Conventions and rating criteria for Women Quad Club
FigurovedConventions
- (t) - successful attempts in training and/or unsuccessful attempts in competitions
- (b) - elements performed only at jumping battles or during warm-up tournaments and ice shows
- (eh) - elements performed only at a exhibition or in an ice show
- Team Tutberidze girls are indicated in bold
- The underline marks the skaters who were the first to perform a particular quadruple jump, twist or throw, as well as the jumps and throws that they landed. Competitions of any level are taken into account (jumps performed for the first time at national competitions are indicated in green color)
- 🥇 - gold medal designates the winners of the Olympic Games
- ¾ - this symbol denotes skaters who landed both quadruple jumps and triple axels at competition
- 4² - this symbol denotes pair skaters who performed both a quadruple twist and a quadruple throw at competition
- In parentheses are quadruple jumps in order of seniority, a triple axel as an Ultra-C element and a triple lutz - triple loop combinations as the most complex combinations of triple jumps (if the skater knows them), as well as combinations from the most complex to the least complex, other complex elements, performed during tournaments or during training. Next to it are statistics on landings of quadruple jumps, triple Axels and +3Lo combinations; the coaching group and the name of the school in which the skater mastered most of the Ultra-C are indicated in square brackets
Note:
1. Jumps and other elements performed on the floor or with the harness are not taken into account in this list.
2. If a woman skater makes an Ultra-C jump for the first time in competition, but with a fall, she is included or remains on the list of skaters who land jumps in training.
3. Combinations of triple jumps, in which the triple loop is the second jump without an Euler, are equated to Ultra-C.
4. If a woman skater has changed her sports citizenship, then she will be on the list for which country she has jumped the most Ultra-C jumps, with the country for which the skater currently competes will be added in brackets. An example is Sofia Samodelkina and Sofia Titova, who remain on the list of Russian athletes.
Rating criteria
Ultra-C jumps by seniority:
4Lz, 4Lo, 4F, 4S, 4T, 3A, 3Lz+3Lo, 3Lo+3Lo, 3F+3Lo, 3S+3Lo, 3T+3Lo
Priority is given to jumps performed in competitions. Then the jumps performed in training are considered. If the number of jumps in the skaters is the same, we look at the complexity of jump combinations. If there are no jump combinations with Ultra-C, we look at the presence of additional skills (cantilever, hydroblading). If there are none, we arrange the skaters alphabetically.
Priority in the rating is given to the number of quadruple jumps over their seniority. For example, a skater who has mastered 4F, 4S, 4T will be ranked higher than a skater who has mastered 4Lz, 4Lo. The exception is Alexandra Trusova and Anna Shcherbakova. Their advantage over the others is that they were the first to make quadruple jumps the norm in women's single skating.
The triple axel has priority over any number and seniority of loop jump combinations (+3Lo), since it is more difficult to learn.