airgelaal
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It's just that other skaters will have the opportunity to shine. If success at 15 was everything, we would never see a figure skater like Loena Hendrickx.
It's just that other skaters will have the opportunity to shine. If success at 15 was everything, we would never see a figure skater like Loena Hendrickx.
Kaori was successful as a junior, but Loena not.Or Kaori Sakamoto, for that matter. Obviously there are a lot more historical examples. But fact that Kaori and Loena were doing the best skating of their lives just this past season, and a lot of us found them way more enjoyable to watch than all the stressed, injured, emaciated teenagers, is pretty good evidence that raising the age minimum won’t be the apocalypse that some people are predicting. There’s never been a shortage of great skaters over 17.
Kaori was successful as a junior, but Loena not.
For example, its Loena when she was 15
She finished this competition in 14th place, while Kaori won silver. And not so long ago they stood together on a pedestal.
In the US, many male pairs & ice dancers have a lot (or most or all) of their expenses paid for by the girl's parents.Plenty of them seem to shell our for young adults quite happily right now. If they do it when the young adults in question are male (or ice dancers), why wouldn't they do it when they're female too?
The same arguments for why it would be hard to cheat on the year kids are born also apply to cheating on the month and day they are born.Oh I did want to mention something on the topic of faking ages. How do we know that wasn’t already being done to make sure people were on the right side of 15 for olympic years? Trusova, for instance, has a birthday 8 days before the cutoff. if she was born nine days later don’t you think they would’ve changed it?
I suppose it might be easier to try and cheat and say "ohhhhh, her DOB was entered incorrectly and she's a month older than we've thought, but no one caught it all these years," but, again, so many of these skaters are competing at a young age and getting attention because the competitions are being streamed online or results are readily available and that personal information winds up being known at least amongst hardcore fans. I just don't think it would be as easy for Russia to manipulate DOBs as it has been for China in other sports in the past (or even Sui a dozen years ago, if those rumors are true).Oh I did want to mention something on the topic of faking ages. How do we know that wasn’t already being done to make sure people were on the right side of 15 for olympic years? Trusova, for instance, has a birthday 8 days before the cutoff. if she was born nine days later don’t you think they would’ve changed it?
Or Kaori Sakamoto, for that matter. Obviously there are a lot more historical examples. But fact that Kaori and Loena were doing the best skating of their lives just this past season, and a lot of us found them way more enjoyable to watch than all the stressed, injured, emaciated teenagers, is pretty good evidence that raising the age minimum won’t be the apocalypse that some people are predicting. There’s never been a shortage of great skaters over 17.
I suppose it might be easier to try and cheat and say "ohhhhh, her DOB was entered incorrectly and she's a month older than we've thought, but no one caught it all these years," but, again, so many of these skaters are competing at a young age and getting attention because the competitions are being streamed online or results are readily available and that personal information winds up being known at least amongst hardcore fans. I just don't think it would be as easy for Russia to manipulate DOBs as it has been for China in other sports in the past (or even Sui a dozen years ago, if those rumors are true).
Leaving their physique aside, what disturbed me was how upset the Russian girls looked after any program that wasn’t perfect. I don’t mean the awful catastrophe that every skater dreads, just a missed jump or stumble. Like the beatings would commence at 0600 hours….Scherbakova looked emaciated. Kamila and Alina both look slender but healthy. Trusova has serious muscle tone.
I'm not going to get into Sarah Thunder Thighs Hughes or Oksana I Drunk My Dinner Baiul.
Scherbakova looked emaciated. Kamila and Alina both look slender but healthy. Trusova has serious muscle tone.
I'm not going to get into Sarah Thunder Thighs Hughes or Oksana I Drunk My Dinner Baiul.
LMAO! That sounds like something my grandmother would have tried if she were alive today. One of her daughters was born 1 day before the school's deadline and, sure as heck, she put her in school that year. She also had, by that point, 5 kids and wanted 3 of them in school, lol.My son was born two weeks after the cutoff for his school and I ground them down by an argument that had he been premature, he would have made the deadline, and they are discriminating against full term babies while privileging the premature, with all the development delays it entails. The bullshit hose was turned to eleven so they simply folded.
And me on the contrary, when the performance was perfect.Leaving their physique aside, what disturbed me was how upset the Russian girls looked after any program that wasn’t perfect. I don’t mean the awful catastrophe that every skater dreads, just a missed jump or stumble. Like the beatings would commence at 0600 hours….
No, this would be wrong as the season starts on July 1st, so you would have skaters who aren't allowed to compete senior for the 1st half of the season (Challengers, GPs and the GPF if they qualify), but can compete at Euros/4CCs, Olympics and Worlds. The fairest way to do it is to have them all be 17 at the start of the season.I agree with changing the age limit but I think it should be 17 by 12/31. All 17 year olds should be eligible. This would mean 17 by Worlds or the Olympics and would avoid the situation where a skater is 17 by July 2 and has to wait until they are 18.
I personally think that Michelle “I’m just here to have fun” Kwan fostered unrealistic expectations with regard to how skater should feel about wins and losses, and with regard to the level of restraint one is supposed to display in K&C. And I love her you know.Leaving their physique aside, what disturbed me was how upset the Russian girls looked after any program that wasn’t perfect. I don’t mean the awful catastrophe that every skater dreads, just a missed jump or stumble. Like the beatings would commence at 0600 hours….
Have you ever seen a baseball star break a bat in frustration? A football star doing a long dance in the end zone? The camera following a tennis player who double-faulted? That thrill of victory and agony of defeat is intrinsic to sports.I don't really wish to see the Kiss and Cry anymore. It's just ridiculous to me to focus on skater or coach reactions, whether good or bad, about the skating. Emotions will be high one way or the other, and I find it makes me question whether this thing's really a sport or not sometimes.
Oh, come on... It's part of the drama of any sport - the reactions to a great play or scores. We see it when divers and gymnasts are waiting for their marks, we see teams celebrating on the sidelines or tumbling out of the dugout when a clutch touchdown, three-pointer or home run happens. Take away the KnC and you make the sport even less interesting or relatable to the public. Everyone understands and knows that sigh of relief that Isabeau Levito gave when her marks came up in the FS at Jr Worlds and she stayed in the lead. Everyone understands and appreciates the "aw shucks" humility of Nathan, even when Raf was raising their fists victoriously in Beijing. It's human emotion at it's very best - and, in the case of the Russian women, at it's most ugly, raw and worst. ABC had it right when they came up with the Wide World of Sports intro... "the thrill of victory and the agony of defeat."I don't really wish to see the Kiss and Cry anymore. It's just ridiculous to me to focus on skater or coach reactions, whether good or bad, about the skating. Emotions will be high one way or the other, and I find it makes me question whether this thing's really a sport or not sometimes.
I don't like those either. And I don't particularly care for the argument that the viewership likes seeing it, therefore it should be shown. It's not entertaining to me, and I was certainly not entertained by seeing Trusova meltdown, nor for the criticism she got for it. These people's emotions getting milked for money is disgusting to me.Have you ever seen a baseball star break a bat in frustration? A football star doing a long dance in the end zone? The camera following a tennis player who double-faulted? That thrill of victory and agony of defeat is intrinsic to sports.
It isn't as though they aren't aware of and getting paid to put those emotions out there on display for public consumption. Let's not pretend like they are innocent victims in the greedy, corporate sporting machine.I don't like those either. And I don't particularly care for the argument that the viewership likes seeing it, therefore it should be shown. It's not entertaining to me, and I was certainly not entertained by seeing Trusova meltdown, nor for the criticism she got for it. These people's emotions getting milked for money is disgusting to me.
I accept that your argument makes some sense for the K&C (still don't wish to see it), but that is not what this is: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KnwlY_TlyLwIt isn't as though they aren't aware of and getting paid to put those emotions out there on display for public consumption.
The figure skating season has always started on July 1. That is why skaters have to meet whatever the age limit is before that date. I presume they settled on 17 because they know that the majority of skaters will be 18 by the time worlds/ Olympics comes around. If they are not 18 at that time, they will only be 3 to 4 months from their 18th birthday. Thank goodness. I’m tired of seeing children in elite, senior level sport. Sports like gymnastics have their age deadline by December 31 because their new season starts on January 1. I would love to see gymnastics go from requiring gymnasts to turn 16 in the calendar year to turning 17. This would at least eliminate having 15–year-olds at the Olympics. No more of this “protected person” garbage as far as WADA is concerned. If someone is too young to be responsible for what is put into their body as far as illegal drugs/performance enhancing drugs, they are absolutely too young to compete in elite competition.I agree with changing the age limit but I think it should be 17 by 12/31. All 17 year olds should be eligible. This would mean 17 by Worlds or the Olympics and would avoid the situation where a skater is 17 by July 2 and has to wait until they are 18.
I'm not arguing or pretending that network TV doesn't partly thrive on the drama from KnC. What I am arguing, as is @PRlady, is that the drama exists in sport regardless of the number of cameras trained on the athletes. I can still remember how absolutely thrilling it was for my HS football team to win our CA Sectionals my freshman year. Practically the entire town it seemed drove up to Sacramento for the championship (CA Sectionals are equivalent to winning a State Championship in most other states) because we cared so much about our team. It's the same reason you get standing ovations for tremendous skates, or the audience clapping along to pick a skater up when they're having a bad skate. We care as much as the athletes themselves.I accept that your argument makes some sense for the K&C (still don't wish to see it), but that is not what this is: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KnwlY_TlyLw
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I don't see why this was necessary, especially that ominous music in the background. You cannot pretend that Network TV partly does thrive on drama, and these girls did get more than what they signed up for.
Oh, come on... It's part of the drama of any sport - the reactions to a great play or scores. We see it when divers and gymnasts are waiting for their marks, we see teams celebrating on the sidelines or tumbling out of the dugout when a clutch touchdown, three-pointer or home run happens. Take away the KnC and you make the sport even less interesting or relatable to the public.
You missed the original point. Which is that the behavior of Eteri's girls in the KnC when they don't have a perfect skate gives the OP the impression they are being abused.I personally think that Michelle “I’m just here to have fun” Kwan fostered unrealistic expectations with regard to how skater should feel about wins and losses, and with regard to the level of restraint one is supposed to display in K&C. And I love her you know.
I don't think this is the same thing. The equivalent to a tennis player fist-pumping after an ace would be a skater fist-pumping after they land a quad. When the tennis game ends, the tennis player gets to go into the locker room to clean up (and collect themselves) before talking to the press.Have you ever seen a baseball star break a bat in frustration? A football star doing a long dance in the end zone? The camera following a tennis player who double-faulted? That thrill of victory and agony of defeat is intrinsic to sports.
Figure skating is different in that you don't know your scores when you get off the ice. But there wasn't always a Kiss and Cry (and there isn't one at lower level comps) and there are similar sports where the scores come up later and the athletes just mill around with the other people involved in competing. There are cameras at the important comps but they aren't right in the athletes' faces like the cameras were on Trusova.