The depth in the women's field is probably one of the deepest. I am tremendously excited for the Olympic season and I cannot wait to see how each skater, regardless of their achievements, develops. What I enjoyed most about this season was witnessing the camaraderie amongst the skaters, especially between Isabeau, Alysa, and Amber. I am excited to see if we have a dark horse like Bradie emerge out of "nowhere" (I dislike this term as it renders invisible a lot of the hard work that skaters put in because they never truly come out of nowhere) and make it onto the Olympic team. Currently, I think we have six frontrunners.
Tier 1: Alysa, Amber, and Isabeau
Between the three of them, Alysa has two world medals (gold and bronze), Isabeau has a world medal (silver) and a Grand Prix Final medal (silver), and Amber has a Grand Prix Final medal (gold). Isabeau has five Grand Prix medals and has never been off the podium at any Grand Prix event since she first stepped foot on senior ice. Amber has four Grand Prix medals and boasts one of the highest scoring ceilings among the American women. Despite these accomplishments, both Amber and Isabeau did not finish as high as they would have liked at Boston which means that they are going into the Olympic season with the opportunity to demonstrate consistency and steely nerves. Alysa will need to work on her rotations and with the potentiality of a triple Axel, she has the opportunity to put down the gauntlet.
Tier 2: Sarah Everhardt, Bradie Tennell, and Elyce Lin-Gracey
Sarah is coming off of a bronze medal finish at Four Continents and has demonstrated consistency that put her on the radar. Sarah also recently showcased a triple Lutz-triple Toe combination which will likely replace her triple Toe-triple Toe. If Sarah can deliver as consistently as she did last season with an upgraded technical content, she will be a big threat and could potentially threaten Isabeau or Amber if they have less than stellar showings. Bradie is coming off of an amazing finish to her season with silver at Four Continents and a huge score at her last international event. If Bradie can maintain her level or even upgrade her technical content to include two triple Lutz-triple Toe combinations, then she will score 210-225 consistently which could threaten anyone except for a clean Kaori or Amber. Elyce had an amazing start then tapered off until she capped off her season with a bronze at the Junior World Championships. If Elyce can find better packaging and tap into her consistency, she could be a threat—if not this season then in the next quad.
Question Marks: Lindsay Thorngren, Starr Andrews, and Ava Marie-Ziegler
I believe Josephine might turn senior this season as well which will be exciting to see.