I can see arguments both for Miner and for Rippon, and I even have a little sympathy for the selection committee, who were given no real guidance by the alleged criteria. I do not put much credence in the 'the criteria where out there' argument. Yes, an initial set of criteria was published in July 2016, amended in September of 2017 and again on December 21, 2017, so the criteria was hardly set in stone.
However, the term 'criteria' is at best generous. It states:
"U.S. Figure Skating’s IC Discipline Groups will take into consideration the performances and results from the events outlined below to determine athletes/teams who will have the most performance impact at the 2018 Olympic Winter Games. The IC Discipline Groups will take into consideration placement and performance (to include performance data derived from the athlete’s detailed result sheets from the competitions listed below along with season’s best scores, season’s trending scores, median and mean data on each athlete/team) from the current 2017-18 season to assess continued growth, consistency and reliability of the athletes/teams being considered (see Attachment D) and the competitive field at the following events listed in a priority order and weighted by tiers"
But then adds:
"In addition, consideration of other athletes/teams will be given due to extenuating circumstances as approved by the IC Discipline Groups."
That is it, there is nothing discussing actual weighting, measurements or values. There is not one objective measurement mentioned. Using the above criteria, the committees (one for each discipline) ranks the skaters and votes on the list. There is no manner in which anyone could practically, strategically train and plan for it. Further, since the athletes have to rely on USFS to assign them to an international, they cannot even control if/how much criteria data is being considered.
USFS should just maker it simple and honest, and use this criteria "After Nationals, we are going to select the skaters we think will do best at the internationals based on everything we know about them."