Over here in California, starting at the CIF rounds two years ago, (CIF qualify for the state meet), the officals brought out some one's bathroom scale and weighed the vaulters on some pavement next to the runway. Get this, the pavement was slanted at approximalty a 20 degree angle to horizontal! I'm sure simular things go on all over the country. I get e-mails from disgruntled coaches and parents about the enforcement of the weight rule with increasing regulariity. I can always tell when the qualifying rounds start at the individual states, because that's when the comments start. Last year during the month of May I addressed 64 such contacts. How can they weigh people on uncertified scales? How can they enforce a weight rule for which no standard exists? How do they account for the normal female weight gain during her menstral cycle? How do we account for poles that have no markings? How about cold weather, rain or headwinds?
I think the current weight rule works better when the coach simply signs the score sheet to certify the athletes approximate weight and the poles are inspected. When it is handled this way the liabiltiy rests with the coach and the athlete. It is they after-all who must make the decisions regarding pole size, grip and step adjustments, and they alone. If an accident results, and mis-representation was done then it is the coach and the athlete who must be accountable.
In addition, why have the colleges not yet adopted the weight/handhold rule? The catastrophic accident study we did three years ago indicates that the most likely group of athletes in the USA to have a catastrophic accident are college men. In fact, based upon participation numbers they are approximalty ten times more likely then any other group to have a serious accidnet. In addition, the typical pre-condition for these accidents was over-gripping on small landing pads, with unpadded hard surfaces around them.
I like the idea of multipal weight ratings based upon an ASTM standard. However, it will be a huge amount of politics amoung the manufactures to accomplish. So far Gill Sports is the only manufacture to agree to participate willingly and openly in such an endeavor.
Last season, in addition to my couple of elite HS girls, I had approximalty 10 other girls between 9' and 11' unable to jump legally on poles between 11' and 12'6 in length. The girls were all of average or slightly above average in athletic ability. The 20 poles we were using for this group represent approximalty 6 brands. Most of them had been jumping a couple years and were very proficent, yet none of them could jump legally all the time. Something is clearly not right!
The weight and grip rule was designed for coaches and athletes as a precaution against holding too high and bending the pole too much. But it does not take into account the dynamics of griping lower on the pole. It virtually makes anyone who short run vaults in practice illegal in HS! I personally find this hard to swallow, since short run vaulting is the corner stone of any technical progression.
The weight/handhold rule as it is currently written, makes the sport more expensive then it needs to be, and it actually makes the sport more dangerous under certican situations, when overly enforced with weigh-ins and hair-splitting.
In prinicipal I support the weight rule, and in fact for the most part, it has done its job.... I seldom see HS boys anymore that are over-gripping and jumping on a pole 20 pounds under their his body weights....like I saw so often in the 80's and early 90's. But the weight rule is far from perfect.
Its the practical applications that worry me.
Some people will lead you to believe that just because we increased the size of the mats that everything is now hunky dory.
But we still have two huge problems to address if pole vaulting is to prosper in the school systems . One is coaching competency at the HS and college level, and the other is reliable weight classification and standardization in vaulting poles. I long for the day when I go to a HS or college meet and everyone is using a mid mark, no-one is over-gripping, and no matter what brand of pole it is, I can suggest that pole to someone with complete confidence that it is indeed the appropiate size.
Jan Johnson
National Safety Chair
ASTM Pole Vault Equipment and Facilities Task Force
www.pvscb.com
www.skyjumpers.com