Angle of repulsion, block, direction of momentum, dynamics. Vault scoring will be hard to figure out this year with the timers. Even some judges are still adjusting.
Agreed on the score goal. If your DD sticks with this sport, she will reach the point where she fails at skills and falls at meets. Learning how to fail and leave a bad event behind is absolutely necessary for long-term success. Encourage her to do routines that satisfy herself, and to leave whatever happens, good or bad, behind her when she rotates to the next one. Doing the best routine that is within your potential to do is far more important than the score the routine gets.[/QUOTE
As sce and profmom say..... Scores are not a good goal to have. Especially as the skills get harder and the scoring gets harder. What the exact score is changes meet to meet, judge to judge.
Yes the scoring gets harder. A leap at 120 gets credit in L4, 150 in L5 (please don’t correct me if my specifics are off, you all get the idea).
At L7/8 and higher it takes 180 to get credit.
The gymnast has no control over what the judge will do. They can only control what they do.
Longevity in this sport comes from what happens in between the scores.
Goals should be about improving what they do. Better form. Improving strength, skills. I want my turns to be steadier. I want a higher amplitude in my layout. More speed on my run. A better block.
And if your daughter goals involve higher level gymnastics. Really the score of this vault doesn’t matter. It’s about the intent of the vault that matters. That’s the tsuk or yurchenko. That they will be flipping much longer then the timer. Her focus should be on doing it, not the score.
Speaking from personal experience. A couple years ago I embarked on a journey to lose some weight and get healthier. My goal was never about a number on the scale, it’s beyond my control any specific week. What I eat, drink and how I move are in my control. That is where my goals were and are focused.
So it goes with scores