OH-IOvaulter wrote:would not the goal of the plant be to place the body in the optimal position to swing as soon as the toe leaves the ground?
Yes.
OH-IOvaulter wrote:would not the goal of the plant be to place the body in the optimal position to swing as soon as the toe leaves the ground?
volteur wrote:agapit wrote:
Volteur. I agree with you. Efim is extremely intelligent person and a great coach. I have had a chance to meet with him and his son Julian few times when I lived in Australia.
volteur wrote:Did you not come back at some stage? So it was probably 92. Go figure.
So how has your thinking about this on-off-on-off progressed in the meantime? (16 years?)
ps you still look like you should be out there vaulting!
volteur wrote:
If the swing phase is basically a counter-reaction to the take-off and in this sense is passive, what is the active intention behind the take-off?
Volteur
golfdane wrote:volteur wrote:
If the swing phase is basically a counter-reaction to the take-off and in this sense is passive, what is the active intention behind the take-off?
Volteur
I don't see the swing phase as passive. A proper executed swing allows for some serious loading of the pole, and is therefore not passive. The kick of the trailing leg provides a good deal of energy into the pole, and facilitates inversion.
The active free take-off, where the vaulter increases his launch angle in comparison to a normal stride, provides an upgoing momentum on the pole/vaulter system, that will stack with any reactions from the pole, providing increased polespeed, allowing for a higher grip (using a slightly longer pole and slightly more flexible pole).
powerplant42 wrote:If the swing is only a reaction to the take-off, then why even train it? Why not just train your take-off instead? One trains it because it is an opportunity to conserve/add energy into the system with the abdominal muscles. The 'reaction' you're talking about gets the swing started, but the vaulter must ACTIVELY swing, that is, not just let momentum do all the work.
golfdane wrote:volteur wrote:
If the swing phase is basically a counter-reaction to the take-off and in this sense is passive, what is the active intention behind the take-off?
Volteur
I don't see the swing phase as passive. A proper executed swing allows for some serious loading of the pole, and is therefore not passive. The kick of the trailing leg provides a good deal of energy into the pole, and facilitates inversion.
volteur wrote:powerplant42 wrote:If the swing is only a reaction to the take-off, then why even train it? Why not just train your take-off instead? One trains it because it is an opportunity to conserve/add energy into the system with the abdominal muscles. The 'reaction' you're talking about gets the swing started, but the vaulter must ACTIVELY swing, that is, not just let momentum do all the work.
yes agreed there is some sort of active component. But what exactly? Do you swing the foot like a kick or maybe like a tap from gymnastics. Or?
agapit wrote:
You see this is a common mistake. Swing by itself does not contribute any additional energy in to the system. Unless it is accelerated and the only way to accelerate it is to apply force through your hands attached to the pole. This force could only be generated with your arms, chest abdominal muscles and hip flexors. So as you can imagine the swing itself is passive the pull on the pole is active.
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