Sheridan |
24.02.2023 22:10 |
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Don't try to post on my page that CSIA and PSIA have adapted to using foot and ankle tipping as the foundation of their teaching system. I get the latest materials from people in the system. I see and hear the results every day from my students and from skiers. Just because a trainer somewhere from PSIA one day said, "steer your feet" and then went on to tell that student to rotate their legs and extend out of a turn; doesn't constitute teaching foot and ankle tipping as the foundation of good skiing. In addition, PSIA teaches no way to balance over one ski. The convoluted approach to ski teaching is astounding and never-ending. So please don't come in here to my page and tell me PSIA uses foot tipping as the basis for their teaching systems, it's just not true. They don't even know if a foot can tip in a ski boot with the fitting most people receive. I will not accept any BS from PSIA or CSIA instructors who have no clue about ski teaching based on a foundation of foot tipping: when they constantly still teach extension, rotary movements, and leg steering. Foot steering and pivoting aren't even close to foot and ankle tipping. Don't contaminate my page with your propaganda and misconceptions.
It is about how well you do it, how you do it, and what other complementary movements you use. It's about whether or not you begin your tipping by moving your feet and ankles to the sides of the boots and using the relaxation of the legs to compliment the foot and ankle tipping. The leverage created by foot and ankle tipping isn't strong, it requires loose or relaxed legs at the hips to let them move freely as you tip your feet. If the legs and hips are stiff or pushing/extending against the snow you can't use your ankles, they are blocking that effort. This is why PSIA and CSIA are so unsuccessful, they teach leg steering and extension which totally negates functional ankle use no matter what they try to promote. You don't need the range you see here in this photo by Bassino. I don't have that range, yet I do everything with my feet and ankles. I guarantee that most men on the World Cup don't have this range, in fact, I know this because I've measured many of them. Yet they still are able to leverage the boots and skis with their ankles.
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