For the Reader's Digest version, you're the man!

If I had read you post earlier, I might not have bothered. Oh well, I'll post it anyway, for anyone that wants more than the RD version!
Kirk
… she makes no attempt to bend the pole! At the instant she leaves the ground the pole is unloaded. She drives her hands up through the pole at and immediately after take off in order to maximise the pole ground angle. … To ensure that the body is not forced to rotate forwards under the hands by the shock of the impact, she allows the impact shock to drive the arms back – often called the soft left arm … (‘a disengaged left arm ‘ is the term used by German coaches). …
powerplant42 wrote:What do you say the difference is between 'pushing' and 'reaching'?
… We do not share the view of those who say … pressing the pole perpendicularly, and that this helps in this initial bending. We approach this differently. … while the pole bends beneath him of itself, and not by pressure of the left hand in the take off. … it bends under the effect of the vaulter’s speed and body mass … Making or encouraging the vaulter to force bending of the pole as much as possible in penetration means allowing him to make a crude error.
powerplant42 wrote:It is almost an incontrovertible fact that the bottom arm plays a role in the pole bending.
powerplant42 wrote:I'm just now thinking that if one truly does 'push as hard as they can with the elbow out' right before take-off, the pole tip will move up...
powerplant42 wrote:... But what about during take-off?
I would say that there’s apparently still confusion about it, so it deserves further study and discussion.
vaultman18 wrote:The bottom arm is not needed to bend the pole. But it is needed to plant the pole properly and provide balance. One very large problem for most vaulters (especially beginner - intermediate) is the plant and take-off tend to overlap too much. If a vaulter is under and planting late the bottom arm becomes more important. If the plant is low and late the bottom arm must apply significant pressure to get the pole out of the vaulters face. The bottom arm can only push while the vaulter is still on the ground (not Free).
With a proper pole-drop, plant action and free take-off the bottom arm will provide upward pressure only in the plant action. The plant will end as the take-off foot leaves the ground (plant is over and take-off begins) so the bottom arm is no longer pushing. Once the take-off has begun the vaulter can't push any long without going into a passive phase.
So to recap:
bottom arm pushes up in plant only
bottom arm does not push after take-off
If the take-off and plant overlap the the bottom arm will push during take-off due to the plant not being finished
KirkB wrote:PP, I don’t know where you got the Bubka quote from, but it sounds counter-intuitive to Agapit’s “lat pull as soon as the pole hits” idea in the 6.40 model. You can’t be “pulling” and “pushing” at the same time with the bottom arm! Not that Bubka ever performed the 6.40 model IMO, but there should be SOME consistency between what Bubka quotes and what Agapit proposes. I’d like to know the BTB2 page # of that quote, and we can go from there.
[sigh]
Kirk
I just don’t know how you can expect a beginner or intermediate vaulter to make such a quick, intelligent choice in the heat of the moment.
powerplant42 wrote:
It is almost an incontrovertible fact that the bottom arm plays a role in the pole bending.
Nope. It's not a fact just because you say it's a fact. You need to back up your "facts". Read BTB2. Read Petrov's 1985 speech. Read the PV Manifesto.
Re-read the full text of the Repent thread, and you will see that Tim thought that too, but after testing in his backyard “lab”, he came to the conclusion that the bottom arm wasn’t needed to bend the pole.
powerplant42 wrote:... I agree that the top hand is the most important... by FAR! But what about this 'growing' that has been described by agapit? What of that? Is it only referring to the top hand?
agapit wrote:None of the vaulter who use a free takeoff method have their arms completely extended before the takeoff of the ground is complete. It happens in the air. Neither any of the steel vaulters had their arms completely extended until after the jump off the ground was complete. In addition it would be impractical to attempt a jump with the straight arms, wouldn't it. Bubka described it as growing after takeoff.
kirk wrote:When you plant, reach forward/up with both arms, so they're both as extended as possible. But let your top arm take your entire weight, using your bottom arm only for balance. Don't try to resist with the bottom arm, or you'll kill your rockback and your forwards momentum into the pit. Then (assuming your takeoff speed is OK; your grip is at the right height; and your pole weight matches your speed/weight/grip/technique) the pole will bend naturally, and the natural pendulum action from your top hand down to your takeoff leg will be all that's needed to bend the pole. Pressing with the bottom hand on or after takeoff dampens this natural pendulum motion, and kills your forwards momentum into the pit.
Kirk Bryde
Vaultingman wrote:I have done one arm vaults before and kept the pole rolling over the box with bends and swung upside down ...
Vaultingman wrote:... but surely the bottom arm must have some job to do other than steering the bend. ...
Vaultingman wrote:... My biggest problem was collapsing the bottom arm on poles that I should of been capable of pressing out. ...
Vaultingman wrote:... If sliding boxes are bad for blocking and wide grips not good then surely just softer poles then!
Return to “Pole Vault - Intermediate Technique”
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 21 guests