There is some obvious confusion here about how a start value is determined.
It is NOT NOT NOT set before the gymnast steps onto the mat. The best you can have is a routine that is expected to be out of a 10.0 or a 9.9, or whatever. If said gymnast misses an element, or flubs something up during the routine, the start value is automatically lowered. That means you can't know what the true start value of the routine is UNTIL IT IS FINISHED.
The panel who judged the start value of the Korean's routine all agreed it was a 9.9. They obviously all missed the element that put it at a 10.0 (after all, the routine had been judged to be a 10.0 the other times he did it in the competition). They also missed the MANDATORY 2 tenths deduction on the 4 holds. How is this any different?
The guy was not penalized before he even started his routine. The final start value of a routine is NEVER known until the routine is finished. It's stupid, it's complicated, but that's how it is.
Don't you guys remember watching the routines? (or did you all have your TVs muted to drown out Elfie and Tim? I can sort of understand that). When a gymnast would fumble an element on the balance beam, Elfie would say "She was supposed to connect those....that lowers her start value." Start value is a subjective thing that needs to be decided upon as the routine is being performed.
How you can draw the distinction between this error and the mandatory deduction error is beyond me. There is no difference. All these articles about the S. Korean being the "true winner" are a bunch of hogwash.
As for the cowardly FIG, they are trying to have it both ways....appease the Koreans without actually DOING anything. How repulsive. Luckily the USOC and the IOC told them where to go.