I am a high school junior, second year vaulter
107lb 5'3" Asian PR: 10'6" in meet 11' in practice. gripping a few inches above 11'.
I use a 120lb 12' Skypole
I am consistently under, anywhere from 4inches to nearly a foot.
Today at practice we had a head wind, and stalled when my step was right on, and again. [Note: I was only capable to jump twice, other times I always felt outside, also wind affects my run/vault greatly @ 107lbs]
When theres no wind and I plant under I land really deep into the pit. Last meet I had to set standards all the way back to 31.5in, and I still hit the crossbar even though I had the height. I was thinking of slowly bringing back my step everytime I vault. That way I'll get a little closer to my ideal takeoff point. Since at practice I went from flying way in to stalling and being shotback at the ideal mark a foot away from what I'm used to. Any other suggestions would be great, I'm willing to try almost about anything.
Used to taking off under, cannot takeoff at ideal mark
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- vault3rb0y
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i was having the same problem end of indoor, you get too comfortable and used to taking off under. Even though you know you have more force and its better to be right on, you never think you are right now. My problem was over striding the last step. You could try doing pole runs and making sure that last step is directly under your leg, not in front of you. If that doesnt work, it could be a confidence problem, which i also had, haha. do some 3 or 4 step easy approaches, after the pole runs, with a pole you know you can get through if you are outside or inside, and just adjust your mark until its right. Once its right, do it over at least 5- 10 times so that it feels more natural. You gotta build the muscle habits and memory of your step being right before it will stay right.AzNJJ wrote:I tried to jump!, best one that came out from jumping up and hitting my ideal mark was stalling out.
PS: I wasn't in the best condition to vault, my sleep was taxed by the stress of up coming AP Exams. last night ~ 3hrs of sleep, day before 2hrs.
The greater the challenge, the more glorious the triumph
This is probalby going to be bad advice, but I advocate for a more controlled run. I used to sprint my runs, but I lost a bit of control and was used to just striding on the last step.
I've cut my pace a bit to something more controlled, and its helped a lot...
I've cut my pace a bit to something more controlled, and its helped a lot...
My latest vaults...
http://www.fileforge.com/pupload/view/106
http://www.fileforge.com/pupload/view/106
- vault3rb0y
- PV Rock Star
- Posts: 2458
- Joined: Wed Apr 26, 2006 6:59 pm
- Expertise: College Coach, Former College Vaulter
- Lifetime Best: 5.14m
- Location: Still Searching
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thats actually really good advice, from what i know. You want the fasted.... controlled speed. If you can run 9.7 meters per second down the last 3 steps thats great, but if your step is always off and your plant is not square, you are defeating the purpose. Thats how i used to vault, but when you get a dynamic step, you get a lot more controlled, even though you arent going as fast, you are putting more usable energy into the pole.Ming3r wrote:This is probalby going to be bad advice, but I advocate for a more controlled run. I used to sprint my runs, but I lost a bit of control and was used to just striding on the last step.
I've cut my pace a bit to something more controlled, and its helped a lot...
The greater the challenge, the more glorious the triumph
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