-it installs solid fundamentals for the approach & takeoff (and swing if you can get to a highbar)
-it reminds the coach and athletes that the approach & takeoff are the most coachable areas of the event
-it's the best way to weed out kids who aren't serious about working hard or who aren't willing to do drills
-it makes the event safer by making sure nobody is just grabbing a pole and "going for it"...this is how it was done when I was a beginner, and 2 out of 3 boys who tried the vault my freshman year got injured the first day, including my twin brother (I was the only one who didn't get hurt...the other two were both better athletes than I was, but never tried vaulting again after that day
![Confused :confused:](./images/smilies/confused.gif)
The event is fun when you learn it properly from the beginning, and can improve without roadblocks, avoiding bad habits and frustration. Letting kids jump every day for fun is not a best practice, in my opinion. Drills, drills, drills! Make each drill a competition with yourself and your fellow vaulters, that is the path to success
Tom