Thoughts:
As far as the top teams are concerned . . .
I drifted off to thinking about something else in the middle of both Hubbell & Donohue's and Gilles & Poirier's FDs. I'm good with H/D's RD. It looked ready for this point in the season. The parts where they were off unison were noticeable because the rest was pretty sharp. The music choice is appropriate for the theme and much better than the 6-piece mashup from the last time H&D attempted this rhythm. I'm not an Elton John fan so I won't assess G&P's RD except to say that my feeling is I would probably like it better if I were an Elton John fan.
Free dances often take longer to develop & start to shine during the season, but at the moment I'm saying there's plenty of room for someone to make a stronger impression in the free dance.
I do like Guignard & Fabbri's Atonement, but I don't see it moving that far up the ranks since last season.
I haven't made it to watching Russian test skates yet.
Anyway, the FDs have a long way to go.
On to the important stuff . . .
We all know the big things that happened over the past two weekends were the following:
1. Green & Parsons defeated Lajoie & Lagha (in Canada, no less). That'll do it. Moves this G&P from the ranks of "new team" into the competitive next generation ranks of the international dance field where they want to be.
2. Taschlerova & Taschler won the battle of who-wants-a-stamp-in-their-passport-for-Beijing at Lombardia. So that shuffles the deck & puts the Czechs on firmer footing heading into Nebelhorn. The Russian Georgians, T&T, the top Finns, & the Canadian Armenians heading into Nebelhorn looking good, with a shot for the Australian/Canadian team & the American/Korean one.
Are Ushakova/Nekrasov seniors this year?
Yes.