http://www.dailynebraskan.com/vnews/dis ... 0d581e0b44
Pole vaulters challenged to block out dangers of sport
By GLENN MELVIN / DN Staff Writer
April 05, 2004
Editor's note: This is the first in a five-part series detailing the most dangerous activities in sports.
Flying through the air with nothing for support except a fiberglass pole and your own momentum.
Below you is a mat that is your only way of landing without a broken bone or severe head injury.
But it's not that simple. Before you land you must push off the pole after inverting upside down, and then arch your body over a bar that you're not supposed to move from its flimsy supports.
Welcome to the life of a pole vaulter.
From a hand slipping to the pole snapping, several things can go wrong each attempt.
"If you're thinking about that, you shouldn't be trying to leave the ground that day," senior Eric Eshbach said, "because there's something wrong."
Most accidents occur when the vaulters are young and inexperienced, however when accidents happen at the collegiate level, the severity of injuries increases with the height of the bar.
In a month-and-a-half stretch in 2002, two high schoolers and one collegian died while vaulting. The two high school deaths were caused by the landing mats being high jump mats instead of the proper pole vault mats.
Kevin Dare of Penn State died after his momentum stopped in mid-air, and he landed head first in the metal plant box.
The National Center for Catastrophic Sports Injury Research at the University of North Carolina considers pole vaulting the most dangerous sport it has studied. An average of one person died each year between 1983 and 2000.
The worst injury to happen at a track meet hosted by Nebraska was last year at the Husker Invitational when Paul Gensic of Air Force fell into the plant box and required a week-long stay in the hospital.
"The worst injury I've seen (was) somebody broke their pole in mid-air," freshman Jenny Green said, "and the pole stuck in their arm and took out a chunk of skin."
The injuries have caused some safety precautions to be taken by high schools and colleges. The National Federation of State High School Associations now requires larger mats for pole vaulting.
Some coaches now require vaulters to wear helmets. But since vaulters usually land on mats that are softer than the helmets, some critics feel the helmets will result in cumulative damage to the brain.
To succeed in the pole vault, athletes must block out the dangerous side of the sport and focus on what they have to do.
"You can't think about the accidents or the dangerous part of it," Green said. "You just have to go out there and give it your all, and if you do what you're supposed to do, you're not going to get hurt."
Also, the more experience a vaulter gets, the less likely for a severe injury to occur.
"It's normally some technical aspect," Eshbach said. "The more and more you do it, you learn where your body is at in the air."
Another Poorly Researched Article
- rainbowgirl28
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- rainbowgirl28
- I'm in Charge
- Posts: 30435
- Joined: Sat Aug 31, 2002 1:59 pm
- Expertise: Former College Vaulter, I coach and officiate as life allows
- Lifetime Best: 11'6"
- Gender: Female
- World Record Holder?: Renaud Lavillenie
- Favorite Vaulter: Casey Carrigan
- Location: A Temperate Island
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Re: Another Poorly Researched Article
rainbowgirl28 wrote:In a month-and-a-half stretch in 2002, two high schoolers and one collegian died while vaulting. The two high school deaths were caused by the landing mats being high jump mats instead of the proper pole vault mats.
You've got to be kidding me...
- tim hutzley
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- mcminkz05
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tim hutzley wrote:Reading that made me mad. That guy could make bowling look like a dangerouse sport!!!
.. 16 pound rock hard objects traveling at deadly speeds down a thin wooden lane.. lightning quick reflexes required to avoind crushed hands in the ball return machine.. a single slip of a finger could result in a catastrophic accident..
What have you done today to get better?
- Robert schmitt
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mcminkz05 wrote:tim hutzley wrote:Reading that made me mad. That guy could make bowling look like a dangerouse sport!!!
.. 16 pound rock hard objects traveling at deadly speeds down a thin wooden lane.. lightning quick reflexes required to avoind crushed hands in the ball return machine.. a single slip of a finger could result in a catastrophic accident..
Don't forget when you lose the handel on the ball on the back swing and take out the crowd. Dangerous not only to the particapants but spectators also!!!
An optimist is one who sees a light in darkness....a pessimist blows it out.
- vaultdad
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Other sports just as "dangerous" to lambast when he runs out of PV stories:
Golf (ever been hit from the guys behind or in front of you?
Bocce Ball (look out for stone balls hurled right at your feet)
Badmitton (those birdies could put your eye out)
Frisbee Golf (taking one to the head could give you a concussion, or worse)
Volleyball ( I watched a spiker catch her braces in the net, OUCH!)
Ever wonder what the phrase "Yellow Journalism" refers too?
I've read the report he's quoting and somehow drew completely different results given the millions of successful jumps made by PV athletes every year by ages 14 thru 80+ . But just look at how many Soccer players have received their lifetime quota of concussions before reaching high school, or heaven forbid the amount of very serious injuries that occur every year in football that are simply not reported . . .! Even Cheerleaders reported a higher level of sustained injuries.
I wonder how this reporter would write the story if a PGA golfer accidentally took out a spectator at a PGA Open with an errant ball to the head! . . .
Golf (ever been hit from the guys behind or in front of you?
Bocce Ball (look out for stone balls hurled right at your feet)
Badmitton (those birdies could put your eye out)
Frisbee Golf (taking one to the head could give you a concussion, or worse)
Volleyball ( I watched a spiker catch her braces in the net, OUCH!)
Ever wonder what the phrase "Yellow Journalism" refers too?
I've read the report he's quoting and somehow drew completely different results given the millions of successful jumps made by PV athletes every year by ages 14 thru 80+ . But just look at how many Soccer players have received their lifetime quota of concussions before reaching high school, or heaven forbid the amount of very serious injuries that occur every year in football that are simply not reported . . .! Even Cheerleaders reported a higher level of sustained injuries.
I wonder how this reporter would write the story if a PGA golfer accidentally took out a spectator at a PGA Open with an errant ball to the head! . . .
Vaulting Incognito "I saw those tubes on your truck, and I thought you were a plumber . . ."
- vaulterpunk
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- tim hutzley
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