this: individual skaters earn guaranteed a certain number of spots from the prior season's results, and the only way they don't get them is if their Federation doesn't submit their names for GP. (See Sandhu and Sokolova.) The host Feds can't bypass them unless:
- There are more guaranteed spots than total spots-total host spots (for non-guaranteed skaters), in which case, there isn't room for anyone down the list, either
- All 18 spots for the country are already taken, which, while mathematically possible, is highly unlikely, even among Russian Ladies
Top 12 (singles) or 10 (pairs/dance) at prior worlds are guaranteed two spots. It is mathematically impossible for them to not get all of their spots, since they are, at worst, selected after host spots, and there is a max of three from each country at Worlds, which leaves 54 spots for 24 singles from prior Worlds, 42 spots for 20 dance teams from prior Worlds, and 30 spots for 20 Pairs from Prior Worlds. There is a selection order based on groups of how they placed at prior Worlds: 1-3, 4-6, 7-9 (singles), 7-10 (pairs/dance), 10-12 (singles). The only way that an event doesn't have one from each group is if the host chooses two skaters from the same group, which has happened, but not even a handful of times in a decade or 2, and, in those cases, one host has two picks from 1-3 or 7-9 and the other has two picks from 4-6 or 10-12.
Then everyone who is age-eligible in the Top 24 SB but not guaranteed two for Worlds is selected for at least one. If none of the Top 10/12 at Worlds was in the Top 24 SB list, and every host picked three skaters/teams that were not guaranteed at least one spot, and every skater/team in the Top 24 SB list were age-eligible, it is mathematically impossible for Top 24 singles guaranteed one to not get one: there would be 6 spots left for those guaranteed 1 for Top 24 WS; in Dance, four teams in the Top 24 SB would be left off; in Pairs 14 teams would.
Not guaranteed are:
- Top 24 SB or Top 24 WS get their guaranteed one spot once 18 spots for their country have been assigned
- Top 24 SB or Top 24 WS get their guaranteed spot once all 72/60/48 are filled by host spots and other skaters guaranteed spots, ie, the only Skater SB 75 who can get a spot is a host skater.
- Top 24 SB and Top 24 WS get a second, which means once they get one spot, they can be bypassed by Skater SB 75.
- Top 24 SB and Top 24 WS getting alternate spots before Skater SB 75. This could mean if guaranteed spots ran out before all guaranteed could get one, they might not get alternate spots that opened up, but would be treated like any other skater/team on the alternates list without two.