The Female Physique Webzine/Gallery
UNDERSTANDING FIGURE JUDGING
Answering The Question:
"How could I end up 12th on
every judge's scorecard?"
By Bill Dobbins
If you are wondering on what basis figure is judged, given that there aren't the same kind of more-or-less objective criteria to go by that you find in bodybuilding, you are out of luck - because nobody can really tell you. Over time, the judges have gravitated toward a longer-waisted, longer-proportioned type of body than you find in fitness or bodybuilding, where the more compact physiques tend to win. But that is more of a tradition than a set of criteria.
But given this tradition, a general rule is that competitors who have the same type of structure as Davana Medina, Jenny Lynn, Amber Littlejohn and Mary Elizabeth Lado will tend to have an advantage. But that's only in general. In specific contests there are liable to be all sorts of body types included in the top five or the top ten – although many of the women who place well finished way down in their last contest and will finish out of the top ten in the next one they enter.
But what confuses competitors is not so much that placings can vary so widely from show to show. It is the almost amazing degree of consistency youtend to see in the scorecards in any given contest. That's where the quote at the beginning of this article comes from. A figure competitor asked me if I thought there was some kind of collusion among the judges, some meeting in which they received instructions on how to vote. How else, she thought, could a group of nine or eleven judges all agree on who should finish 11th, 12th or whatever?
Anyone who examines figure scorecards and see that this type of thing does seem to happen fairly often. But what causes this is not some kind of conspiracy among the judges in which the placings are determined ahead of time. Instead, the process that creates this kind of result actually takes place during the contest and is perfectly obvious to everyone watching if they know what to look for.
The key is the control exercised by the head judge over the call-outs. While prejudging call-outs in IFBB bodybuilding have always involved a more mixed quality of competitors in any given group, the NPC style is more specific: the first five called out are the top five, the next group defines who will finish 6th through 10th, then the next group of five and so on. In bodybuilding, this is a fairly effective and efficient process. Because there is a tradition of specific standards in bodybuilding, judges might disagree as to whether a competitor should be 2nd or 3rd, but not whether they should be 2nd or 12th. There simply shouldn't be that much disagreement among competent judges in the vast majority of cases.
But judges in figure can't rely simply on their own experience or expertise. They just aren't any specific standards to go by. The practice in fitness, which is also applied in figure, is to give high placings to women who have done well in past contests or who look like those who have placed well in the past. But there has always been a much greater degree of "sameness" in fitness bodies than in figure, because the fitness women also had to be gymnasts (for the most part) and excelling in gymnastic moves requires a small, lean, compact body.
But because of the misconception that figure is somehow "easier," a lot of women from both fitness and bodybuilding have decided to switch categories. So the figure line-up - especially at the pro level where there are no height categories – usually contains a wide variety of different body types. Tall, long-bodied competitors stand next to former gymnasts and bodybuilders as well as sexy "bikini models." So what's a judge to do? How can you arrive at a series of placings that conforms to the Òconsistency? required by both the NPC and the IFBB?
The answer is that you follow the lead of the head judge. Here is a scenario that takes place more often than you might think: The head judge calls out five competitors. Whether that would be your top five or whether you think all the competitors in the group deserve to be there doesn't matter. The judges have now been told who the top five are supposed to be. Disagree at your peril.
Then the head judge begins to ask the competitors to change places in the group. The one of the end is moved to the middle or next to the competitor in the middle. Another competitor is moved out to the end. After this is done, it is made clear to all the judges who the top five are and in what order they are supposed to finish. The one in the middle is the best in the group, the ones next to her are next best and so forth.
The same thing happens with the next five and then five more until all the competitors have been prejudged. All the judges have to do is follow the lead of the head judge and write down the scores accordingly.
So I would tell the woman who finished 12th on every scorecard that this happened because she was brought out in the third group of five and the head judge moved her to stand next to the competitor in the middle: the 2nd placing in the third group of five = 12th. Simple as that.
Of course, when you are dealing with contests across the country at both the amateur and professional levels, there are a variety of different head judges and not all of them have things so carefully organized. However, when this system is used there aren't really 9 or 11 judges score the contest – there is only one. But until the NPC and IFBB decide to define what figure actually is and can describe what kind of physiques they are looking for in some more specific way, one system would seem to be as good as another.
Nonethless, you do end up with some bizarre placings when the head judge has overlooked a competitor of great quality (most often because she simply isn't isn't well known enough yet) and you see her standing in the "tail end" group that contains women who, however aesthetic and athletic looking, are obviously not suited to success in figure competition. Seeing a swan standing there among the ducks you'd think the judges would be embarrassed. But physique judges seem to have an endless capacity for rationalization which protects them from admitting that mistakes have been made.