ETA- So I'm going to give an example. I was landing 2T and 2S pretty easily at one point, and even rotating a 2A. I wasn't skating at a 'dangerous' level but I certainly wasn't very good. You're telling me that, because I'm at a low level (and would represent a developing nation in skating), I should still as my 33 year old self have a chance to go to Worlds?
Well, if you were 13-18 you would be at a level that we do see from skaters on the JGP circuit. To be credible at the junior level, a skater needs a double axel (at least an attempt) and a double-double combination plus a specified harder double as the solo jump in a legal short program.
We do sometimes see skaters who are no closer to meeting the SP jump requirements than you would have been, though most are at least capable of the doubles albeit inconsistent.
The skaters who get to Junior Worlds, with minimums in place, are better than that.
But we expect more than that from seniors.
I would actually prefer, rather than making people reach some technical score that changes constantly in order to control the number of entrants, that it was based on the skills someone has. For example, I think you should have to have at least one triple to compete at the Senior level. That would be harder to police though. So maybe having a technical score that is typical for skaters with at least X number of triples and a double axel who can get at least to level 2 on steps and spins would be a decent substitute.
Agreed.
Seniors are required to have two different triples in the short program, along with a double axel. Any two triples are allowed.
So set the SP tech minimums as 3T+2T, 3S, and 2A, plus level 2, perhaps, for spins and steps. And then add the equivalent of another 3T, another 3S, another 2A, and three or four more double jumps (to allow for a seventh jump pass and three combinations total) in the freeskate.
Given the current requirements, that seems like a reasonable minimal expectation for seniors.
And someone who has good overall technical quality but lacks the ability to rotate triples could make up the difference with intentional doubles, at least in the freeskate, and positive GOEs. And/or level 3s and 4s on the spins and steps.
Personally, I'm more concerned about the quality of the skating than the jump content, to tell the truth, although that is less objective to quantify. I'd want to see skaters averaging at least 4.0 for SS in juniors and 5.0 in seniors. And we usually do, at junior and senior worlds, with a few exceptions.
But if that were an actual requirement along with the tech minimums, would judges start fudging the SS scores of skaters on the bubble for meeting the requirements? The same for GOEs.
If it's just small federation compatriot judges inflating their own skaters' scores at senior B events, how much effect could they have given the trimming and averaging? Perhaps enough to make the difference between just making the cut for the Worlds minimums and just missing it.