- Jan 14, 2014
- 352
- 201
I have a gymnast who goes onto the in a good shape on her front handspring but as soon as her hands hit the vault she closes her hips and pikes, is there any drills/conditioning that i can do to get the to stop this?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I suppose I misinterpreted, thinking the gymnast left the springboard straight body ("in a good shape") and only piked upon blocking.I have a gymnast who goes onto the in a good shape on her front handspring but as soon as her hands hit the vault she closes her hips and pikes,
This sounds interesting, but I'm having a hard time understanding. Could you explain it a bit different, or perhaps provide a video?An Australian coach I once worked with used to do board approach drills for rotation. The front handspring is a deadend vault that doesn't really lead to anything. So he used to put the board way up close to the table and have gymnasts work on establishing rotation off the board (arm circle, feet in front and punching hard. If the gymnast did it right and punched hard enough, she'd rotate through a hollow layout to her back; arms would be by the ears following the arm circle and stay there. If there wasn't enough height on the punch, the hands would touch but the body shape would fall hollow- not flat back. And the gymnast would land on the front end of the table (covered by an 8 incher) and not sail out.
A couple of weeks before competition, he'd pull the springboard back to their normal handspring setting and they would naturally reach out to the table.
I'm picturing this, but I could be way off:
Not mine, I just saw it on Swing Big the other day and thought it sounded like the drill that Wordsmith was talking about. Might try it with my kids, though. And I will look out for that high hurdle.good drill but they all hurdle too high.![]()
I'm picturing this, but I could be way off: