VGThuy
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I also feel the Men have pretty great skating skills generally speaking as well.
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I am not familiar with the exact training of singles skaters in the USA, I rely mostly on info on message boards and articles. However I am aware of what is going on in Canada, so my own reply was aimed more towards that idea. As for the rest, you can ask the poster whom I quoted.And how is edge work not a priority when the US has a strong contingent of ice dance teams?
I meant team related skills. I know parents who didn't want their daughter to go into skating partly because they had the impression it encourages the kids to be self centered. I suggested synchronized skating which they had never heard of.This one I disagree with. Sure, you don't get the team life lessons unless you do synchro but there are plenty of life lessons to be learned in any sport even individual ones.
The silver lining is that it could have been worse for them, but it wasn’t.
I saw Bradie Tennel for the 1st time last night. Hummm what to say?
Honestly, the judges were not going to do the U.S. ladies any favors.
You keep saying this and I do not know what the basis for it is at all. What favors are the judges supposed to be doing? The US ladies did not skate well at all in the individual competition at all. Yet both Bradie and Karen had their PB in terms of components in this short.
Maybe they should help themselves and skate cleaner programs.
I know there's a rule for newbie skaters on the international scene to draw first for skate order. But come on with Bradie having to skate first in the first group. That's rock bottom political clout.
No, that is what you call a random draw. This has been reviewed already in a thread you have both read and replied in. There was nothing suspicious about Bradie’s draw. She could have been anywhere in the first half and just happened to draw first.
As for Adam and Kolyada, Kolyada has better Skating skills, more speed, and more one footed skating. Adam chose a strategy that would appeal to the casual American viewer who does not, it seems, like skaters to fall. By choosing that strategy he limited the total points he could receive, but at the same time backstopped how far down in the rankings he could fall. It was a good strategy for Adam given his strengths and weaknesses, but please let’s remember that was his choice.
I would hazard a guess and say the elimination of figures in competitions is also a reason. In North American, it seems that once you can stand, you're taught to jump. Glide, edge control, all those are not taken as seriously as they once were in "figure" skating. You watch the old school skaters (ie. the likes of Scott H., Katia G., Kat Witt, Roz Summers, etc.), they had a great ability to move on the ice, not just jump.
I wouldn't put Lipinski on that list. I'd rather have a long constitstant career that maybe doesn't include an Olympic Gold, than a 15th and 1st at Worlds, no GP golds, only one National gold out of three tries and only one Olympic gold. Her career was that stellar in the grand scheme of things. Same with Sarah Hughes.
It's ok, but it's only on one year from Feb 97-98. I'd rather have a career that lasts 5-10+ years with more competitions and more medals. Like Michelle Kwan, she may not have an Olympic gold but in her case I'd rather have her career with bronze and silver than a gold. Much more consistent of a skater and competitor.
"Plenty" of times?? Exactly four, if I am not forgetting something major. 97 Nationals, 96-97 Champion Series final, 97 Worlds, 98 Olympics. Three of those wins were in a time span of about four months during which Kwan was struggling hardcore and Tara was carrying rolling momentum, and in only one of the four wins over Michelle did she manage to win both portions of the competition en route to the title (Champion Series final). She was second to Kwan in the SP at 97 Nationals, second to Kwan in the LP at 97 Worlds, and second to Kwan in the SP at 98 Olys. Meanwhile, in the events during the same time period that Kwan beat Lipinski, she basically trounced her in both segments of the competition and it wasn't even close (97 Skate America and 98 Nationals).
So yes, I would personally still definitely write Lipinski off, not as a "one-hit" wonder perhaps, but as pretty much a one-season wonder for sure. Hughes, to me, had a stronger career because she was able to gain success over time and showed that she had more longevity than one year.
She has two GPF golds I think that should count. She won every major comp but Four Continents and top US skaters didn't go there.
Not sure what the point is about 5 world titles. Who knows if Kwan would have stayed in that long if she had OGM.
The main thing is it would not be fair to write Tara off as one hit wonder. She beat Kwan plenty of times in her small career.
The ruthless centralised systems in Russia have a steady stream of willing participates because there's funding and opportunities involved. But then whether you'd want to implement that in the US is highly questionable as demonstrated by the gymnastics program.
What I mean is that none of the U.S. ladies carried in enough reputation backed up by solid performances over enough time, and thus they all lacked political rep.
U.S. Olympic coach Audrey Weisiger, founder and president of Grassroots to Champions, a consulting company that develops young skaters, believes U.S. coaches and skaters should find a way to work together for the common good.
“We need more group training for skaters, and we need to get to them earlier,” she said in a phone interview Saturday from her home in the Washington, D.C., suburbs. “Instead of reaching the 15-16-year-olds, we should be looking at the 10-14-year-olds. They don’t have to be the ones who are winning every competition yet. You want to help them on their way. You want to start checking to see how they’re physically developing, help them with the appropriate nutrition information, encourage them to take ballet, that kind of thing. And if they all do it together, it’s a lot more fun.”
Many of the Russian skaters also grew up in poverty.
American figure skaters, by contrast, generally come from the upper-middle class. Instead of giving the skater and the skater's family a better life, this sport drains their finances.
Many of the Russian skaters also grew up in poverty. In that sense, they are more akin to the typical American basketball player than the typical American skater.
However, it is not always the case. In this video https://youtu.be/YuBsOOGDL0E?t=635, you hear Zagitova crying and saying if she achieves something in the sports, it will help the family, all of this (training, suffering) won’t be in vain.
Also, those who have daughters that are skaters, or who know young girls skating in the US : why did they start ? Because the reason might has to do a lot with the outcome. Maybe.
While there are no gaps, perhaps too many, Ice Dancers in the US today, if we see know a resurgence in Men's figure skating, it normally takes years to make a champion. Although, Nathan and Vincent can carry it very well.The economic analysis technique, a recursive model, comes to mind. It looks at the cyclic phenomena that occur based on rewards/demand in prior periods and gaps in available supply. The last one I looked at many years ago was one that analyzed the supply of engineers! Never thought that I would associate it with figure skating. Sorry for getting overly geeky.
Right now in the US, men's figure skating is seeing a resurgence and if more profound, ice dancing.
The U.S. has a female skater who won the silver at Worlds just two short years ago. But the judges at Nationals, in their infinite wisdom, awarded her with lower program component scores than the self-choreographed Karen Chen and an unknown 19-going-on-20-year-old who skated to Disney princess music. Thus, the one U.S. lady who would have earned rep points from an international judging panel spent the Olympics doing Toyota promotions instead of competing on the ice.
Interesting generalization. It doesn't apply to Kwan, Harding, Galindo, Nagasu, Nathan Chen, Zhou, Tennell, Wagner, Starr Andrews, at least two prominent juniors at 2018 Nats with touching immigrant stories... for starters.American figure skaters, by contrast, generally come from the upper-middle class. .
It's hard to say without knowing what context Jen meant it in. Are we just talking about skaters who medal at nats, or are we talking about all those skaters who work hard for years and end up 4th at regionals? In the larger context it might actually be true because who else could afford such an expensive hobby.Interesting generalization. It doesn't apply to Kwan, Harding, Galindo, Nagasu, Nathan Chen, Zhou, Tennell, Wagner, Starr Andrews, at least two prominent juniors at 2018 Nats with touching immigrant stories... for starters.
Who's world are we talking about? Was it the end of my world when coke changed its recipe and came in second to Pepsi in sales? No, but I'm sure it mattered to coke.Is it really the end of the world that an American lady has not been on an Olympic podium lately? I guess so...
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Does it really matter if most are UPPER middle class if many/half/most of those who rise to the top are not?It's hard to say without knowing what context Jen meant it in. Are we just talking about skaters who medal at nats, or are we talking about all those skaters who work hard for years and end up 4th at regionals? In the larger context it might actually be true because who else could afford such an expensive hobby. Who's world are we talking about? Was it the end of my world when coke changed its recipe and came in second to Pepsi in sales? No, but I'm sure it mattered to coke.
The US gov spends billions on promoting oly sports, not to mention corporations who buy tv rights, advertisement, etc based on skating's popularity, so yeah, I doubt anyone at usfs slept well the night after the ladies LP.
Yep. I also think skating is more popular in Russia. I remember reading on gymnastics board that artistic gymnastics is kind of like boxing there not super popular parents want daughters in skating, ballet, rhythmic gymnastics.I assume it only matters in the context of pool to draw from. The more people who skate, the greater the chance of finding great talent.