No Bungee at competition!
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- drcurran
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No Bungee at competition!
Just received the notice below from Stanley Underwood.
Dan
Just a heads up - the NFHS rule book for 2008 inadvertently omitted the language banning the use of a bungee on competition days. The Federation will probably post an emergency update re-instating the ban within the next few days.
In the meantime, play safe - do NOT allow a bungee to be used during warm-ups at a meet. With the upcoming VTC, KIL, TSSAA, and other high school championships it is important that we monitor this.
I will advise as soon as the Federation posts the update, but I repeat, do NOT permit the vaulters to use a bungee during warm-ups at a meet.
Dan
Just a heads up - the NFHS rule book for 2008 inadvertently omitted the language banning the use of a bungee on competition days. The Federation will probably post an emergency update re-instating the ban within the next few days.
In the meantime, play safe - do NOT allow a bungee to be used during warm-ups at a meet. With the upcoming VTC, KIL, TSSAA, and other high school championships it is important that we monitor this.
I will advise as soon as the Federation posts the update, but I repeat, do NOT permit the vaulters to use a bungee during warm-ups at a meet.
I'm not as good as I once was, but I'm as good once as I ever was!
TK
TK
- tennpolevault
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What the heck?? Is this for everywhere? I've never heard about this!
It might be a safety issue getting tangled in the bungie, but it's safer to land on a bungie head first than a bar...(don't do that, I know from experience )
I'm ticked off now, going over bars during warm up would wreck my confidence levels unless I went over more bars during practise.
Grrrrrrr!
It might be a safety issue getting tangled in the bungie, but it's safer to land on a bungie head first than a bar...(don't do that, I know from experience )
I'm ticked off now, going over bars during warm up would wreck my confidence levels unless I went over more bars during practise.
Grrrrrrr!
Don't eat the crossbar.
Plant in the box.
Plant in the box.
- vault3rb0y
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It is much safer to have a bungee up there than no bungee. Especially for high school vaulters, we need to have a reference point when swing on a pole. A lot of high schoolers dont have the experience you "feel" when they wont make pit, so a bungee with the standards on 80 will get them reference if they need to bail. There is no safety danger with getting caught in a bungee either... the worst that happens is a little rubber-burn! What a stupid rule. In simplot they put a bar up for all of nico's warm up jumps and no one complained.
The greater the challenge, the more glorious the triumph
This note was sent out by the MIAA (Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Association - our governing body) to all the member coaches - they receieved it driectly from the NFHS :
Code: Select all
The NFHS has received the question of whether or not it is acceptable for a bungee cord to be used for warm-ups in the pole vault at an interscholastic track and field meet.
In 2006 the NFHS Track and Field Rules Committee discussed the use of the bungee cord for warm-ups at an interscholastic meet and agreed this would not be acceptable under Rule 7-5-16. This restriction would be in effect during the actual competition as well as the warm-up period prior to the event.
SITUATION: The pole vaulters from Team A want to use a bungee cord to place on the vaulting standards during warm-ups at the visiting school. The event judge for the pole vault informs the vaulters and their coach that this is not acceptable under Rule 7-5-16 during competition, and is not allowed during warm-ups, as the item is not the acceptable crossbar and may not be appropriate to be placed on this vaulting standard system. RULING: Correct procedure. COMMENT: Rule 7-5-16 is clear that a crossbar may not be used in warm-ups once the competition has begun. The field event judge has exercised the correct judgment for the pre-event warm-up, as only the use of a crossbar manufactured for the event should be used. Training devices such as bungee cords shall not be used at interscholastic meets.
This situation is provided to assist you in responding to questions you may receive regarding this matter. Please disseminate this interpretation to your coaches and officials as you deem appropriate. It will also be placed on the NFHS web site.
Should you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact me. Thank you for your attention and consideration.
BO/lb
cc: Bob Gardner, NFHS
NFHS Track and Field Rules Committee
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I don't know what the NFHS thinking behind this rule is, but I'm confident that it isn't safety. If the NFHS were concerned about pole vault safety, it would not have adopted the idiotic rule change that allows a vaulter to blast off the ground in a full blown attempt, come up short and then either dive for the front bums or slam back to the runway and not have it count as an attempt. All that was needed was a change that said that if the vaulter clearly attempts to abort the attempt and both feet leave the ground it's not a miss. For the NFHS it's more important to be consistent with the high jump than safe.
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There are a few instances where a bungee might be ok. Warm ups is one of the last. I made a comment to a vaulter critiquing his jump at a bungee. I usually will bring in Bubba to "check my coaching work". Here is my comment to the vaulter and Bubbas comment to me. After you read it you'll understand why I'm not a big fan of bungees for the most part. I hope this might open some eyes.
I wrote;
"Bungees in my opinion promote laziness at the top. You can cream the bungee and it stays up giving you a false sense of accomplishment".
Think about it, the last place you would want a false sense of accomplishment is right before you have to jump for real. Using a crossbar instead of a bungee in warm ups might also save the vaulter from a "no height".
Bubba sent this back to me;
Sorry to be a sourpuss but SO many kids are petrified of the crossbar. I have no problem with beginning the practice with a bungee just within their reach but that's it. What's worse is when they think they can jump that height. That's the part that bothers me the most. The rule of thumb is 2' for a tight bungee - so a 10' bungee jump is equal to an 8' bar clearance. I’ll start a bungee at 9’ or so with the standards all the way back and then move up 6â€
I wrote;
"Bungees in my opinion promote laziness at the top. You can cream the bungee and it stays up giving you a false sense of accomplishment".
Think about it, the last place you would want a false sense of accomplishment is right before you have to jump for real. Using a crossbar instead of a bungee in warm ups might also save the vaulter from a "no height".
Bubba sent this back to me;
Sorry to be a sourpuss but SO many kids are petrified of the crossbar. I have no problem with beginning the practice with a bungee just within their reach but that's it. What's worse is when they think they can jump that height. That's the part that bothers me the most. The rule of thumb is 2' for a tight bungee - so a 10' bungee jump is equal to an 8' bar clearance. I’ll start a bungee at 9’ or so with the standards all the way back and then move up 6â€
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I don't ever see bungees used in HS meets around here, but I would be 100% behind a rule that allowed them. It is safer for the kids if they have something to swing for. It promotes better awareness of where you are in the air.
The issue is probably speeding the meet up. Just get your two kids who are going to be putting the bar up to stand there on the standards and raise/lower. If a kid doesn't want the bungee, just put it high enough that their poles won't hit it.
The issue is probably speeding the meet up. Just get your two kids who are going to be putting the bar up to stand there on the standards and raise/lower. If a kid doesn't want the bungee, just put it high enough that their poles won't hit it.
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