Calculating Show Freestyle scores
Show Freestyle scores are based on a cumulative Difficulty model where Presentation, Required Elements, and Deductions can affect the score.
Difficulty is calculated by adding the points from each skill performed. There is no limit on the total difficulty score.
Presentation increases or decreases the score by a percentage calculated from the presentation marks (+, ✓, or -).
Deductions take off a percentage for misses, and time violations.
Each missed required element will also take off a percentage from the total score.
The result/routine score (called ) is obtained by multiplying the difficulty score () with the presentation score (), the deduction score (), and the required elements score (). The result cannot be lower than 0.
The calculation for each of these scores is described in the following sections.
Difficulty
There is no maximum difficulty score. The difficulty score is the sum of the total points for each skill performed in a routine. Every time a skill is successfully performed, the value of that skill is added to the difficulty score.
The points per level can be calculated with the following formulas where is the level of the skill rounded to two decimal places. However, a level 0 skill is always worth 0 points.
Example
The point values per level 0-8 skill are:
Level | 0 | 0.5 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Points per skill | 0.00 | 0.12 | 0.15 | 0.23 | 0.34 | 0.51 | 0.76 | 1.14 | 1.71 | 2.56 |
The score of every difficulty judge is calculated by multiplying the amount of skills recorded at that level by that judge (called , where is the level) with for each level, and adding the results (called ) for each level together, (the resulting sum is called , where is the judge number. This means judge 1 is called , judge 2 is called , etc.) For example:
All difficulty judges’ scores are then averaged together according to the averaging rules, the result is called
Presentation
The presentation score may impact the difficulty score by a factor of
Where the Form and Execution category may impact the score by a factor of ,
the Style category may impact the score by a factor of ,
the Entertainment category may impact the score by a factor of ,
the Musicality category may impact the score by a factor of
The total presentation score may be outside
The scores of each category (Form and Execution, Style, Entertainment, Musicality) for each judge is calculated on a scale from −3 to 3 as , , , by averaging the marks the judge has given in that category where "–" is worth -1, (the amount of negative marks given by a judge for a specific category is called where is , , or , for the category) "✓" is worth 0 (despite this, the marks are important as they are part of the average and brings the score closer to the average; the amount of checkmarks given by a judge is called ) and "+" is worth 1. (the amount of positive marks given by a judge is called )
The averages of all judges’ scores for each category is then averaged as , , and by averaging according to the averaging rules for all judges who judged that category.
To calculate the multiplication factor that will be used to calculate the final score, the averages are multiplied by their respective factor and added to 1, this is called .
Required disciplines
Each missed required discipline may impact the score by a factor of
The average number of missing required disciplines recorded by the required disciplines judges are calculated and called this average is rounded to a whole number, the factor is then multiplied by , the result is called . ()
A required discipline is either not performed or performed and a score of either performed (1) or not performed (0) can be obtained per required discipline.
The required elements () are subtracted from 1 to be converted into a factor, the result is called ()
Deductions
Each deduction (miss, time violation, space violation) may impact the score with a factor of
The average number of misses recorded by the Required Disciplines judges are calculated according to the averaging rules. This average is called and is rounded to a whole number, the factor is then multiplied with , the result is called . ()
The average number of time violations recorded by the required disciplines judges are calculated and called this average is also rounded to a whole number, the factor is then multiplied with , the result is called . ()
The misses () and violations () are summed together and subtracted from 1, the result is called and cannot be lower than 0. ()
Result
The result/routine score (called ) is obtained by multiplying the difficulty score () with the presentation score (), the deduction score (), and the required elements score (). The result cannot be lower than 0.