Cooleo111 wrote:I don't know where you're from, but in high school in Jersey you are not allowed to touch the mats at all...if you do it's considered a miss. You can however plant your pole in the box and go back, or let your pole break the plane without touching the mats. Also, if you plant and leave the ground with both feet, that is considered a miss. In my experience, the rule you described is accurate for USATF meets, not scholastic ones.
I'm from the United States of America and follow the rules spelled out by the NFHS. Unless New Jersey has additional rules that I'm not aware of, simply touching the mats in the way I described earlier is not a miss.
From the rule book:
Rule 7 Jumping Events
SECTION 5. Pole Vault
ART. 29... It is a foul if the competitor:...
b. Leaves the ground
in an attempt and fails to clear the crossbar.
d. Allows any part of his/her body or the pole to touch the ground or the landing pad
beyond the vertical plane of the top of the stop board, without clearing the bar.
in regards to b) simply having both feet leave the ground does not necessarily constitute a miss. it is up to the official to determine intent, but if a vaulter is clearly trying to stop and uses the pole in the box to stop, and his feet come off the ground, I'm not going to count it as a miss. Jan Johnson clarified this rule at a seminar he gave and told us the intent of the rule was to count it as a miss if the vaulter was clearly trying to make an attempt at the bar, not trying to stop.
I know the NFHS and Jan have been trying to make the rules as clear as possible. I would advise EVERY vaulter, coach, and official to read the latest rule book at the beginning of every season and have one with you at every meet if a all possible.
PoleVaultPlanet is coming.....