I know, MissJasmine.
I just wonder where we can draw the line.
After all, when Sale/Pelletier were awarded a second gold in figure skating, impropriety was the reason, even though no proof was ever found (the french judge changed her story). But that isn't going to stop anyone and everyone with a judging beef from filing protests, and appeals and whatever else they can do, improriety or not. It's happening here in a big way.
I guess my point is, no one is going to abide by these distinctions in the future when lodging protests, or complaining about results. All people will see is if they yell loudly enough, they can get results changed, medals awarded, whatever they want. It isn't going to stop here, it's going to get worse and worse. You have to draw the line. That's why they have rules. And one of those rules is you do not go back after a meet and change things. It's opening a huge can of worms. But now that the FIG broke their own rules and reviewed the tapes AFTER the meet, look how many more protests there were in men's gymnastics alone:
All-Around protest by S. Korea.
Rings protest by the Bulgarians (already denied)
Vault protest by Canadians
High bar protest by Russia
Russia is now protesting the women's All-Around results as well.
So whatever one might say about the start value error being so integral to the final score that a breaking of the rules is justified, it won't end there. Next time it will be other deductions, and other complaints.
Whether or not you think a start value error is more costly than the 2 tenths mandatory deduction is really subjective anyway. If the judges had started the routine at the 10.0 that does NOT mean he would have automatically scored a tenth higher. They may well have deducted from somewhere else to get him at the score they wanted. It's a brutal fact in gymnastics. Does anyone know how they arrive at their deductions? No.