 If I were to explain what it's like, it's like, oh my god, I'm in the air, and then it's a split second of, oh my god, I'm in the air, but then the rest of it's like, okay, I'm in control. I'm Laili Ipsa here with CalTV News reporting from Oakland Ice Center, where many members of CalFigure Skating Train. Many people watching the 2018 PyeongChang Olympics were outraged at skaters like Patrick Chan, who fell were able to beat skaters like Adam Rapun, who skated a flawless program. Well, I'm here with Captain of CalFigure Skating Chelsea in order to give you a better explanation on how figure skating is scored and what that means for training skaters. The IJS system is a point-based system and it's broken into two parts. You have your technical score and then you have your component score. So the technical score is basically what it sounds like, all the technical elements. So this consists of your footwork sequence, your jumps, your spins. For a senior ladies long program, you have seven jumping passes. You have three spins and then you have a step sequence and a choreography sequence. What does that mean? You have seven jumps in your routine. Three of those jumping passes are combinations and then the rest of them are solo jumps. And then for spins, you have what we call levels. So judges are allowed to give you grades of execution and we call these GOEs for short. And the GOE scale ranges from a negative three to a positive three. So if a judge awards you a zero for an element, that means that it's okay. It's textbook okay. You don't get any additional points, but you don't lose any points. So zeros are usually good. So my training now, I definitely can say that it's been affected by the IJS system. Since everything is such a numbers game nowadays, a lot of skaters, including myself, work on spins differently. We work on jumps differently. Our instincts tell us that we want to stay on the ground and stay safe. But for the sport, we're pushing ourselves to go to incredible speeds to go into triple jumps that require brute force in order to complete successfully.