BethelPV wrote:Tim,
How many vaults did it feel like you could just not catch up to the pole? I used to be an extremely bad tuck and shoot vaulter, who is transitioning to Petrov Model jumping. I remember when I would tuck, that there were times when it just felt like i could not even invert, like i would get stuck and couldn't extend. Just wondering if you ever felt that way. The more ive started actually swinging around the pole, the less that seems to happen to me! Just curious!
Zach
Not often, but sometimes. This was always because of a bad takeoff that limited my ability to swing. The tuck had to be completed off of a very fast swing just as the pole began to unbend. If it happened after that, it was impossible to go up the pole. Timing was everything. In my opinion Paul Burgess has the best of all possible worlds. He combines a free takeoff with all of the advantages that I feel come from tucking. I have heard that his coach also worked with Rodion Gatulin who also combined a free takeoff with a tuck. The two are not mutually exclusive of one another.
Remember, my jump and my understanding of the vault are colored by my particular physical limitations. It may not be the best way to vault high, but I am certain that it is the ONLY way I could vault at all. If you cannot run fast, and you cannot jump off of the ground, and you are not tall, what do you have left? The answer to that question determines almost everything I know about the vault that differs from what I have learned from others. I have been forced to consider alternatives because, as Altius has so often reminded me, "What is technically desirable must also be athletically possible." The only thing I could do well was to swing very long and very fast, and because this took so long to happen, I was forced to tuck to catch up to the pole. From this perspective I can promise you that a tuck done in the right way at the right time does not cost much if any penetration and actually helps the hips go up the pole instead of inhibiting them. But this has to come off of a really good run and plant, and unless you are forced to take a low angle, you don't have to do it.
I bet when you switched to Petrov your hips started going up the pole with ease and you left the days of what old Mr. Dial used to call "getting stuck in the bucket" behind. The awesome thing about the Petrov model is that it teaches you how to carry the pole, run, plant, swing, and finish the vault all at the same time. You have to learn to carry the pole and plant properly, and when that happens the swing through to inversion becomes possible, and even easy to do. This is often a revelation to athletes who have gone through the difficulties you describe for years, and it is one of the joys of teaching the proper run and takeoff to see this happen.