Coaches tip...
'It sounds that her poblem is the standard kip-cast connection problem all kids (well most i guess) go through. Once they snap the leg to the bar the kick/drop their legs down.
What your daughter needs to do is. Once her leg touch the bar she needs to drive them up towards the ceiling as she presses down on the bar (which from what you say, it sounds she has enough strength to do well). While doing this she must use her stomach muscle to try and hold her toes up. So that as she pulls over the bar and leans over she sees her toes or just glimpses them.'
What Valentin has suggested is right, this is the main problem of gymnasts when they learn a kip. Coaches, there is one thing answer to this problem and it has to do with the way you spot your gymnasts through kips on bars:
It is human nature that when a gymnast first learns an action of transferring momentum through opening/closing body angles, to '
use' the spotter to facilitate the trick...what i mean by this is, the majority of kips that are spotted by coaches are - one hand on the mid-back region, the other placed on the underside of the legs (to lift gymnast from below the bar to above). Once the kip is initiated, you (the coach), will feel a strong press down on the hand that is supporting the gymnasts' legs.
This press down is exactly what we do not want to reinforce!
Instead, the next time you spot a kip, try to place one hand on the back just as usual, while the other hand that normally is placed underneath the legs, is placed on top of the shins of the gymnast. In the beginning you will confuse your gymnasts greatly because normally they are 'lazy' and let
you perform the work. However, eventually they will understand to use their abdominal muscles to press upwards against the hand on their shins and correctly understand the transfer of momentum that develops the kipping action on bars....Goodluck!!!!
