superpipe wrote: I absolutely agree with what you are saying. ...
And I now agree with everything you're saying! I didn't think you got it at first ... but I guess you did.
Kirk
superpipe wrote: I absolutely agree with what you are saying. ...
ADTF Academy wrote: I call them "this is what you do if your take off and initial swing fails" drill.
ADTF Academy wrote: Side Note to Kirk if I could add one thing to your drill and for this young lady is her inverted C in the back of her swing is way too big ... With the abs tight and the lower back flat the stretch in her chest and stomach will increase in size and cause the hips and foot to actually whip through faster. However, this will cause a tighter inverted C which sadly most people like to see the big inverted C position. I like fast swings over cheated and slow takeoffs.
ADTF Academy wrote: In the vault what she is doing now will [???] and I bet cause her to have a pause at takeoff in her jump and thus a delay in her swing coming off the ground ...
KirkB wrote:ADTF Academy wrote: Side Note to Kirk if I could add one thing to your drill and for this young lady is her inverted C in the back of her swing is way too big ... With the abs tight and the lower back flat the stretch in her chest and stomach will increase in size and cause the hips and foot to actually whip through faster. However, this will cause a tighter inverted C which sadly most people like to see the big inverted C position. I like fast swings over cheated and slow takeoffs.
ADTFA, I agree with you. I like to show Amy's vid to vaulters that have no idea of the POWER of the DOWNSWING. She does it ... in a VERY exagerated way. Most mere mortals won't have the flexibility in their core ... or even the daringness ... to do this drill as EXTREMELY as Amy does it. But as an example of how it CAN be done, I think it's good. The interesting part of what you say (pardon my paraphrasing) is that it's not how BIG of a downswing you have ... it's how TIGHT your core is when you stretch into the inverted-C, and then how QUICKLY you initiate the downswing.
KirkB wrote:I'll add that you then need to ACCELERATE thru the downswing. This can be done thru swinging your trail leg FASTER than a natural swing ... using some muscles in your thighs and lower abdomen that you may not even know you have (or maybe you know you HAVE them, but you don't know how to USE them!) ... quadriceps, rectus femoris, tensor fascia lata, rectus abdominis, and external oblique.
These are all things that can be taught in the Stretch Whip Drill. The extreme stretch to the inverted-C position is only one aspect of this drill. Even Amy would not go this high in her elastic stretch on the pole. You should TRY to do it like Amy, but then (as ADTFA says - but I'm paraphrasing again) dial it back to something more like the "elastic stretch" of a real vault ... before your lack of an elastic stretch turns into the opposite extreme.
KirkB wrote:ADTF Academy wrote: In the vault what she is doing now will [???] and I bet cause her to have a pause at takeoff in her jump and thus a delay in her swing coming off the ground ...
Yes, I'll bet you're right. I had this flaw myself ... I didn't know any better back then. It's hard to describe how to get a FULL stretch before you swing (Amy gets MORE than a full stretch), and then begin your swing IMMEDIATELY ... and I rarely see a vaulter do this properly ... but it can be done. I know it can be done, becuz I've personally experienced it. In their haste to swing, most vaulters begin the swing too early ... or (like you say re Amy), probably swing too late. The happy medium isn't just a compromise, it's an OPTIMIZE.
ADTF Academy wrote:How old is this young lady? How high has she jumped? What is the biggest pole she has been on?
superpipe wrote:The reason I'm still more for swinging Bubkas on a high bar vs. the rings is that you are forced to use your core strength to hold your body alignment while you extend into a vertical position. Even Amy on the rings, really doesn't have to use much core strength to hold her body alignment while extending to vertical since there is no force acting against her aside from gravity.
superpipe wrote:This acting force in a real vault would be the recoiling of the pole forward and the fact that the pole is in your way, not allowing you to swing your legs over your head ( b/c the pole is bent less than 90 degrees before you finish the swing in 99.9% of cases ).
ADTF Academy wrote: If you watch his short approach jumps this is what we are trying to move towards you can see he doesn't need to [power out of it bubka drill style] at all. His swing is redirected vertically and he moves to inversion with no mechanical work at all. When a vaulter does this right for the first time they usually look at me and go "What was that... What just happened... Did I get upside down?" I go yes did you have to do anything and they go no and I go " THATS POLE VAULT"
ADTF Academy wrote: The whole redistributing energy vertical can be summed up like this. I heard the deadlift comparison this is not the action you want. In a deadlift or good morning the shoulders are raised with a flat back. If the shoulders are driven fast than the hips drive forward and the feet must fall off towards the crossbar. This is not what we want. Try this sit on your butt with your chest up and hands out infront like your holding a pole in the U position. Now with someone holding your hands roll up your spine til your back is flat. This will allow your body to move vertical while keeping the legs also moving vertical. Another common phrase I say is put your pants on. You don't throw your shoulders back you slowly roll up your spine to pull your pants up.
... if you takeoff and swing a la Petrov/Bubka, then you're going to have a powerful swing that inverts you. At this point you're upside down, and the pole is still bent. Then, you're going to "pullup", just like you might pull up your pants. (I'm serious.) Another analogy would be that you pull up just like the first part of a clean-and-jerk. (The "clean" part.)
ADTF Academy wrote: The swing takes care of itself and you only have to worry about finishing the turn and clearance. The middle section of the vault is a blur. If you can feel out ever moment your vault is probably really slow.
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