PV Official wrote:As an official I would not want to have to enforce this rule because of its subjectivity as Kirk pointed out.
I don't lightly try to counter the opinion of an experienced PV official and a 5+ M vaulter (as I certainly am neither of them and bow to your expertise in matter specific to the PV), but I would point out that most sports rely on officials repeatedly making important assessments of the position of balls and body parts relative to some physical object, and as these things go, the position of the head of a vaulter relative to a clearly delinated zone on the crossbar strikes me as one that would be relatively easy in comparison. Soccer balls crossing the side or end line, feet in bounds on after a catch on the sidelines, a volleyball struck above (or below) the top of the net, a baseball/softball pitch above the knees, a fly ball inside or outside the foul pole, a field goal attempt inside or outside the imaginary extension of the post as it sails overhead, etc. The head of a vaulter, if viewed from behind by someone standing on the runway, is going to follow a pretty smooth (and relatively slow) path in terms of left-right motion, and will never (one hopes!) be obscured by any other part of the body. With a successful vault, it will pass behind the bar moving, for the most part, mostly vertical. The speed, the motions, the unobscured view, strike me (as someone who had to make calls as an official in 3 other sports) as ideal for accuracy.
If an official treats the rule as one that he/she won't call a vaulter on unless he is certain beyond all reasonable doubt that it was violated (so you give them the close ones, say a 3-6 inch buffer), then I honestly don't see what the problem will be. (after all, its not really the kid that's crossing the bar 3 ft off center, its the one that crosses 4+ ft off center that are the highest risk).
I also would support a workable "land in the coaches box" rule, but I do think this one it would be more problematic in terms of judging compliance. (and I think the c-box should be redesigned if it's going to be used as zone that determines what an acceptable vault is, which means expensive retro fits of pit covers. 10 cents worth of spray paint will convert existing crossbars to one compliant with a "4 ft" rule).
PV Official wrote:From Divalent’s description and from my experience, most of the vaults that would fail the “4 foot rule” would be attempts by less experienced vaulters with poor technique.
Based on your experience, do you think this rule (assuming the "call" can be made easily) would distinguish the unsafe vaults without also penalizing some safe ones? (and does 4 ft sound about right, or do you think a different length would be better).
Finally, (if I've not persuaded you on this possible rule), what would you suggest as an alternative way to allow an official to weed out unsafe vaulters besides the two you listed? (I'd support a higher minimum standard, but the value of the second one eludes me due to my lack of knowledge). Again, I'll point out that the issue is that many kids do not have responsible coaches that will yank a kid that is repeatedly putting himself at risk. Given the reality of the situation, it seems like the only other option (unless you just want to let them vault unsafely) is to set some minimal rules that prevent them from being rewarded by clearing bars in an unsafe manner. (because the risk goes up as the bar goes up)