vault3rb0y wrote: Geez.... my .02- ... Ok.... so lets say an experienced vaulter is blowing through his biggest pole. Obviously he has two options to progress, either go up a pole and go up in grip.
You forgot two other viable options: (a) shorten your run, so that you don't hit the takeoff with quite as much speed; and (b) LOWER your grip.
vault3rb0y wrote: If he is a petrov vaulter, and is able to swing long the entire vault, going up a pole and keeping the same grip will make covering the pole harder. So.... he raises his grip, making the pole feel softer. Once blowing through, he can then go up a pole and the pole will not feel as stiff, and he can still "catch the ride". Incrementally he may have increased his push off a little by going up a pole, but he has also raised his grip. This is my interpretation of how a petrov vaulter would progress. The only way he could go up a pole without raising grip would be to increase the inversion speed (while staying long, as petrovians require).
Yes, keeping the same grip will "make covering the pole harder". So Petrovians have a couple choices ... (a) swing FASTER; or (b) move the standards in a bit. I prefer (a).
There's been countless vaulters describing this predicament on PVP ... maybe more beginners than intermediates ... but the advice that RainbowGirl and myself (and I'm sure several others) have consistently given is that you should NOT raise your grip when you go to a bigger pole. The reason is that you then have TWO variables to get used to (the higher grip and the stiffer pole) rather than just one.
In my personal experience ... and I'm talking about progressing from 14-3 thru 17-6 at UW ... I never once found it useful to raise my grip on a pole in order to slow down the pole speed or get a higher pushoff. In practice, it's quite the opposite ... you'll crush the pole even more ... and land even DEEPER into the pit ... and your pushoff will be LESS than before. If you have no stiffer pole to go to, your best option in this situation is to LOWER your grip (or shorten your run) ... and get a better, more fluent, more "continuous motion" swing ... that's going to allow you to invert earlier ... and shoot off the top of the pole faster/better. Once you improve this TECHNIQUE (it's all in the timing!), THEN (and only then) you can raise your grip.
vault3rb0y wrote:Now a tuck and shooter.... blows through a pole. He knows that he can safely raise his grip OR go up a pole, because in order to invert on the next pole, all he has to do is tuck a little more which increases his swing speed, and he can get on the next pole. Raising his grip does much less for him, because he has no trouble covering the pole, and it essentially just makes his pole softer (in most cases). So he goes up a pole, gets a bigger push off, but everytime he blows through he keeps his grip the same and tucks more. The only reason to raise your grip would be if you could not invert quickly enough to catch the vault. therefore with less energy put into the pole but with the ability to invert quicker than petrov vaulters, they hold lower and push higher than their petrov counterparts.
I have less to say about this alternative, since I can't draw on my personal experience. You say "all he has to do is tuck a little more". But what if he's already tucking as much as he humanly can?
You say "with less energy put into the pole". Do you mean compared to Petrovians? I say that tuck/shooters put MORE energy into the pole than Petrovians (for the reason that I explained in my last post on the Beginner's forum ... here ... http://www.polevaultpower.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=27&t=17776&start=12
You say they "hold lower and push higher than their petrov counterparts". If so, then how do you explain Duplantis? Are you suggesting that he's a tuck/shooter? His lack of bottom arm push AND his fantastically fast and powerful swing definitely put him in the Petrov category. You won't see tuck/shooters doing that! While tuck/shooters are making their pole bend more (at the expense of their swing speed), Duplantis is doing the opposite.
vault3rb0y wrote:In the end, the more energy you put into the pole, the higher you will vault. It's hard to argue that a petrov vaulter does not have the ability to add more energy into the vault, they just need to hold higher and have more core strength to swing long.
Nope. There's a HUGE difference between putting energy into the POLE and putting energy into the VAULT. You speak of these two disparate techniques as if they're synonomous. They're not!
Tuck/shooters can put more energy into the POLE (compared to Petrovians), but Petrovians can put more energy into the VAULTER-POLE SYSTEM!
Let's break this down a bit ... again ... [sigh] ...
Let's assume for the sake of argument that Bubka can perform the Petrov Model and the Tuck/Shoot "model" equally well. (He can't, of course.) He has the same runway speed, and the same power on his takeoff. Let's ignore the fact that there's certain things that Petrov demands he does on the runway, plant and takeoff. So let's just assume that whether he's performing one model or the other, everything "on the ground" is identical.
Now ... he's at a decision point ... he can block out his bottom arm to put more energy into the pole (and less into his swing), or he can do the opposite. This is where the 2 models differ the most!
Let's go Tuck/Shoot first. He blocks out, and doesn't swing as hard or as fast (a consequence of blocking out). Is he adding energy to the pole? Yes! Is he adding energy to his swing? No! He's actually SLOWING DOWN his swing! So much so that he has to "row" or "muscle up" to keep his rotational speed going ... and "fight" against the coil/recoil of the pole.
Not let's go Petrov. He lets his top arm take all the energy (momentum) from his run/takeoff, and he swings long/hard ... using his top arm as a fulcrum. His body is now a pendulum ... swinging about the top hand as the pole rotates about the box. This is the DOUBLE-PENDULUM ... true of bamboo/steel vaulters, and true of Petrovians. Is he adding energy to the pole! Yes ... but not as much as when he tucks/shoots. After takeoff, the DISTRIBUTION of his energy is different!
As he swings, he's not only adding SOME energy to the POLE (albeit less than the tuck/shooter), but he's also speeding up his rotational speed about his top hand ... by his WHIPPING action ... thus adding MORE energy to his SWING. As a result, he gets inverted SOONER ... and has no trouble staying with the coil/uncoil of the pole ... so he can continue his "continuous motion" right thru his extension ... without any pause in the tuck position. He doesn't even need to "row" or "muscle up" at all ... he SWINGS upside down! He's "one with the pole"!
Do you get it now?
Kirk