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I think the team will be Nathan, Adam and Vincent.
Tom Z. coached Jeremy Abbott and Joshua Farris for years and they didn’t have these program/PCS problems. Were they just always that fundamentally different skaters? Or did Yuka Sato/Jason Dungjen & Christy Krall/Damon Allen do that much miracle work?
Camden Pulkinen.(see Camden P. whose last name I need to learn to spell for a recent example)
No, AFAIK. 12 men have qualified via Sectionals this past weekend:I know it's the longest of shots, but can Farris still technically skate at Nationals, given his withdrawal from NHK?
Is Josh training at all?
A completely logical conclusion to draw when Max has comprehensively outskated Vincent head to head twice now.![]()
At this moment Chen seems to be a lock at the Nationals, but Aaron needs to outskate there everyone else, not just Vincent, IMO.
Andrew Torgashev placed 11th in his senior debut at Nationals last year. Alex Krasnozhon is making his senior national debut this year. Camden Pulkinen is staying Junior in the U.S. this year.I think 3 of the 6 JGP men's finalists are from the U.S.
Are any of them skating senior at Nationals?
I think 3 of the 6 JGP men's finalists are from the U.S.
Are any of them skating senior at Nationals? And if they are, are any of them capable of medalling? And if one does, do you think he'd be sent to the Olympics over a man who's been skating senior all season?
FWIW, Vincent has been posting some soul-searching thoughts on Instagram. He is NOT content with his last two skates and does not accept that they reflect his ability!Last year at this time, no one predicted a 1-2 of Nathan/Vincent at Nats; Vincent had done passably well in the junior grand prix and did not qualify for the final. At Nats and then again at Jr worlds, he pulled it together. If he skates cleanly with several quads in January, he can make the team. If I was a betting man, I'd still say with his base value and the long odds some on this site are giving him, I'd bet on Vincent.
The poster I was quoting made it very much about the Max vs Vincent argument, which there is no question over who is winning that.
Vincent is trying a much harder program.
So the question becomes do they give him credit for that over the higher Grand Prix finishes Max has with a less technically challenging program?
Vincent was only about 3 points behind Max at Cup of China. Max isn't leaving him in his dust. I think that it's really going to come down to who of the 4 contenders actually delivers in San Jose.
I have an awful feeling this is once again going to come down to the tech caller at Nationals and if Max gets screwed again by a marshmallow-soft tech panel I'm going to hit the damn roof.
It depends on what they want. Vincent is trying a much harder program.
And failing at it.
And failing at it.
They shouldn't! Or else what message does that send? "Go right ahead and splatter yourself all over the ice with jumps you can't actually land and we'll still reward you"? JFC.
And Max - who was far from perfect himself - beat out Vincent by fifteen points at IdF. And that was with a very generous tech caller who clearly went on holiday during Vincent's skate.
I have an awful feeling this is once again going to come down to the tech caller at Nationals and if Max gets screwed again by a marshmallow-soft tech panel I'm going to hit the damn roof.
FWIW, Vincent has been posting some soul-searching thoughts on Instagram. He is NOT content with his last two skates and does not accept that they reflect his ability!
I am glad that the younger guys are willing to put quads in programs - because I think putting it off this long has not been good for Jason - and were skaters like Adam and Joshua ever really great at quads? Did any of them have something like a single 4T in their programs as juniors?
Alex Johnson is the sole U.S. man listed for Golden Spin of Zagreb, December 6-9."The whole year I've had a little bit of tendinitis on and off in my left ankle, so I had to be careful how many quads I try each day," Dolensky said. "It's kind of a constant balance between wanting to work on it and be consistent, and keeping my body healthy."
Dolensky won the Philadelphia Summer International in August, but things went awry at the U.S. International Classic in Salt Lake City, where he finished sixth.
"With what I had to do, I couldn't afford that this year," Dolensky said. "I learned something in particular at that competition, and I'm taking that forward with me."
FWIW, Vincent has been posting some soul-searching thoughts on Instagram. He is NOT content with his last two skates and does not accept that they reflect his ability!