Unread postby vault3rb0y » Mon Mar 31, 2008 11:38 pm
Are you seriously trying to call someone out based on their current jump?
Thats your problem in a nutshell right there "Jason", (thats getting confusing, but anyway) you are judging technique based on how someone does something at this point in time. Any coach who knows anything will tell you that it is not how you are actually doing something, it is the technique you are STRIVING for. There are actually only a handful of concepts in the petrov model, but as a result of these handful of concepts, EVERYTHING in the vauult has a purpose. You are confusing the purposes of certain things in the vault. The bottom arm is straight because they load the pole well enough to bend it until their bottom arm is straight. In fact, some coaches like Agapit (a VERY well respected coach) even suggested that you do not need upward pressure with the bottom arm. It just sits there stabalizing, and All the energy should be transfered through the top hand. That was debated, but take it however you want.
Jason, you are seeing things in the vault and basing conclusions and principles based on that. Thats called convergent thinking. What you need to do is understand the principles first, and Diverge from there, using divergent thinking (go figure), to think about how to go about apply these principles in the vault. Then you will understand how and why the elite vaulters do things the way they do. Ill give you a hint, most if it is based on stiff poling technique. What does the bottom arm do there?
SO you can look at MY jumps too if you like, and pick apart how i could do things differently to jump higher, or realize that how you jump now is not important, its how you hope to jump in the future. And if a 16'6" in PRACTICE is the best vault your model has produced thus far, maybe you should reconsider how YOU hope to jump in the future as well. And stop posting on videos of vaulters on YouTube unless you are prepared to talk about how to improve people at every level of the vault inteligently if need be, because a true model applies to every level of jumper.
The greater the challenge, the more glorious the triumph