Wisconsin's Consecutive Attempt NFHS Rule Adaptation
Posted: Sun Jan 17, 2010 9:59 pm
Wisconsin's high school sports governing body, the WIAA, has an adaptation of the NFHS pole vault rules that requires a vaulter to take his or her second attempt immediately after a miss on the first attempt (and gives the vaulter the option of taking the third attempt immediately if the first two are misses). Do any other states have this rule adaptation?
I've never liked this rule and think that it makes the event less safe. The rule that gives the vaulters 4 minutes between jumps when there are 3 vaulters left in the competition and 6 minutes when there is just one suggests that a vaulter needs recovery time between attempts. Wisconsin vaulters get the extra time at the end of the competition but they apparently don't need it at the beginning. I believe the theory is that it will speed up the competition but it hasn't done so. Pole vault is often still the last event to finish. The vaulter and coach generally consume the entire 90 seconds between attempts (and often more) discussing what went wrong, whether to change the standards placement, and basically trying to get the vaulter's head back where it needs to be for the next attempt. The competitions I've been to where the regular 5-alive rules apply seem to go faster. Overall, Wisconsin vaulters take the same number of jumps, maybe more because the second attempt is rushed, as the vaulters in another state, they just take more time between them.
Thoughts?
On the plus side, Wisconsin has another rule adaptation that is great. When vaulters enter the competition after passing at least three heights, they get 2 minutes of warmup time for each vaulter entering the competition at that height. So, for example, if the opening height in a big girls' competition is 7' and the two best vaulters enter the competition at 10', two hours later, they get 4 minutes of shared time to do anything they want without a bar -- pop ups, full vaults, run throughs, whatever -- instead of just one trip down the runway.
I've never liked this rule and think that it makes the event less safe. The rule that gives the vaulters 4 minutes between jumps when there are 3 vaulters left in the competition and 6 minutes when there is just one suggests that a vaulter needs recovery time between attempts. Wisconsin vaulters get the extra time at the end of the competition but they apparently don't need it at the beginning. I believe the theory is that it will speed up the competition but it hasn't done so. Pole vault is often still the last event to finish. The vaulter and coach generally consume the entire 90 seconds between attempts (and often more) discussing what went wrong, whether to change the standards placement, and basically trying to get the vaulter's head back where it needs to be for the next attempt. The competitions I've been to where the regular 5-alive rules apply seem to go faster. Overall, Wisconsin vaulters take the same number of jumps, maybe more because the second attempt is rushed, as the vaulters in another state, they just take more time between them.
Thoughts?
On the plus side, Wisconsin has another rule adaptation that is great. When vaulters enter the competition after passing at least three heights, they get 2 minutes of warmup time for each vaulter entering the competition at that height. So, for example, if the opening height in a big girls' competition is 7' and the two best vaulters enter the competition at 10', two hours later, they get 4 minutes of shared time to do anything they want without a bar -- pop ups, full vaults, run throughs, whatever -- instead of just one trip down the runway.