- Apr 5, 2010
- 208
- 55
how do you guys teach this? and what kind of lead up drills do you use?
I coach gymnastics for a living and have been for almost 20 years. I've coached anything from rec to mommy and me, pre team, usag L4-L9 team, rec team, I have always started these on trampoline teaching an arabian front tuck with a half twist at the end (jump, half turn, front flip, half twist, land)...never needing to spot. I use drills like "jump 1/2 turn roll down the wedge" and that leads to "jump 1/2 turn front flip to feet on the wedge" then the same drills on an 8"er. I also use "standing front from 2 panel mats stacked", then "standing front 1/2 twist from panels", and eventually "standing arabians from panels" and "standing arabian 1/2 twist from panels". I've never in my time had a problem teaching a kid a standing full with these progressions...and usually it doesn't take a kid very long to learn it this way for me....but now I have a question...............
Is a standing full supposed to be what I describe, or, is a standing full supposed to be more of a standing whip with a full twist? Or a standing layout with a full twist?
I've never seen it taught as a standing straight flip with twist until a few weeks ago when I showed up at our teen tumbling for cheer class. The coach (who i very rarely am ever in the gym with) was "spotting" a girl (17 year old high schooler) on a standing full off of one folded panel mat onto an 8"er. The coach kept throwing her over and over, and the kid kept twisting 3/4 of the way and either landing on her side or on her knees. The coach has been spotting this kid in this very same way for more than a year. The coach asked me how to "fix" the standing full. When I suggested the way I teach it, she didn't take my suggestions and kept doing what she was doing. So I go to the guy who owns the gym and asked him his opinion...he tells me that a standing full is supposed to be like a run tumbling full, only standing...he didn't tell me that I was wrong, but he told me that the way she was teaching it was fine.
I am now way confused.
I coach gymnastics for a living and have been for almost 20 years. I've coached anything from rec to mommy and me, pre team, usag L4-L9 team, rec team, I have always started these on trampoline teaching an arabian front tuck with a half twist at the end (jump, half turn, front flip, half twist, land)...never needing to spot. I use drills like "jump 1/2 turn roll down the wedge" and that leads to "jump 1/2 turn front flip to feet on the wedge" then the same drills on an 8"er. I also use "standing front from 2 panel mats stacked", then "standing front 1/2 twist from panels", and eventually "standing arabians from panels" and "standing arabian 1/2 twist from panels". I've never in my time had a problem teaching a kid a standing full with these progressions...and usually it doesn't take a kid very long to learn it this way for me....but now I have a question...............
Is a standing full supposed to be what I describe, or, is a standing full supposed to be more of a standing whip with a full twist? Or a standing layout with a full twist?
I've never seen it taught as a standing straight flip with twist until a few weeks ago when I showed up at our teen tumbling for cheer class. The coach (who i very rarely am ever in the gym with) was "spotting" a girl (17 year old high schooler) on a standing full off of one folded panel mat onto an 8"er. The coach kept throwing her over and over, and the kid kept twisting 3/4 of the way and either landing on her side or on her knees. The coach has been spotting this kid in this very same way for more than a year. The coach asked me how to "fix" the standing full. When I suggested the way I teach it, she didn't take my suggestions and kept doing what she was doing. So I go to the guy who owns the gym and asked him his opinion...he tells me that a standing full is supposed to be like a run tumbling full, only standing...he didn't tell me that I was wrong, but he told me that the way she was teaching it was fine.
I am now way confused.