Pratt: Vaulting His Way to the Top
Posted: Wed Feb 08, 2006 6:32 pm
Vaulting His Way to the Top
By Sam Scorup - 7 Feb 2006
Source
You start on the runway with the pole upright, lowering it while gaining speed over the course of your 18 steps. You thrust the pole into a box, pushing off the ground to shift the pole forward. The pole bends, and you swing into a handstand on the pole. The pole recoils and throws you over the bar.
BYU pole vault coach Larry Berryhill said he respected Robbie Pratt's skill in an unconventional, specialized event.
"Most vaulters have to be a little bit crazy," Berryhill said, giving Pratt a backhanded compliment. "Anybody has to [be crazy] to go up 20 feet above cement. Pole vaulters are always doing very challenging things."
The pole vault requires various skills, including technique, strength and mental preparation. Pratt, however, likes to keep things simple as he competes.
"The hardest part of the vault is really the run, so usually I'm thinking about hitting my speed in an optimum place and hitting the box hard. That's really all I think about."
A descendent of famed Latter-day Saint Parley P. Pratt, BYU pole-vaulter Robison Pratt grew up in the colonies of Mexico. His path from Casas Grandes, Chihuahua, to track and field stardom was an unlikely one.
Berryhill, who has coached at BYU since 1985, met Pratt when Robbie was in his youth. He asked Pratt if he knew what the pole vault was. When Pratt said he was unfamiliar with it, Berryhill said Pratt's father, who was an All-American decathlete, should teach him. Berryhill gave Pratt a 10-foot pole, but Pratt didn't receive it until he was in his late teens.
At age 13, Pratt moved to El Paso, Tex. He started vaulting at age 15, after originally competing as a high jumper in high school. He injured his back, and then began his career as a "not very good" pole-vaulter.
However, by the time his back healed, he was a better pole-vaulter than high jumper.
"It was way more fun, so I said 'forget the high jump'-I'm a vaulter now.'"
At the Pole Vault Summit in Reno, Nev., Pratt cleared the bar at a shade over 18 feet, 8 inches. The mark not only set a school record, but also the Mexican national indoor record, and through the end of January, it is one of the top five heights cleared in the world this year.
Berryhill said Pratt's performance at Reno matched any athletic achievement by a BYU Cougar in a collegiate competition.
"Every coach, basically, that's in the NCAA and every open coach was at this competition," Berryhill said. "What he did was equal to winning the Masters [golf tournament] on the amateur level and beating the pros by five strokes."
Not only does Pratt's last name carry intriguing ties, but his first name comes from former BYU track coach Clarence Robison, who was Pratt's father's track coach at BYU. Clarence Robison's son, Mark Robison, is the current BYU men's track head coach.
His work ethic and focus have elevated Pratt to elite status in the pole vault. He has competed for Mexico in several international meets, ranging from the Pan-American Games to the Sydney Olympics in 2000. Pratt was only 19-years-old and a pre-missionary when he had his first Olympic experience.
Berryhill is sold on Pratt's ability to take home some hardware from the world competitions.
"Robbie has the most potential of any of those kids [I've worked with], including one boy who won the gold medal in 2000," Berryhill said.
Pratt, who also teaches Spanish at the Missionary Training Center in Provo, uses his 6-foot-6 frame to help him reach greater heights in the pole vault.
"Robbie has some advantages," Berryhill said. "There's always an advantage to height. He has good speed. The potential is there, as long as it's developed properly."
The NCAA championships will be held the same day as the World Championships, so Pratt will be able to compete at only one of the meets. The world meet will take place in Russia-the home of the greatest pole-vaulters of the last 50 years, Berryhill said, while adding that a victory in Moscow could give BYU and the LDS Church good publicity on a worldwide level. However, because he recruits athletes and gives track scholarships, Robison will decide where Pratt will compete. Pratt said where he wanted to compete was irrelevant, because he had no say in the decision. He understood the situation and will be loyal to whichever team he will represent.
Even some of the biggest track enthusiasts acknowledge their sport is not the only thing that matters in life. Citing the post-pole vault business successes of previous athletes he has coached, Berryhill's goal is for Pratt to be successful in life far beyond his years of athletic competition.
"My philosophy has always been we'll get the absolute best out of you in pole vault," Berryhill said, "but what's most important is where you are 10 years after you quit pole vaulting. If you're successful in life, this has just been something to get you there."
(For comments, e--mail Sam Scorup at sams@byu.edu)
By Sam Scorup - 7 Feb 2006
Source
You start on the runway with the pole upright, lowering it while gaining speed over the course of your 18 steps. You thrust the pole into a box, pushing off the ground to shift the pole forward. The pole bends, and you swing into a handstand on the pole. The pole recoils and throws you over the bar.
BYU pole vault coach Larry Berryhill said he respected Robbie Pratt's skill in an unconventional, specialized event.
"Most vaulters have to be a little bit crazy," Berryhill said, giving Pratt a backhanded compliment. "Anybody has to [be crazy] to go up 20 feet above cement. Pole vaulters are always doing very challenging things."
The pole vault requires various skills, including technique, strength and mental preparation. Pratt, however, likes to keep things simple as he competes.
"The hardest part of the vault is really the run, so usually I'm thinking about hitting my speed in an optimum place and hitting the box hard. That's really all I think about."
A descendent of famed Latter-day Saint Parley P. Pratt, BYU pole-vaulter Robison Pratt grew up in the colonies of Mexico. His path from Casas Grandes, Chihuahua, to track and field stardom was an unlikely one.
Berryhill, who has coached at BYU since 1985, met Pratt when Robbie was in his youth. He asked Pratt if he knew what the pole vault was. When Pratt said he was unfamiliar with it, Berryhill said Pratt's father, who was an All-American decathlete, should teach him. Berryhill gave Pratt a 10-foot pole, but Pratt didn't receive it until he was in his late teens.
At age 13, Pratt moved to El Paso, Tex. He started vaulting at age 15, after originally competing as a high jumper in high school. He injured his back, and then began his career as a "not very good" pole-vaulter.
However, by the time his back healed, he was a better pole-vaulter than high jumper.
"It was way more fun, so I said 'forget the high jump'-I'm a vaulter now.'"
At the Pole Vault Summit in Reno, Nev., Pratt cleared the bar at a shade over 18 feet, 8 inches. The mark not only set a school record, but also the Mexican national indoor record, and through the end of January, it is one of the top five heights cleared in the world this year.
Berryhill said Pratt's performance at Reno matched any athletic achievement by a BYU Cougar in a collegiate competition.
"Every coach, basically, that's in the NCAA and every open coach was at this competition," Berryhill said. "What he did was equal to winning the Masters [golf tournament] on the amateur level and beating the pros by five strokes."
Not only does Pratt's last name carry intriguing ties, but his first name comes from former BYU track coach Clarence Robison, who was Pratt's father's track coach at BYU. Clarence Robison's son, Mark Robison, is the current BYU men's track head coach.
His work ethic and focus have elevated Pratt to elite status in the pole vault. He has competed for Mexico in several international meets, ranging from the Pan-American Games to the Sydney Olympics in 2000. Pratt was only 19-years-old and a pre-missionary when he had his first Olympic experience.
Berryhill is sold on Pratt's ability to take home some hardware from the world competitions.
"Robbie has the most potential of any of those kids [I've worked with], including one boy who won the gold medal in 2000," Berryhill said.
Pratt, who also teaches Spanish at the Missionary Training Center in Provo, uses his 6-foot-6 frame to help him reach greater heights in the pole vault.
"Robbie has some advantages," Berryhill said. "There's always an advantage to height. He has good speed. The potential is there, as long as it's developed properly."
The NCAA championships will be held the same day as the World Championships, so Pratt will be able to compete at only one of the meets. The world meet will take place in Russia-the home of the greatest pole-vaulters of the last 50 years, Berryhill said, while adding that a victory in Moscow could give BYU and the LDS Church good publicity on a worldwide level. However, because he recruits athletes and gives track scholarships, Robison will decide where Pratt will compete. Pratt said where he wanted to compete was irrelevant, because he had no say in the decision. He understood the situation and will be loyal to whichever team he will represent.
Even some of the biggest track enthusiasts acknowledge their sport is not the only thing that matters in life. Citing the post-pole vault business successes of previous athletes he has coached, Berryhill's goal is for Pratt to be successful in life far beyond his years of athletic competition.
"My philosophy has always been we'll get the absolute best out of you in pole vault," Berryhill said, "but what's most important is where you are 10 years after you quit pole vaulting. If you're successful in life, this has just been something to get you there."
(For comments, e--mail Sam Scorup at sams@byu.edu)