powerplant42 wrote:That's why 'positions' should be disregarded when trying to replicate technique... instead the athlete should focus on the ACTION that is ocurring!
Close, but no cigar.
Positions are OK to LOOK at. After all, when you analyze a video frame by frame, that's ALL you have to look at. But what you must ask yourself when you look at a FRAME (or a POSITION) is "what happened just before this?", and "what's going to happen next?". Or as you said in a very cryptic way, PP, "what's the ACTION that's occurring when this snapshot was taken?".
So each frame is important only in the context of the 2 frames that envelope it.
To say you should DISREGARD positions is stating it far too strongly. You HAVE to look at them ... in CONTEXT ... but just on video ... not in your mind's eye.
As you said PP, when you're vaulting (or visualizing your vault while standing at the end of the runway), you should focus on the ACTIONS ... the things that happen BETWEEN each frame ... rather than the POSITIONS or FRAMES per se.
Also, a position should never be viewed or visualized as a FROZEN position. There's no pauses in the continuous chain, so you never want to stay in one position for ANY length of time ... not even a millisecond! Instead, you want to visualize yourself PASSING THRU all of the various positions that "prove" that you're going thru the correct body motions of a "perfect vault".
I think that's what some people are afraid of. If you think too much about the POSITION, then you might not be focussing on the ACTIONS that make up the various positions. Just remember to keep this all in the context of a continuous chain motion ... from the start of your run to over the bar.
Kirk