Mid Mark Chart

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agapit
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Re: mid

Unread postby agapit » Thu Jun 12, 2008 1:32 pm

ladyvolspvcoach wrote:I decided to prove him wrong. Laws of nature and natural order aside, try as I may, I couldn't prove him wrong on the track. The data continued to show me wrong and that it worked in every case regardless of skill level or sex of the athlete.


I don't think it is productive to go on the quest to prove someone wrong. I think the point is to have a real medicine not a fix all potion. Examining the substance of the solution should improve the solution sometime even open new horizons. You know they were trying to improve the treatment for heart disorders and discovered Viagra, not the same thing but very useful to many people.

We could just swear allegiance to the chart if it is so fault proof and do it on faith until someone can come and explain it to us. This sound like one way of dealing with it, to keep everyone happy and cool.

ladyvolspvcoach wrote:when athletes held the same grip their mids were exactly the same regardless of their height.


I am sorry. I am not trying to be difficult, but I have never seen anything like this. Is this a coincidence or is there a law of physics or mechanics or chemistry or something else involved. Coach can you please explain here why people holding the same grip regardless of their physical ability and constitution would have a same mid (+/- 8")? Even if they run with the same speed they could have different step length. You are not saying that two people who have the same speed must run with the same step length, right? If you are not saying this than what are you saying?
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mid

Unread postby ladyvolspvcoach » Thu Jun 12, 2008 2:21 pm

I don't think it is productive to go on the quest to prove someone wrong. I think the point is to have a real medicine not a fix all potion.
I agree, Roman, but in this particular case it has proven to be a blessing for me...

Coach can you please explain here why people holding the same grip regardless of their physical ability and constitution would have a same mid (+/- 8")?
no I can not explain it. I personally had to really wrestle with the idea that it was actually happening at all. However, the result is that I now have an incredible tool that I have found several uses for. In my opinion( and clearly on this formum, we all have one) this is one of the most productive sets of data that I have found relative to actualizing behavior in the vault as opposed to synthizing theory....

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Unread postby dj » Thu Jun 12, 2008 3:54 pm

hey pvstudent

give me a grip for each jumper and i'll see how close i get to where there 6 step check is or should be...

fair enough.

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Re: mid

Unread postby decanuck » Thu Jun 12, 2008 3:58 pm

ladyvolspvcoach wrote:Actually, neither of these can be true. I coach that an overstride is the extension of the heel beyong the knee and if you look neither of these ladies is guilty of that behavior.
Ahh, we have a conflict in terms. By overstride, I meant simply that the athlete's footstrike was horizontally ahead of the an imaginary line drawn straight down from the athlete's centre of mass (DJ posted this somewhere). It is very possible for this to happen without an athlete's toe extending beyond their knee. It could be what's happening in that video.

I'm curious, what makes you choose this definition of overstriding? To me it seems descriptive, rather than prescriptive. I'll bet for many athletes it's a very effective indicator--it seems to have worked well for your ladies. But think about this example...There's a vaulter here people call stilts. Her legs are EXTREMELY long overall, but the length is disproportionately distributed between her upper and lower legs. Her femurs are of average length for a girl, even for a girl much shorter than she is. But her forelegs are RIDICULOUSLY long. Like, comically long. Now, when she runs, by your definition of overstriding, she overstrides BADLY--her toes go way past her knees. But her foot placement is just fine; it's right underneath her centre of mass. If you told her not to let her toes go past her knees, she'd be turning over quickly, but without force--"spinning her wheels," so to speak.

But getting back to the Dartfish clip of your two Lady Vols, I still think it's possible the short one is overstriding (by the above definition), or the tall one is understriding, or both. But it's also possible that they're not, and they're both running as effectively as they can given their current abilities. If this is the case, then by necessity, the shorter vaulter must be a stronger runner than the taller vaulter in the sense that each foot impact is more forceful and shorter in time (i.e. for each stride her foot is in contact with the ground for less time than the taller vaulter's strides).

I think it would be interesting to compare the footstrikes of these vaulters, or two like them in a similar situation. I'll bet the shorter one's feet are on and off the ground quicker. Now if that hunch is correct, then consider this...

What happens when the taller vaulter becomes a stronger running (over time through both physical and technical training). Her footstrike time would come decrease, force would increase, and her strides would be longer, meaning her start mark AND mid mark would need to move back. You could deal with this one of two ways:
1. If she can handle it, move her grip up. This would keep her in line with DJ's chart.
2. Move her too a stiffer pole. This would put her mid outside of that prescribed in the chart.

This is one reason why I think any given vaulter's "ideal" or "proper" 6-step check mark can fall outside of the prescribed mid if an athlete's on a stiff pole, or inside of it if they're on a soft pole. Remember, poles bend and penetration occurs according to energy, and energy comes not just from the ground (impulse at takeoff) but also the work on the pole. Now since the ground work (impulse at takeoff) is the greatest contributor of energy by far, it makes sense that grip height is highly related to impulse at takeoff, which is why DJ's chart works even if it doesn't completely make sense. But what if you notice that your (now stronger) taller vaulter is being a little lazy on the top end and you choose option #2 above to work on it? Well then her mid is now off the chart (outside).

BUT if you move her up in grip on a pole of the same relative stiffness, she'll still be "on the chart," so to speak. The conclusion: the chart relates two variables: energy from run and grip height, plus or minus a certain amount depending on the size of the vaulter. The CONTROLLED variable in the chart is the energy from the second phase, which can correlate with pole stiffness.

Maybe the question is, what is the amount of the controlled variable (pole stiffness)? How to we quantify this and manipulate it to fit the chart? Perhaps DJ should add a note to the bottom that says "Chart applies when vaulting on a pole of the nearest possible length such that the vaulter can hold right below the tape with stiffness rated 10-20lbs/5-10kg above the body weight of the vaulter." (note: 10-20lbs is a baseless, made up number, but seems right-ish on instinct)

For vaulters with lower grips on stiffer poles, wouldn't their 6-step check be further out than that prescribed by the chart? And wouldn't their height clearances be higher than what corresponds to their grip on the chart?

also my intent was to provide visual and tangable results that could be discussed not judged. This was not intended to prove any point but to present a sense of reality to the application of the data in the chart.
And that you have--look what it got us talking about! I didn't mean to imply otherwise.

ladyvolspvcoach wrote:This is a possible point of contention, but I coach that you accelerate to the mid then attempt to get your feet down as fast as you can from the mid to the take off with a specific focus on the penultimate and take off. You cannot execute these last two steps effectively if you are attempting to accelerate into the take off. So no, the length of the run does not change the mid mark.
Hmm...you may be right that it's better to sacrifice acceleration for a good takeoff coming into the last step. I don't know about the penultimate step though. At any rate, you can certainly accelerate right up until the penultimate step though It doesn't make sense to hit your mid mark and just "coast."

But about the mid make/approach length relationship. Consider a more extreme example. One vaulter, two jumps, same grip. One jump with 5 left approach, one with 9 left. When the vaulter is 3 lefts out (at their mid), they have a LOT more speed at that point on their 9L approach than they do on their 5L approach because they have a whole 8 more steps worth of acceleration. The distance form mid to takeoff will be covered much faster. Their steps will be longer. If their run from 5L was on, they would either have to slow way down or they'd take off way inside (or a bit of both).

Now I know it's a bit preposterous to grip the same height off of 5L and 9L, but it's entirely possible if a stiffer pole is used for 9L. So that's how pole stiffness and approach length are related if grip height is kept constant, how they can push the ideal 6-step mid in or out.

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Unread postby dj » Thu Jun 12, 2008 4:10 pm

hey

longer run.. more speed,, same grip.. they blow through if they are vaulting correctly..

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Unread postby decanuck » Thu Jun 12, 2008 4:26 pm

Indeed. As I said above, there are two ways to solve the blow-through.
1. Move them up grip--this keeps them in line with your chart
2. Move them to a stiffer pole--this means their mid should be further outside due to the increased speed coming into the 6th step out.

Speed at takeoff does not correlate to grip in total isolation.
Nor does swing or work on the top end correlate to pole stiffness in total isolation.

The two overlap to some degree. ENERGY is the key.

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mid

Unread postby ladyvolspvcoach » Thu Jun 12, 2008 5:29 pm

I'm curious, what makes you choose this definition of overstriding?
this is a definition that I got from DJ..along with many hours of discussions...
If this is the case, then by necessity, the shorter vaulter must be a stronger runner than the taller vaulter in the sense that each foot impact is more forceful and shorter in time (i.e. for each stride her foot is in contact with the ground for less time than the taller vaulter's strides).
before I did this little experiement I thought so too. However, when I pulled my trusty Dartfish timer out and measured them seperately they cycle their last six strides and contact time exactly the same. Well at least to the .001 second. More over, in the past 5 years or so of using the data in my rundrill I've had a number of vaulters some over 5' 9 with very different body shapes. They all will after about 2 months hit their last six strides in exactly the same times. I actually mark the track to have an indicator when I video them. I could overlay any one of them on any of the others and get the same video as the one I posted.
What happens when the taller vaulter becomes a stronger running (over time through both physical and technical training).
The taller one is the older and stronger of the two at the time this was taken. The short one had just been jumping for 7 months..
Move her too a stiffer pole. This would put her mid outside of that prescribed in the chart.
stiffer poles will only move their mid out of you move the grip up then hopefully you are moving their total number of strides up too.
The CONTROLLED variable in the chart is the energy from the second phase, which can correlate with pole stiffness.
actually pole stiffness is not a factor especially not a variable involved in the data represented on the chart. It is simply a way to measure the effectiveness of the speed being developed and allowing the vaulter to progress up to the next relative stiffness.

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Mid mark Chart

Unread postby PVstudent » Fri Jun 13, 2008 1:04 am

For her 4.20m vault the female was gripped at 3.95m on a 4.30m (160) 18.8 rating pole (mistyped the original length as 4.2m instead of the correct 4.30m (14 foot length)). The male vaulter was on a grip of 4.95 (approximately) on the 5.30m jump and because he ran out of suitable poles gripped at 4.85 on a 5.20m pole (210) 12.7 flex rating pole when attempting and clearing the 5.70m bar despite him being horribly under at takeoff. I am certain of this grip because immediately prior to the jump we had to discuss what to do because the pole was "too soft" and there were no poles left in the bag. I watched him make the adjustment. The rest is history and we both drank a toast to the pole vault god for being kind to us that day.
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Unread postby dj » Fri Jun 13, 2008 7:20 am

good morning

i would say your male vaulter should have a "Six Stride Check Mark" at 55 feet max at this time..(sorry i don't have my conversions with me...) 6 equal strides of 6'10"...

the "under" could have been from two things..

one, the Mark was closer than 55 feet?

or.. my choice.. the Mark was farther "out" than 55 feet and the vaulter stretched to be under..

let us know if you know where the mark was..

the lady should have a Mark of 43/44.. 6 equal strides of 5'6" or 5'7"...

that should put her in position to run correctly and vault correctly..

again check one day when they are jumping well and see where the Six Stride is...

later

dj

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Unread postby dj » Fri Jun 13, 2008 3:37 pm

Good morning PVstudent

It is indeed a “checkâ€

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Unread postby dj » Sat Jun 14, 2008 8:26 am

Good morning

Take a look at these comparisons.

Tim Mack

Grip………….5.00m
TO…………...4.17m
Check………..16.75m
Time-6.steps…1.37sec
Avg.length.steps…2.096..6’10â€

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Unread postby PVstudent » Tue Jun 17, 2008 4:22 pm

Following my previous post of actual data as case studies of a male and female DJ kindly contacted me by PM and made available the long history of the development of the data used to construct the chart. He also kindly posted a very useful article on how he implemented the findings of his chart.

Here is a copy of my response which DJ may not have received even though I did send it by PM. If you did not receive it DJ I hope you do not mind it being published here. It was a rapidly prepared response and I did not have time to elaborate.

"PVstudent
To: DJ
Posted: Fri Jun 13, 2008 2:19 am
Subject: Re: six stride Check Mark


Firstly thank you for posting the response to me by PM.

Given the complete history it is now clear to me that your development of the mid chart is based on " empirical correlation of data measured actually and also by 'eyeball' following the insight re "proportional relationships of grip and distance covered to takeoff point from the 6th step out."

Also I understand that you have found this holds up well when applied across vaulters of different stature and experience.

Secondly on reading your response to me I found the way in which you expressed the background information less confrontational and argumentative than on the PVP public forum. Also I think it clears up the pragmatic basis on which the chart is based. In arguing your case I think you overstated the "science" aspects to the detriment of the perfectly reasonable findings used to establish the chart. It is empirical and pragmatic, the result of collected observations over the decades. It is the science claims that I found blinded me!

Thirdly, in practice I know that once I have established a takeoff point from an even number steps of the approach run greater than 6 steps, then the rubric 3 finger breadths to one fist width increase in grip length on the pole requires 1 real person's actual foot length further out as the start point of the run up. (Pole Grip Length I don't consider to be the same as grip height; I define this as the vertical distance from standing on the takeoff toe tip to the highest part of the top hand grip when the pole is pivoted at the base of the rear wall of the box.) The six step mark also moves out, but by a smaller amount that the real person's foot length. On a 16 step approach moving the run out 1 real foot length moves the mid step back out about 3-5cms (1.5 - 2.0 inches) and the takeoff also moves out, but only about 0.5 to 1.5 inches once the grip height and the run stabilize.

Our experience, I think in practice, is very close in regard to what happens and is reflected in your chart. Where I totally disagree with you is in the causative relationships you have posited to be the reasons underlying what you and others (including me) observe to be close to the case in every day practical coaching.

Fourthly, since the proportional changes appear to me to be real person size and vault capacity dependent, the step length and rate must also be dependent on these two interacting factors. Hence since grip length along the pole is limited by the maximum reach height at toe off in the takeoff the "ideal" six step mark for any individual is due to the interaction of a real person's effective vertical reach height at takeoff and their learned capacity to takeoff. This is the fundamental reason that two vaulter's gripping the same distance along the pole will be relatively closely matched on their 6 step check mark particularly when you accept plus / minus 8 inches as the tolerance bandwidth (range 1 1/3 imperial foot measure or 16 inches; i.e. 0.406m; 40.6 cms).

I do appreciate that you sent me the PM and I am happy to correspond further in this way. I have some more questions and points for clarification but I must away to coaching.

Thank you. I hope the public dialogue will assist you to get your message across more clearly so we can benefit for shared insight and seek a better understanding of why what is going on is so. I don't think we are as far apart on this as I thought. "


On PVP the debate has opened up further to expose some more of the worms in the can with the posting of the Dartfish based video. DJ and Ladypvolcoach suggested by inference it supports the claims made in regard to people with the same grip length on the pole to also have the same 6 step check mark distance out from the takeoff.

I was surprised, nay astonished, on my first viewing of the video and like St. Paul on the road to Damascus experienced a revelation and saw the light!

However it was a momentary lapse and my science training broke through the euphoria of conversion and returned me into the dark depths of doubt. I will explain in another post why the Dartfish evidence produces a correct observation but leads the faithful to a false believe.

The table below summarizes my data in comparison to those of DJ's Chart (and his response on PVP) along with the DJ data for Bubka and Mack. This table also provide the key to understanding why the Dartfish video gives rise to an observation that is correct but to an inferred conclusion that is incorrect.

Image

Briefly the table shows DJ is close on some parts and not so close (female not close) (male quite close) on the various indicators used in the table. The data for Mack and the male vaulter show some concordance on step length but not on rate and have similar average speed on the male case 5.70m jump. There is clearly a causative interaction between step length and step rate in the creation of average speed. ie.,the same average speed can be the outcome of different different step length and rate combinations for different individual athletes. Saying the same thing another way, the actual value of step length (SL) and step rate (SR) for any given average speed are variables since average speed is a function of the SL x SR relationship.

Hence I believe it is possible for two vaulters to have the same grip length on the pole, the same final 6 steps average speed with differing proportional combination of the SL and SR. The upper limit of effective step length and of vertical reach height at takeoff is ultimately fixed by the individuals stature. The upper limit of step rate is neurophysiologically determined and is strongly influenced by the genetic inheritance of the individual.

Experience shows that the step length is the variable most amenable to training effects. Step rate on the other hand is less malleable because it is very difficult to increase upper step rate limit beyond that determined by the muscle contractile properties and their individual mechanical advantages in operating limb motion in fast running and sprinting. Hence overstriding and or understriding become of central concern in the pole vault approach run. Unfortunately there is the complication of the pole carriage, carry angle, oscillations which have to be of synchronized in phase to the run frequency (step rate) of the legs whilst guided by the arms and supported on the torso. Both the step length and rate have to be combined so that there is phasic relationship harmony of pole and body motion which makes pole vault approach run quite specific to the event and to the individual.

DJ's chart provides a good (in my view) general guide but the specifics have to be tailored to the individual and not the individual to the chart, since the chart data lacks fine discrimination.

I summarize DJ's chart to be as follows:

1. Empirically based and relies upon carefully observed linear proportional relationships between GRIP Length and 1. Back of Box to Takeoff Point 2. 6 step distance "out" from the takeoff point.

2. When used in the manner prescribed by DJ (article on how to use the 6 step check mark) it does provide an initial "rough approximation" but relatively safe guide to where the vaulter should be at touchdown of the foot with SIX steps between that point and the takeoff point.

3. DJ in the instructional article does make it clear that this initial (my words here)" informed guesstimate" is just that and the athlete in conjunction with the coach fine tune the initial location of the 6 step check mark according to the individual and the number of steps they are using in the run.

As has been stated by me and many others this is very reasonable and very useful to coaches and athletes who need this excellent tool to get to the approximately correct spot when they are both learning their craft.

The chart does have some limitations which become apparent when dealing with skilled vaulter's who do not fit in well with DJ's data. To use an analogy If one tries to make a fine adjustment to a metric nut by means of an imperial size spanner the fit might be close but not quite right and vice versa. In other words the precision of the chart is close but not quite in specific cases. Judgement becomes qualitative especially when modifying an athlete's approach run and is not just science or mathematics. It is an art requiring experience, knowledge and wisdom and DJ's chart used with these caveats in mind is a most helpful tool.

The chart does cover a considerable range of individuals but whilst the general rubric (mine) "1 Fist increase in Grip length along the pole then move the run start out by 1 foot length (foot is actual individual's foot)" holds most of the time. I have found that the very short or the very tall will not match up well to the data in the chart.
What the optimal ratios are may need to be individually tuned in the light of the sprinting model adopted by an individual vaulter and their coach.

There are other issues but of less importance;
    Limited sampling and sample size.(homogeneity of variance issue)
    Regression to the mean
    Ratio data interactions assumed to be linear in all cases (assumption only tested empirically)
    No independent verification or replication (anecdotal evidence very strong in support though)
    The theories of sprinting which have arisen based around DJ's Chart also require further exploration.

Image
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