How to Build Confidence For Pole Vaulting Higher
Things You'll Need
- Pole vaulting equipment
- Landing mats
- Athletic clothing
- Track shoes
Instructions
-
-
1
You and your equipment should both be in excellent shape. Check your equipment. Confidence in your poles and landing mats allows you to concentrate on proper technique. The pole must be extremely flexible and resilient to propel you upward and over a bar. Well-padded mats, too, are great confidence boosters, arranged around the pole-plant box and especially in the landing area, thick matting can significantly reduce fear. American Track & Field provides a thorough checklist for equipment safety.
-
2
Physical laws enable energy transfers during a vault. Educate yourself. Developing the confidence to jump higher than a house might mean learning the laws of energy transfer. University of Virginia physics professor Louis Bloomfield explains the sequence: when you stand with the pole, your legs store chemical energy; as you run toward the pole-plant box, chemical energy becomes kinetic energy; when you plant and bend the pole, kinetic energy turns into elastic potential energy, hurling you skyward; then gravitational energy takes over, and you fly over the bar. Understanding these energy transfers can be reassuring.
-
3
Your jumping fitness can improve with good coaching. Find an experienced coach. A coach who can explain technique, build trust and help a fearful athlete undertake increasing risk is a huge confidence booster. Coaches can correct faulty biomechanics. A good coach can assess an athlete's physical weakness and mental vulnerability and devise a training program that does not overwhelm the jumper's skills.
-
4
Practice the take-off. Mark Strawderman, former three-time All-American champion in the pole vault and current director of MF's Everything Track & Field division, emphasizes that your pole-plant and take-off are the most important confidence builders. A great drill is to take three "running" steps, very slowly plant the pole and bend it. Once you perfect this, gradually introduce more running steps, and always execute the pole-plant in slow motion to ensure proper technique.
-
5
Olympic pole vaulters develop confidence in their abilities. Learn from the pros. In 2003, USAToday featured Olympian Stacy Dragila discussing the fears of pole vaulting. So much risk is involved, Dragila notes, that trusting your coach and equipment is critical. Even panic can set in, sometimes at the worst possible moment: the pole-plant. This is where trusting physical laws can instill enough confidence for the athlete to commit to a dangerous act.
-
1
sports