I'm speaking more about the lack of pads on the standard bases here than the coach tapping, but they're both SAFETY issues ...
You guys joke about these SAFETY issues, but
it's really no joking matter.
In my day, we honestly didn't know any better. We made do with the pads we had, but they were clearly inadequate. At my HS, I had 3 fishnets full of foam pieces that I carried on my back from the equipment shed to the pit each practice (I eventually made a custom-shaped wheelbarrow for this). That wasn't much foam. Under that, there was just sawdust. I was on a first-name basis with my chiropractor throughout HS.
At UW, there was what was considered a state-of-the-art pit, but it didn't have any front buns or pads over the standard bases, and it was under-sized by today's standards.
How I survived my PV career without DYING or PARLYZING myself, I'll never know, as I was quite fearless and reckless. It wasn't until 2002 that I heard about the first DEATH due to pole vaulting - the Kevin Dare accident - and it was a bit of a wake-up call to me. I realized that I had often been "wild on the pole" enough to have fallen like he did - either into the box or onto the standards.
At UW, I did survive 3 severe falls into the box, where I did permanent damage to my ankles, one fall onto the metal base of the standards (out for 2 weeks), and one fall head-first onto the track to the left of the pit (where I lost my 2 front teeth and got a concussion).
But thankfully, I'm here today to talk about it. I thank God and my lucky stars that I recovered from these accidents relatively unscarred.
So when a HS has (a) a knowledgeable coach (I
THINK); (b) an athlete fully aware of the dangers of landing on the base of the standards (WE'VE
TOLD YOU!); and (c) THE STANDARDS PADS -
RIGHT THERE!, then for heavan's sakes,
USE THEM!!! There's no excuse not to!
LHS, I hope you can appreciate that I'm not trying to "mother you" (as you called it). Rather, I'm seriously concerned for your
SAFETY!
Please discuss this VERY IMPORTANT ISSUE with your coach, and please tell me that you now understand the importance of safety, and that you'll "play safe". Thank
you for protecting
yourself from injury!
Kirk