Karen-W
YMCA is such a catchy tune!
- Messages
- 51,816
?
I think the likelihood of this happening is as good as the likelihood of increasing the age minimum to 16 is. But, then again, maybe some feds would be willing to make that tradeoff. 


Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
?I think the likelihood of this happening is as good as the likelihood of increasing the age minimum to 16 is. But, then again, maybe some feds would be willing to make that tradeoff.
![]()
They changed the SP rules to allow a 3A when basically only Asada was landing a 3A (was there any other woman doing the jump in competition). There are considerably more skaters attempting quads now than were attempting 3As then.We aren't anywhere close to half of the field landing quads in the FS. Once we hit that threshold then we can discuss whether or not it should be allowed in the SP.
Don't forget Michael Weiss attempting 4Lz at the Nagano Olympics in 1998. I don't know if he attempted it all season long in his FS but I definitely remember him falling on it at the opening of his LP in Nagano.There had also been occasional not clean attempts by other skaters on rare occasions, including salchow and lutz, but not necessarily internationally.
They changed the SP rules to allow a 3A when basically only Asada was landing a 3A (was there any other woman doing the jump in competition). There are considerably more skaters attempting quads now than were attempting 3As then.
Don't forget Michael Weiss attempting 4Lz at the Nagano Olympics in 1998. I don't know if he attempted it all season long in his FS but I definitely remember him falling on it at the opening of his LP in Nagano.
Well, Meissner was credited with a 3A once.Yukari Nakano had been doing it in the late 00s, so she was probably on the minds of those proposing the rule change. But she retired in 2010.
Still, only skaters from one country.
Meissner only ever landed it nationally, once in 2005. I don't think she was on the minds of the people writing the rules for the 2010-11 season...Well, Meissner was credited with a 3A once.
If the PCS factoring had been equal, Valieva would have basically tied with Nathan Chen in the FP at Skate Canada.If they allow quads in he SP, they REALLY need to adjust the PCS factoring - if they're going to do the same tech as the men, they should get the same PCS.
This is an interesting point. Do you believe more mature skaters will be able to do quads or will it remain a certain body type and a certain age? Last year at Worlds I found Loena and Karen—just off the podium—more complete with their triples and their artistry. And the revolving door in Russia is depressing. I’d like to seeI will say this because ANL is nothing if he isn’t fair.
Lets allow the quad in the short program but I want the age limit for seniors raised to 18. I want to see actual women in women’s figure skating (Loena, Satoko, Amber) not girls or teenyboppers and that’s how it’s becoming in my opinion.
#truth
And let them do all the quads they want in juniors as well
This is an interesting point. Do you believe more mature skaters will be able to do quads or will it remain a certain body type and a certain age? Last year at Worlds I found Loena and Karen—just off the podium—more complete with their triples and t
But at what cost do you keep that build & low body fat? There is a risk of young adult osteoporosis and there may be an unseen impact from the girls that try and fail - some girls will have a body type where they can do this and stay strong but others who dedicate themselves to the sport for years and try unhealthy things to keep themselves at low body fat may disappear from the public eye. I’m not an expert on it by any means but I wonder how much of that goes on. What about raising point values of non jump technical elements?I don't think there should be different rules between the ladies and men's competition now.
I mean we are already at the natural extension to that, which is well known, that females that keep a slender 12-16 year old build (by keeping a very low body fat, which holds off a natural voluptuous mature build) can basically perform the same tricks as a slender 17-24 year old man.
The only female skater I find at all interesting from Russia is Tuktamysheva because her work with Mishin is true scientific development of technique that is generalizable to all skaters.
But at what cost do you keep that build & low body fat? There is a risk of young adult osteoporosis and there may be an unseen impact from the girls that try and fail - some girls will have a body type where they can do this and stay strong but others who dedicate themselves to the sport for years and try unhealthy things to keep themselves at low body fat may disappear from the public eye. I’m not an expert on it by any means but I wonder how much of that goes on. What about raising point values of non jump technical elements?
But if the jump values are already high, doesn’t allowing quads in the short make the impact of being able to do quads even higher? If you wanted to make it so that quads had less value compared to other technical elements, could you raise the technical value of step sequences, spins, and triples relative to quads?There is no additional cost at this time because the skaters can already do it. It's just the rules preventing them.
You are right, it is not healthy. However, the current differences in the rules between men and ladies do not actually create a great enough contrast to drive the sport in a better direction.
But if the jump values are already high, doesn’t allowing quads in the short make the impact of being able to do quads even higher? If you wanted to make it so that quads had less value compared to other technical elements, could you raise the technical value of step sequences, spins, and triples relative to quads?
It won't kill it. Everyone else will catch up. Them they will refine it artistically and so on.Please no.
Russians are already receiving undeserved high PCS (in the SP and LP) because they can do quads... It will kill the competition.
I agree to allow quads in the SP only of the PCS are reflecting the actual skating, and not the fact that you can do or not a quad (it's already in the TES !)
It's a different problem really. Russians are already receiving undeserved high PCS (in the SP and LP) even though they cannot do quads in the SP yet. So it's not the quads that is affecting the PCS. It's just poor PCS judging all along, with or without quads (e.g. Liza does not have a quad).Please no.
Russians are already receiving undeserved high PCS (in the SP and LP) because they can do quads... It will kill the competition.
I agree to allow quads in the SP only of the PCS are reflecting the actual skating, and not the fact that you can do or not a quad (it's already in the TES !)
Should GOEs for non-jump elements be worth more (% to BV) than for jumps?But if the jump values are already high, doesn’t allowing quads in the short make the impact of being able to do quads even higher? If you wanted to make it so that quads had less value compared to other technical elements, could you raise the technical value of step sequences, spins, and triples relative to quads?