First off, the SD was a set rhythm and they were very fortunate to work with someone whose specialty is mainly spanish style choreography and that the rhythm and the spanish style just so happened to suit them. With the FD, they didn't want to do dramatic so they had to go in a different direction. Elena herself said it took them forever to find the music that everyone thought would work, so it wasn't merely Averbukh sitting on his thumbs but 6 people who had no clue what would suit the couple. Second, Christopher Dean was one of Gilles and Donahue's coaches and had also choreographed Crone and Poirier's last free dance, so he had a better idea of what would work with them as opposed to Averbukh working with someone (Ilinykh) whom he last worked with when that person was 11. Third, Julia Andreeva, an ISU judge and a friend of Kustarova's (so she isn't actively out to sabotage IZ) said there was a huge improvement in IZ's skating between the test skates and the Grand Prix. What Averbukh gave them was what they could skate at the time and apparently, even that might have seemed challenging at the time.
And finally, I seem to recall you accusing Averbukh of sabotaging IZ, saying that he purposely gave them a bad free dance.
I did in the beginning because of his initial reactions to the formulations of the new pairs. But now after looking at things a full year after and the added info from uhh, it doesn't seem quite that simplistic. I/Z were moderated by a group of Russian specialists. No matter what Averbuch gave I/Z they had the final say, not so?
But more importantly, the current state of Russian ice dance is more a reflection of their federation and their leadership (or the lack thereof) style. They need to radically come forward to the 21 st century because they seem to be trapped in a 90's time warp.
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