I've heard this before, about diving and gymnastics, as well as snowboard and figure skating. The thing is that the scores aren't based solely on the judges. Tricks, jumps, dives, vaults, whatever are assigned a degree of difficulty. You do that trick and then the judges give a point score for how well you did it. The final score is based on the degree of difficulty AND on the judge's evaluation of how well you do it. Personally, I'd open it all up and add ballroom and other dance events to the Winter Games, along with the rest of the sports. |
| How do they choose the sports for Olympics? Why not bowling or race walking? |
Now THAT was a bore fest. Different strokes. |
| Olympian that makes it look easy = very talented |
| Ice dance should be thrown out of the Olympics. The judging is corrupt and doesn't even reflect what happens on the ice. Lets stick to sports that can't be so obviously rigged results-wise. |
Walking IS an Olympic sport, FYI. |
Soccer, volley ball and hockey have points. They also have refs not judges. Refs are totally different than judges. I agree about diving, figure skating, dressage. Ski jumping is on the border. |
Remember when the Olympics required not just the short and long programs but also the compulsory figures? Lol! Those were the good old days. I still remember how we all held our breath in 1984 when it was Katarina Witt vs Debbie Williams and how Debbie had like a .008 advantage (or something equally ridiculous) going into the actual skating. God, the pressure that built up on some of these Olympians bc of manufactured geopolitical drama was unreal. |
For reals? How is the US doing in that category? |
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Re: race walking - yes, it's an Olympic sport, used to know a competitor. There's a 1966 Cary Grant movie (Walk, Don't Run) that is set in Tokyo during the 1964 Olympics and features a race walker. The US, unfortunately, isn't a race-walking powerhouse.
And you'd really limit the winter Olympics if you took out every sport that has a subjective element. Even ski-jumping has a style factor. |