2017-18 State of U.S. Ladies Skating | Page 154 | Golden Skate

2017-18 State of U.S. Ladies Skating

I agree. This is how I look at the field so far:

Ashley
The uber Ashley fans say she is going to clean up the tech. The opposing side says she has been on a downward spiral. The truth of the matter is that she has been on a downward spiral since LY. She has been posting all these videos of her working on her spins but they are still so slow. BUT somehow Ashley always seems to peak with a home crowd. I firmly believe that she will clean up a bit for nationals AND will have some favorable calls from the tech panel. She has the MOST sponsors of the ladies and unless she lands lower than 4th, I cannot imagine the federation NOT sending her. My bet is that she lands in 3rd at nationals.

Polina
We haven't seen much of her - the next GP will be very telling but I will be surprised if she actually makes it higher than 5th at Nationals. I could even imagine a Mirai situation where she lands on the podium and they choose one of the other ladies over her. She has another cycle in her which might give the federation more reason to hold off on sending her this time especially if she has a poor outing in this next GP.

Mariah
She has beautiful qualities but reworking the technique this year was poorly timed and it looks like its affecting her confidence. All the commentators are saying it but she needs a coach that can actually focus on her. Kori was focused on Jason, Raf on Nathan, , , , Ashley, and Adam in that order. I cannot imagine her making the podium. And depending on who doesn't make the podium, if Mariah did, I also think the federation would choose another more prominent skater over her.

Mirai
I am personally biased (although she did exceed my prediction post for NHK!). Let's keep it real - the axel isn't a lock but the buzz is and she is riding that wave. The performance is not where it needs to be but she also has shown glimmers during NHK: a furrowed brow here, a smile there... I think NHK gave her a good confidence boost and she has timing on her hands. She has all this time to focus on training for nationals and yes, my girl Mirai is a head case but nobody can refute that she has been hitting that ice with a newfound determination. I think she is really taking ownership of her skating and I believe she has a really good shot of making the team.

Karen
The US is in a sea of head cases/inconsistencies. I think Karen (although it PAINS me to say it over my girl MN) has the highest potential to be in the final flight at the Olympics for the current crop of US ladies. She has the PCS when she is on and has the higher ceiling tech wise than Ashley. She has a chance to make once last case for herself at Skate America...

And just because people like to bring them out of the woodwork:

Bradie
It isn't going to happen.

Courtney
It isn't going to happen.

I might eat my words but at Skate America, no US lady will be higher than 2nd... but I honestly feel like it will be Karen in 2/3 and then Ashley one level below Karen. Said it.

Thats just my personal opinion but I feel like some die hards might come after me so if you do not hear from me again... It was nice posting 28 times.

I agree with your assessment regarding Mariah's coaching situation. I often wondered if she and Frank Carroll would be a good fit..
 
The thing that makes me the sad is that Caroline Zhang was so unimportant, she didn't even warrant an "isn't going to happen."

Caroline ... I want her to go to Worlds or the Olympics, just once. :noshake:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3LpW3f5EYSs&t=4m15s

It seems like her mule kick is back :noshake:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=29zY4QiNU1Y&t=0m36s

Huh. I remember back in 2007 everyone was raging about Caroline Zhang, but I knew that it would be Mirai who would break through the ranks. This is because her jumping technique (and that mule kick and flutz) was terrible to begin with and as she hit the growth spurt it became impossible to fix. Her spiral sequences were lovely, but now it seems that Mirai/Karen even hit those a lot better than Caroline now.

Meanwhile Mirai had the whole package, except maybe occasional two-footing and URs which made puberty hard to deal with post-2010. But I have faith in her still!
 
Crazy that both of them are still around 10 years later (even if they may be shadows of their former selves). Same with Wagner (whose peak was later). I feel we've gone through around two full cycles where other skaters have come and go (Flatt, Zawadzki, Gao, Gold, etc.) and these 3 have stuck around.
 
i don't know why but i feel Mirai 3A is more stable and powerful in practice? in competition she seems rarely attack that jump, like a bit slow or not enough speed, off axis sometimes and always 2 foot her landing while in practice we have seen many good attempts without UR or 2 foot. Well maybe nervousness? but her jumps in general is getting better and she's more consistent than ever!
 
She has one top three finish in her last 6 nationals appearances. She has not won a GP medal since 2013. She made one appearance at Worlds in the last 7 years, where she finished 10th. On what basis is she a shoo-in?

Mirai does have a recent international medal -- 4CC bronze last season where Mariah was 6th and Karen 12th. She might not yet have reached the status of being a shoo-in, but nobody else is at the moment. Even though she did not get any GP podiums this year, her 4th place score at NHK at 194.46 was more than 10 points higher than Ashley's 183.94 at Skate Canada. If Anna were not injured, Ashley would not have made the SC podium either.
 
Mirai does have a recent international medal -- 4CC bronze last season where Mariah was 6th and Karen 12th. She might not yet have reached the status of being a shoo-in, but nobody else is at the moment. Even though she did not get any GP podiums this year, her 4th place score at NHK at 194.46 was more than 10 points higher than Ashley's 183.94 at Skate Canada. If Anna were not injured, Ashley would not have made the SC podium either.

Again, you can't compare scores from competition to competition. Particularly when its openly acknowledged that the tech panel at Skate Canada was brutal. If Ashley had the tech panel at NHK, she may well have scored 195+ for her performances at Skate Canada. And as for Ashley only getting on the podium because Anna was injured, that's sport and shouldn't even factor into these discussions. At every competition, you can say that so-and-so only did well because so-and-so was sick, tired, injured, having a bad day, missed their flight connection the day before, etc. Its ridiculous. Plus, its not like Ashley hasn't beaten Anna in *multiple* match-ups since the latter moved up to seniors - I guess under your logic, every other time it was because Anna was injured so Ashley didn't truly deserve it in those instances either.
 
Ashley, Mariah and Karen all skate with connection to their music and they get higher PCS scores than Mirai does. Mirai simply does not perform her programs---she executes her elements, and that just isn't enough to make her competitive with the top ladies in the sport. The only 'connection' Mirai had to Miss Saigon was her dress.
 
It is what it is. If Wagner got on the SC podium because a competitor above her melted down, fine - I think we all understand and accept that happening as a part of competition. The bigger point being made with this discussion is that she shouldn’t rely on this happening every time as an excuse to NOT do better.
 
Mirai does have a recent international medal -- 4CC bronze last season where Mariah was 6th and Karen 12th. She might not yet have reached the status of being a shoo-in, but nobody else is at the moment. Even though she did not get any GP podiums this year, her 4th place score at NHK at 194.46 was more than 10 points higher than Ashley's 183.94 at Skate Canada. If Anna were not injured, Ashley would not have made the SC podium either.

I agree with your post. My point was that there is no "shoo-in" at this point, and unlikely to be prior to Nationals unless Ashley makes the GPF. It's looking like the team will be Ashley, Karen, and Mirai, but only if that ends up being the Nationals podium.
 
Well, and honestly if Ashley hadn't killed it in the free, Gracie would have been on the podium de facto because others faltered. Lots of people have gotten medals from the mistakes and falls of others.
 
Well, and honestly if Ashley hadn't killed it in the free, Gracie would have been on the podium de facto because others faltered. Lots of people have gotten medals from the mistakes and falls of others.

True, and if Gracie had skated a great FS, Evgenia wouldn't be a two-time world champion. This might have changed the upward trajectory of her marks substantially.
 
The last consistent skater the US had was Michelle Kwan. These young girls might come up in the rank, but if they can't consistently put out clean performances, they will never matter much. Medvedeva rose to the top because she's super consistent.
If Karen is anywhere near that level, she would be the top skater, too.
 
The last consistent skater the US had was Michelle Kwan. These young girls might come up in the rank, but if they can't consistently put out clean performances, they will never matter much. Medvedeva rose to the top because she's super consistent.
If Karen is anywhere near that level, she would be the top skater, too.

Karen is still quite young. Evgenia is nothing short of a Phenom and that's why she's become a huge star in our sport. Karen is coming off of her first title and a 4th place finish at Worlds. I'm willing to cut her some slack.
 
May we talk about the selection criteria?

The criteria state this is all decided by weighted metrics:

The IC Discipline Groups will take into consideration placement and performance (to include performance data derived from the athlete’s detailed result sheets from the competitions listed below along with season’s best scores, season’s trending scores, median and mean data on each athlete/team) from the current 2017-18 season to assess continued growth, consistency and reliability of the athletes/teams being considered and the competitive field at the following events listed in a priority order and weighted by tiers

Athletes shall be selected based upon performance(s) in the events below. The events have been stratified into tiers from the highest value events in Tier 1 through the lowest value events in Tier 3. Events within each tier shall be evaluated at equal weight.
Tier 1
- 2018 U.S. Figure Skating Championships TBD,
January 3-7, 2018
- 2017 ISU Grand Prix Final TBD, December, 2017
- 2017 ISU World Figure Skating Championships
Helsinki, Finland, March 29 – April 2, 2017
Tier 2
- 2017 Grand Prix Series Competitions Canada – October, 2017
China – November, 2017 Japan – November, 2017 France – November, 2017 Russia – November, 2017 USA - November 23 – 26, 2017
- 2017 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships
Gangneung, Korea, February 15 – 19, 2017
Tier 3
- 2017 Challenger Series Events
Typically 10 international events held from September through December, 2017. Dates and locations are TBD
- 2017 U.S. Figure Skating Championships Kansas City, MO, January 14-22, 2017
- 2017 World Junior Figure Skating Championships Taipei City, Chinese Taipei, March 15-19, 2017
- 2017 ISU Junior Grand Prix Final TBD, December, 2017

However, the last page of the criteria (sorry I can't post photos) shows a sample graph of consistency trends of all the events in a competitor's season. All events in the graph appear to be weighted the same, and not weighted higher according to Tier.

Criteria states events are ranked by "highest value." But what does this mean?

For example, Bradie Tennell currently has the highest SB among US ladies! But her score was achieved at Lombardia, a Tier 3 event. Karen, Ashley and Mariah all have 2017 World experience, which is Tier 1. But they have not been spectacular so far this season. Do Karen, Ashley and Mariah automatically rank before Bradie because they went to Worlds, even though it was longer ago? At what point does a World's score count less than a spectacular Lombardia score?

Can someone explain this, and better yet, why are the metrics not made public? If the decision is made simply on the metrics (and not corporate sponsorships) then there should be no fear of the USFSA opening their backroom door to this procedure.
 
Karen is still quite young. Evgenia is nothing short of a Phenom and that's why she's become a huge star in our sport. Karen is coming off of her first title and a 4th place finish at Worlds. I'm willing to cut her some slack.

American skaters also aren't getting free passes on URs and wrong edges like Evgenia does. Although I am happy to finally see some healthy rise in PCS for Karen, hope this keeps up...

For example, Bradie Tennell currently has the highest SB among US ladies! But her score was achieved at Lombardia, a Tier 3 event. Karen, Ashley and Mariah all have 2017 World experience, which is Tier 1. But they have not been spectacular so far this season. Do Karen, Ashley and Mariah automatically rank before Bradie because they went to Worlds, even though it was longer ago? At what point does a World's score count less than a spectacular Lombardia score?

Can someone explain this, and better yet, why are the metrics not made public? If the decision is made simply on the metrics (and not corporate sponsorships) then there should be no fear of the USFSA opening their backroom door to this procedure.

Bradie's lutz technique seems quite unreliable. Just from the 2017 Nats FS video, the kick-back crossed behind the skating leg is really dangerous, and she was *really* close to skidding the landing. I would not bet on that lutz. :scratch2:

FYI I think Karen's 4th place at World's > Bradie's at Lombardia. But I think Skate America/Nationals 2018 will seal the deal.
 
May we talk about the selection criteria?

The criteria state this is all decided by weighted metrics:

The IC Discipline Groups will take into consideration placement and performance (to include performance data derived from the athlete’s detailed result sheets from the competitions listed below along with season’s best scores, season’s trending scores, median and mean data on each athlete/team) from the current 2017-18 season to assess continued growth, consistency and reliability of the athletes/teams being considered and the competitive field at the following events listed in a priority order and weighted by tiers

Athletes shall be selected based upon performance(s) in the events below. The events have been stratified into tiers from the highest value events in Tier 1 through the lowest value events in Tier 3. Events within each tier shall be evaluated at equal weight.
Tier 1
- 2018 U.S. Figure Skating Championships TBD,
January 3-7, 2018
- 2017 ISU Grand Prix Final TBD, December, 2017
- 2017 ISU World Figure Skating Championships
Helsinki, Finland, March 29 – April 2, 2017
Tier 2
- 2017 Grand Prix Series Competitions Canada – October, 2017
China – November, 2017 Japan – November, 2017 France – November, 2017 Russia – November, 2017 USA - November 23 – 26, 2017
- 2017 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships
Gangneung, Korea, February 15 – 19, 2017
Tier 3
- 2017 Challenger Series Events
Typically 10 international events held from September through December, 2017. Dates and locations are TBD
- 2017 U.S. Figure Skating Championships Kansas City, MO, January 14-22, 2017
- 2017 World Junior Figure Skating Championships Taipei City, Chinese Taipei, March 15-19, 2017
- 2017 ISU Junior Grand Prix Final TBD, December, 2017

However, the last page of the criteria (sorry I can't post photos) shows a sample graph of consistency trends of all the events in a competitor's season. All events in the graph appear to be weighted the same, and not weighted higher according to Tier.

Criteria states events are ranked by "highest value." But what does this mean? ...

leafy, what is your source for these criteria? A hard-copy document from USFS?

Is it available online to the public? (My guess is that it is not.)
I'm not arguing with you. Thanks for sharing.
Just grasping at straws -- cuz if it were available online, I would be rushing to take a closer look, esp. at the graph that you mentioned.

The comps in the three tiers are not unexpected, but if you are saying that you have an official USFS document for 2018 OWG, it is good to know that the selection criteria really are analogous to the criteria for 2017 Worlds.

And it's the first passage that you quoted that I find especially interesting -- the part about SBs, trending, etc.

... At what point does a World's score count less than a spectacular Lombardia score? ...

I bet that different members of the USFS selection committee might have differing answers to the question.

I don't think any of us mere mortals on GS ever could answer that question definitively.

The tiers give us only a general idea of what comps are weighted more heavily than others.

I agree with Miss Ice that Karen's 4th at 2017 Worlds should be worth more than Bradie's 4th at Lombardia.
But I do not think any of us could be sure how the selection committee would view (for example) Mariah's 12th place (with 187.83) at 2017 Worlds in comparison to Bradie's 4th (with 196.70) at Lombardia.
 
It is what it is. If Wagner got on the SC podium because a competitor above her melted down, fine - I think we all understand and accept that happening as a part of competition. The bigger point being made with this discussion is that she shouldn’t rely on this happening every time as an excuse to NOT do better.

When has Ashley ever said she's relying on others to make mistakes in order to make a podium? Its the last thing on her mind heading into a competition. She's certainly not relying on this as a strategy. If anything, its only people on here who seem to suggest that that's her strategy.
 
It's located in the log-in area for all USFSA members, then under "General Info" and "Team Selection Procedures." It says "confidential" on it.

leafy, many thanks for your reply :thank:.

Glad to know that the OWG selection procedures are readily available to all USFS members.

[One of the things that bugged me in 2014 was that some people had the misconception that skaters had not been informed in advance of the selection criteria. The skaters had been informed at 2013 Champs Camp.]

Question:

Does the members-only site also show the selection procedures for 2018 Worlds?

If so, would you mind telling us whether/how the criteria for 2018 OWG differ from the criteria for 2018 Worlds?

Another misconception (among some) in 2014 was that 2014 Olympians by default should have been assigned to 2014 Worlds as well.
But the reality was that the 2014 OWG criteria were not identical to the 2014 Worlds criteria (which did not include 2013 GPs and 2013 Nats).​
 
Huh. I remember back in 2007 everyone was raging about Caroline Zhang, but I knew that it would be Mirai who would break through the ranks. This is because her jumping technique (and that mule kick and flutz) was terrible to begin with and as she hit the growth spurt it became impossible to fix. Her spiral sequences were lovely, but now it seems that Mirai/Karen even hit those a lot better than Caroline now.

Meanwhile Mirai had the whole package, except maybe occasional two-footing and URs which made puberty hard to deal with post-2010. But I have faith in her still!

I thought the same thing. Even though everyone was talking about Caroline heading into Nationals in 2008 Mirai stole the show and it should have been obvious that Caroline's terrible jump technique and being slow as molasses on the ice meant she wasn't going to be a contender as she got older. I couldn't understand why people weren't talking about Mirai even though she was a lot faster had better jumps skating skills and her spins were nearly as good too.
 
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