Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Maybe just from me lolAn improvement over what exactly? And where is this call for transparency coming from? From FIG athletes? From federations that feel unjustly scored?
So in your opinion fans of a sport don’t deserve to know how it’s scored?Arguments that transparency make things better for gym nerds carry no water in my opinion.
That Olympic floor final needed more transparency on scores.
rlayt said:So in your opinion fans of a sport don’t deserve to know how it’s scored?
For a start, they can release the individual judges scores to the public rather than relying on leaks...
I've had parents run up to me from the stands and try to harangue me for a score (how dare my precious pooh-bear get a low score after five falls!?!), let alone pressure from coaches and gyms and such. I still think that at least making the scores public is the right thing.NOT releasing individual judges scores protects them from being pressured to score a certain way by their federation or friendly federations. Olympic assignments are determined by how you do on a number of designated competitions during the Olympic cycle. If you publish scores, another judge willing to judge more according to the federation's wishes will be sent.
I can't imagine any of you calling for public scores have ever experienced the harassment from coaches disagreeing with you - starting at the lowest levels where it is usually quite obvious what scores you gave.
Gymnastics is literally the only subjectively judged Olympic sport that does not release individual judge scores.What is the real arugment for more transparency in judging? I mean in term of correct placement of routines. Is there a real concern that gymnasts are not being judged fairly within a single competition?
Arguments that transparency make things better for gym nerds carry no water in my opinion.
As far as I can tell, the vast, vast majority of FIG Brevet judges in WAG and MAG take their duties very, very seriously.