Canadian skaters are not only the least pleasant losers but they have been overscored for years. I struggle to think of a time when a Canadian skater was ever underscored. Yet, they always make the most noise about poor judging...
S&P, B&K, Chan, B&E (although Lloyd was pretty funny), now D&R with their ridiculous PCS etc etc etc.
Yes as a whole Canada is proably the most overscored country in figure skating. I cant think of any skaters/team more overscored than Chan or Sale & Pelletier ever. Those others you mentioned were all overscored too, but so were Stojko, Browning (at times), Bourne & Kraatz. Yet as you say Canadians are the ones who whine about judging and complain about politics the most. As if Canadians never politic and dont send some of the most biased judges out there to events. Think of this:
1. At the 92 worlds Kurt Browning did a double lutz in the short program, a mandatory .5 deduction that year. 5.9 for required elements from Canada.
2. At the 92 Olympics the Canadian judge placed Browning 2nd in the LP, above winner Vikor Petrenko. He ended up 6th in the LP and overall with remaining ordinals from 4th to 9th.
3. At the 97 worlds the Canadian judge placed Bourne & Kraatz 1st in everyone of the 4 dances in a competition with Gritschuk & Platov, Kyrlova & Ovsiannikov, Anissina & Peizerat, and others. Even the 2nd CD and OD where they didnt have another ordinal higher than 3rd, and some 4ths and 5ths, he put them 1st. He was their only 1st place ordinal in any dance.
4. At the 2001 worlds Benoit Lavoie tied Sale & Pelletier and Berezhnaya & Sikharulidze where Jamie practically fell (stumbled out of, hands down) on her triple toe in the short. She only had B&S ahead on a tiebreak as he gave them 5.6, 5.9 and B&S 5.7, 5.8. Then in the LP where B&S were clean and S&P singled a jump he had S&P above by more than any other judge, a whole .3. He was 1 of 2 who had S&P higher in the SLC SP too. He had S&P above B&S by the biggest margin of any judge again in the SLC LP (.3 again) and threw a tantrum in the booth when B&S were posted ahead in the results. Should have been banned from judging immediately for his disgusting S&P bias.
5. At the 76 Olympics the Canadian judge was the only one who had Cranston winning the overall event ahead of John Curry (the Soviet judge showed similar bias doing likewise for Kovalev) despite a subpar competition for him with disaesterous figures and a flawed LP, and Curry being sublime.
6. At the 88 worlds Manley had a required .4 deduction minimum for a short program error but gained a 5.7 for elements from the Canadian judge out of her apparent base mark of 6.1 or 6.2.
7. At the 2001 Grand Prix final the Canadian judge gave S&P 5.9, 6.0 before B&S even skated their LP.