On May 16, 4:01 am, Henry Law <
n...@lawshouse.org> wrote:
> On 15/05/13 23:01, Rebecca Caroe wrote:
>
> > Harry ... told me that he often asks a crew to do one thing knowing that what they actually do is different - but IS the effect he's seeking.
>
> That's absolutely the right thing to do. The coach needs to find the
> right words to get the rowers to do the right thing, whatever the words
> are, and even if the words imply or assume that the laws of Newtonian
> dynamics are completely ignored.
>
> For example, "I want you to imagine that no force is required to get you
> along the slide, as if all you had to do was sit still and let the
> forward motion of the boat underneath you bring you from back stops to
> front stops" is wholly defensible, especially if it achieves the desired
> end.
>
> What's wrong is mis-describing what's going on, and holding
> categorically to it as if it were fact.
I go along with this. But I back off from blaming a coach for
propagating nonsense to other coaches who had rowed for
them, I put the responsibility on those coaches to figure out
why they're teaching something rather than rote repeating what
they have been taught. "Splash to bow" comes to mind as
the typical lesson in teaching catches.
When I have new rowers, I tend to not push them toward
any front-end length. I like them to learn the concepts
of catching before they try to press out. I have told a sculler
who asked me to watch them row to stop worrying about
trying to be long at the catch for now, that she needed first
to learn good recovery discipline - she was coming out of
bow altogether and as she approached the catch, her seat
slowed and stopped while she reached with body and arms
to get long. I had her drill a bit to build some recovery
discipline, and told her work on that for about 300 miles before
you start thinking about being long at the catch again.
She attends a monthly group sculling session on Sundays
with a coach. She came back to me later and told me
that the coach asked why she was rowing shorter and she
told the coach that I had said that length wasn't important.
I just laughed.
Similarly, when I teach newer people to control their slides, one
of the helpful things I have them think about is to come out
much slower than they think they should, creep and roll
out of bow, and simply catch when the stroke catches, even
if they haven't made it to full slide. Keep doing that for a little
while, and then gradually extend your length. Your stern pair
will thank you.
That has been misconstrued, "sully says to control
your slide, just row shorter.'
I am a very effective teacher at getting rowers longer in
the water and more effective at the ends, so find it
interesting to be accused of telling people to row
short!! :^)
Of course the problem is that most of these incidents are
not people I actually coach, but that I will help out for a
couple sessions or a clinic. I invite our members that
if they have been good club citizens, they can come by
and stick a single in the water when I'm teaching beginners
and row by and I'll give them some sculling "tips".
This is generally where the telephone game goes badly
for me! :^)