floskate
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I had read about this controversy many moons ago in various books and magazines of the time, but until you see it, you don't really get an idea of the scale of it. This was a biggie!!
To set the scene, Pakhomova & Gorshkov had finished 2nd to the retiring Diane Towler and Bernard Ford at the 1969 Worlds in Colorado Springs. As such they were the supposed heir apparent's to the title and winning the 1970 Europeans didn't do anything to dissuade the judges from this assumption.
Judy Schwomeyer and Jim Sladky of the US had finished 3rd in the same event and heading into the 1970 Worlds were the main competition for the Soviets. After both compulsories and OSP, the Americans had a 1.5 point lead over P&G. All they had to do was win the free and they would be World Champions. So judge for yourselves. These are the performances of the top two teams in the FD:
Schwomeyer & Sladky 1970 Worlds FD
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQtsCOm9Byk&t=102s
Pakhomova & Gorshkov 1970 Worlds FD
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DhUo7nkM28g&t=89s
The Soviet Judge placed the Americans 4th in the free dance, but others placed them third as well. It was a 5/4 panel and Mollie Phillips of Great Britain who was judge number 1 as you look at the scores is the judge who placed the Russians ahead in the free and thus swinging it in their favour. According to Lynn Copely-Graves in her book 'Evolution of Dance on Ice', Phillips' reasoning for this placement was that Judy's behind stuck out!!! All of this meant that Pakhomova & Gorshkov gained 1.6 points on their American rivals in the free dance thus giving them the victory by one tenth of a point and one vital ordinal.
Now Ice Dance is littered with controversial results as we all know, but what bothered me about this is that the Americans showed the judges the future of the sport.....and the judges shut the door on it. How different would the sport have been if the Americans had won and been the dominant pair up to 1972. The fact that Pakhomova & Gorshkov lost the 1972 Europeans to Buck & Buck of West Germany shows that not everyone was convinced, particularly by Gorshkov. As Ian Phillips wrote in the April 1970 edition of Skating World;
Ouch!!
Thoughts?
To set the scene, Pakhomova & Gorshkov had finished 2nd to the retiring Diane Towler and Bernard Ford at the 1969 Worlds in Colorado Springs. As such they were the supposed heir apparent's to the title and winning the 1970 Europeans didn't do anything to dissuade the judges from this assumption.
Judy Schwomeyer and Jim Sladky of the US had finished 3rd in the same event and heading into the 1970 Worlds were the main competition for the Soviets. After both compulsories and OSP, the Americans had a 1.5 point lead over P&G. All they had to do was win the free and they would be World Champions. So judge for yourselves. These are the performances of the top two teams in the FD:
Schwomeyer & Sladky 1970 Worlds FD
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQtsCOm9Byk&t=102s
Pakhomova & Gorshkov 1970 Worlds FD
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DhUo7nkM28g&t=89s
The Soviet Judge placed the Americans 4th in the free dance, but others placed them third as well. It was a 5/4 panel and Mollie Phillips of Great Britain who was judge number 1 as you look at the scores is the judge who placed the Russians ahead in the free and thus swinging it in their favour. According to Lynn Copely-Graves in her book 'Evolution of Dance on Ice', Phillips' reasoning for this placement was that Judy's behind stuck out!!! All of this meant that Pakhomova & Gorshkov gained 1.6 points on their American rivals in the free dance thus giving them the victory by one tenth of a point and one vital ordinal.
Now Ice Dance is littered with controversial results as we all know, but what bothered me about this is that the Americans showed the judges the future of the sport.....and the judges shut the door on it. How different would the sport have been if the Americans had won and been the dominant pair up to 1972. The fact that Pakhomova & Gorshkov lost the 1972 Europeans to Buck & Buck of West Germany shows that not everyone was convinced, particularly by Gorshkov. As Ian Phillips wrote in the April 1970 edition of Skating World;
"It will always be a mystery to me what happened in the free.......when Britain marks them (Schwomeyer & Sladky) down in the free as well it is totally beyond my comprehension. Pakhomova is a brilliant performer, but her partner is no skater!"
Ouch!!

Thoughts?
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