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Monday, March 16, 2009


Skating Articles for Monday, March 16, 2009

Around the world of figure skating: March 16 - Source, IceNetwork News

Change in Focus Benefits Chipeur - by J. Barry Mittan, Golden Skate News

The Inside Edge with Sarah and Drew: Taylor Firth lands role of Lexie in Ice Castles remake - by Sarah S. Brannen and Drew Meekins, IceNetwork News

RP skaters eye Winter Olympics - Source, ABS-CBN News

Getting ready for an on-ice extravaganza - by Kevin Swayze, TheRecord.com

Out There: Everything is nice on the ice for Wisconsin Rapids Figure Skating Club - Source, Wisconsin Rapids Tribune

The Clinton Figure Skating Club presents the 59th annual Fantasy on Ice (2009 Edition) - by Dick Moon, WKTV.com

Michigan-based artists to highlight annual ice show - by Jim Kasuba, The News Herald



Sunday, March 15, 2009

Kim Yu-Na claims Japanese skaters "obstruct" her practice

The following is a translation of the above video report, provided by 'hani' @ FSU

Sports Anchor:
Good evening, and welcome to SBS Sports News. Today we'll open with somewhat shocking news.

Korean figure skating star KIM Yu-Na made a surprising confession in her latest exclusive interview with SBS.
Kim revealed that several skaters have continued to deliberately interfere her path during competition warm-ups.
Here is LEE Sung-Hoon with more details from Toronto.

Reporter:
For Kim Yu-Na, every warm-up before the competition has been filled with tense.
Any time Kim attempted a jump, a fellow competitior would appear in her path, resulting in some very close moments.

Male Sportscaster:
"Oh~ that was very close. What a relief [nothing went wrong]" (Yu-Na and an asian skater is getting closer.)

Reporter:
In figure skating, it is considered good sportsmanship to keep out of the fellow skaters' jumping path.
But apparently Kim is an exception. For some reason there was always someone in her way.
And somehow, the offender was always from Japan.
Calling it a coincidence is no longer an option.

Last month's Four Continents Championships held in Vancouver was the last straw.
Kim's coach, Brian Orser, went so far as to protest that one Japanese skater was shadowing Kim on purpose.

Kim Yu-Na: "At the recent Four Continents, it was worse than before;
I couldn't help thinking, 'does it have to be this bad?'"

Reporter:
Kim says that she plans to face with her competitors if the same situation arises at the upcoming World Championships in LA.
This time, she says, she won't hold back if someone deliberately gets in her way.

Kim Yu-Na:
"Of course I don't want to be brought down by this.
Losing to something so petty might even affect my own competition, so we're trying to figure out how to tackle this problem."

Reporter:
The Korean figure skating queen vows to overcome her fellow skaters in fair competition through her superior skating.
This is LEE Sung-Hoon from Toronto.



Blazing Blades Contributing Author Series

Bring Back 6.0 Judging, for the Love of Skating

 

Facebook Group Asks for a Return to 6.0

 

By Monica Friedlander

 

If the International Skating Union were a corporation, it would have filed for bankruptcy by now. If it were a government, it would have been voted out of office. But as a private association with no accountability to anyone, it can preside over the most devastating decline in the popularity of the sport in recent memory — and refuse to do anything about it.

 

Just consider this: In 1999, ABC signed a five-year contract with the ISU for $22 million a year. Today, the ISU struggles to find anyone to cover its major events and ISU president Ottavio Cinquanta was quoted last year as saying he would “give away the rights” if necessary if someone would only telecast of the 2009 World Championships. The ISU is in such dire straights that it had to reduce the number of judges for World and Olympic competition because it cannot pay their expenses! 

 

Audiences for skating are vanishing, tours are folding, TV ratings are plummeting, sponsors are turning their back the sport, and skaters can't pay for their training expenses. What could have gone so wrong?

 

Can it be merely a coincidence that all this has happened in the aftermath of the most revolutionary overhaul ever in the way the sport is judged?

 

In one big swoop in 2004, more than a century of skating history was turned on its head. The 6.0 judging system, which had served the sport from its earliest days through its biggest boom, was tossed aside and replaced by the International Judging System (IJS), a convoluted new scoring system based on a “code of points” and devised under the leadership of a speed skater.

 

The focus now is not on the performance but on accumulating points every second of the program, regardless of the artistic value of the elements that award them. The routines all look alike as skaters dip into the same bag of tricks and lay them out in the same order to maximize points.

Skaters and coaches, reluctant for years to speak out against the new skating order, can no longer keep silent. 

 

Johnny Weir: “The judging system is killing the sport … I'm longing for the day where you can see a beautiful program, where you can feel an emotion from it and not be adding up the points in your head.”

 

Evan Lysacek: "[6.0] became an everyday, commonly used phrase, a brand … Losing that brand has been very difficult, and the sport took a hit."

 

Brian Boitano: "[The new system] is just really screwed up. We should just go back to the old 6.0."

 

Keauna McLaughlin: “You are so limited in what you can do that everyone is just going to wind up doing the same thing because there is no room for creativity.”

 

Coach Carol Heiss Jenkins: "I don't think it's a fan-friendly system … In the old system, 6.0 was perfect. It's hard to know what the best is anymore. I miss that."

 

- Facebook: Bring Back 6.0 -

 

In response to this growing unhappiness with the system, a group was formed on Facebook asking for a return to 6.0 judging. Members of “Bring Back the 6.0 Judging System” include reigning Olympic champion Evgeni Plushenko, world champions Tai Babilonia, Debi Thomas and Elaine Zayak, and a large number of world and national medalists and world-class competitors such as Mark Mitchell, Naomi Lang, Doug Mattis, Kati Winkler, Stefan Lindemann, Craig Heath, and dozens more. Coaches — such as Evelyn Kramer, Audrey Weisiger and Jose Piccard — have also jumped on the bandwagon.

 

Nearly 900 people joined the group, even though the membership is limited to those active on Facebook and skewed to Facebook's young members, most of whom barely even remember the 6.0 system. Under the circumstances, the size and high-profile membership of the group is a powerful statement about the growing dissatisfaction with the IJS at all levels of the sport.

 

Not everyone is of the same mind, of course, particularly the judges. One of them wrote to me, “It's so much easier judging each element on its own instead of having to remember each and every element a skater did in the program.” That may very well be true. But the system should not be a matter of convenience to the judges but of benefit to the skaters and the sport. Besides, the judges are so focused on awarding points and deciding on levels of execution that they can’t see the forest for the trees. How can they even claim to maintain a perspective over the big picture when they have to constantly enter points on a computer screen throughout the entire performance?

 

Most importantly, the system doesn’t merely change the way the sport is judged, but also the way it’s performed. Figure skating looks profoundly different now compared to just a few years back. No judging change in the history of the sport has ever done that.

 

Ultimately, art is more than the sum of its parts. It is appreciated holistically and needs to be judged the same way. Artistic impression cannot be sliced up into five arbitrarily-selected components, like vegetables in a salad shooter.

 

The perfect mark was not only a recognizable and beloved brand in figure skating, but has been the hallmark of all judged sports, whether skating, gymnastics, diving - even Dancing with the Stars. Judging an artistic pursuit cannot be turned into a mathematical equation. The result of attempting to do so is that creativity, innovation, and artistic statements in figure skating are things of the past.

 

If nothing changes, no one will ever get a perfect mark again. Audiences will never cheer or boo a mark, nor know which judge gave which mark. Judging is anonymous and incomprehensible. At the end of each performance (and following a painfully long wait) one mysterious, ugly global score is spewed out by a computer and announced to a confused audience: 147.86. Whoopie. The silence is deafening.

 

The time is ripe to ask the ISU leadership to at least consider the possibility that the new system has failed before the last fan walks into the sunset. It’s the fans, after all, who make or break the sport. For the love of skating, let's bring back the system that’s worked since the dawn of figure skating. Let’s return to 6.0.

 

To join the Facebook 6.0 group, see http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=48693097611.


Editor's Note:  Blazing Blades offered it's position on the Scoring debade in it's February 24, 2009 editorial "Improve the IJS or revert to 6.0? The scoring debate is the wrong priority."



Skating Articles for Sunday, March 15, 2009

Team Fintastic claim third consecutive title: Team Braemar fifth; Chicago Jazz sixth - by Kelly Hodge, IceNetwork News

How I went from Semtex to Spandex - by Donal MacIntyre, The Daily Mail

Historicist: The Greatest Skating Carnival in America - by Kevin Plummer, Torontoist.com

Abbott cutting a new swath: Aspen figure skater has bare-knuckled his way to the top in an unlikely manner - by John Henderson, The Denver Post

Weir, Abbott scheduled for April 4th benefit show in New Jersey - Source, An information post by 'Sylvia' @ FSU




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