This weekend DD gym hosted there yearly meet. Things went smoothly and I actually had fun volunteering all weekend long. During setup and tear down the coaches were available and much bonding took place.
I learned our gym does not have a spring floor but instead a foam floor. The HC/Owner expressed to me that he likes it because it is not easy. He knows when the girls visit other gym power will not be an issue.
Does anyone have thoughts on Foam floor versus Spring floor?
I really think the gym owner's reasoning is
very flawed. Spring floor systems are way more safer than foam block floor, and they allow for higher level training, both in terms of eventually skill difficulty and repetitions. Also, a foam block floor will
always be inferior compared to a spring floor. This is because the deflection and restitution rate of a foam block is so much slower than a spring. Science says that the amount of force that is exerted on a foam block will largely be absorbed, and the amount that isn't absorbed will be deflected back relatively slowly. A spring, however, is almost instantaneous in the way it deals with forces, with very little loss of energy.
Another point to think about is that virtually every competition you'll go to will have a spring floor. It makes
no sense to train all the time on a surface entirely different than what she'll compete on. Gymnasts must be taught to use a spring floor, as well as how to land on one in a controlled manner. Having extra power than usual at a meet is not a good thing, really. Landings will be all over the place, the reaction time of the floor will make the timing of skills feel different, and yes, more potential for injury, too. I'm sure many of us saw the effects of unfamiliar (and even faulty) equipment at this year's Worlds in Montréal. There were injuries
everywhere, and many people were thrown off by the feel of the equipment.
One more point: innovation creates a better and safer sport environment. In the past there were horsehair floors, actual wooden beams and bars, a very narrow horse for vaulting, not to mention springboards that used foam blocks too, some of them even just consisting of curled multi-ply wood, relying on the natural bounce and reaction of the wood. But look at where we are today; there is a reason equipment does not look like that now. The modern equipment we have today is far more effective and safe!
I really would not like the idea of staying at a gym with outdated equipment and a warped philosophy on training.
I would do whatever I possibly could to persuade the owner to change his mind.
What is the highest competitive level in your current gym?