wtfisup wrote:As my good friend Father Time once said, "A correre e cagare ci si immerda i garretti."
Translation: Only real men land on the slant of the pit.
If you don't get stood up at least twice you're not trying hard enough.
Does Borges jump on small poles? No. He only has three. Big, Giant, and Viva LaBorges. Saw it in Jock-grim.
#mindblown
I really cannot think of worse advice. The highest jumps come with the standards all the way back. What goes straight up must come straight down. A very narrow top end is not playing the averages, besides the fact that the further you push off, the more you penetrate. I personally witnessed the highest push off in the history of the sport, and the standards were all the way back on that jump. There is no such thing is a big pole, or there shouldn't be. There is the right pole and it will put you in the center of the pit every time. This does not just apply to youngsters with the assumption that they should be given watered down advice to keep them safe. It applies to everybody. If a vaulter does not hit the center of the pit, there is something fundamentally wrong with their technique. Proper technique makes the vault safe. If that were not true, this sport would and should be banned.