My thoughts on the junior ladies:
- Isabeau Levito: I've watched this young lady keenly, ever since she popped up on my radar some few years ago at the Intermediate level. What struck me about Levito was not her jumps but her beautiful lines, extensions, musicality, and humongous presence on the ice. As soon as she steps on the ice, you can't help but be drawn in because of her unequivocal command of the ice. This competition was no different. Isabeau improved major aspects of her skating such as her speed and skating skills. Her performances were superb. However, if there was any critique I would give, I would love for Isabeau to work with a jump specialist to improve her technique. Although not horrendous, the "halt before you jump" habit is not going to do her jumps any favor in terms of cleanliness and execution. I will say, however, that based purely on her double-Axel, they have DEFINITELY improved her jumps. However, before heading into the international arena, I hope Isabeau works on her jumps and speed because everything else is EXCELLENT.
- Kanon Smith: I first watched Kanon skate when her Juvenile level video randomly popped on YouTube. Kanon not only has the elusive "IT" factor to her skating but her overall maturity and presence far exceeds the level of choreography she was given. Although her programs played to her strengths and presented her as a "child having fun on the ice," her skating seemed too poised and elegant for such juvenile programs. Kanon's strength, to me, lies in her jumps. With her jumps, Kanon gains great height and distance while landing with soft knees and a beautiful edge. However, I hope Kanon improves the rotation of the triple-Toe on her triple-triples so that she will not penalized. Moreover, I thought her spins were in a class of their own. Kanon's layback was probably the best--senior or junior.
- Mia Kalin: Mia was tremendously gutsy attempting the quad-Toe and although under-rotated, it is a huge step forward for this young lady. Although Mia needs to improve her speed, spins, and musicality, her drive to push the technical boundaries are quite commendable. I hope Mia works on her consistency in competition as well because I've seen her do multiple clean run-throughs during practices but in competition, she hesitates, loses speed, and it is attributing to her jumps being short of rotation and her overall programs lacking dynamic and attack.
Honorable Mentions: Adele Zheng, Elsa Cheng, Ava Ziegler, and Clare Seo.