- Mar 25, 2012
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About the issue of lazy coaches.
Sure, they exist in smaller numbers that some of you think, but I doubt you'll find the lazy coaches vaulting an entire team group at a single height. It's far more likely you'll find a coach who will adjust the table to compensate, not for height, not for weight, but for the sole purpose of avoiding the energy it takes to teach a kid to run at un-natural speeds toward a stationary object, punch the board in proper posture after a well executed hurdle, extend into the table will inverting their body,..... yad, yad, yada.
It ain't easy to teach a light weight shorty to vault well at what some claim an unreasonable height, but they end up better vaulters for having gone through the process of solving all these problems, and setting "the bar" a bit higher for them selves.
I also want to say that all of these problems can be solved at a lower height, and that's fine with me if the coach is committed to working their tail end off to make a kid into a good vaulter.
Sure, they exist in smaller numbers that some of you think, but I doubt you'll find the lazy coaches vaulting an entire team group at a single height. It's far more likely you'll find a coach who will adjust the table to compensate, not for height, not for weight, but for the sole purpose of avoiding the energy it takes to teach a kid to run at un-natural speeds toward a stationary object, punch the board in proper posture after a well executed hurdle, extend into the table will inverting their body,..... yad, yad, yada.
It ain't easy to teach a light weight shorty to vault well at what some claim an unreasonable height, but they end up better vaulters for having gone through the process of solving all these problems, and setting "the bar" a bit higher for them selves.
I also want to say that all of these problems can be solved at a lower height, and that's fine with me if the coach is committed to working their tail end off to make a kid into a good vaulter.