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#1
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Question for Coaches
Please be honest: When you're doing a private lesson with a kid at a crowded FS session, how well do you respect other skaters who aren't having lessons but are just out there trying to practice? Truth is, I've had a lot of trouble in crowded practice sessions lately, and it isn't the kids that scare me--it's the hard-nosed coaches they are having lessons with. Even when I'm doing my program with my music actually playing, coaches don't seem to notice until I collide with the kids they are teaching. Then, of course it's me who gets in trouble.
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#2
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I'm not a coach, so I can't reply directly to your question. But why would you ever collide with a kid? Even if your music is playing, you're not absolved from paying attention to what's going on around you. Yes, the skater doing their program should have the right of way, but I can think of lots of situations where you have to graciously yield on a crowded session - when another skater is already in a spin, for instance. I'm an adult skater who mostly skates freestyles with the kids, and I haven't found it to be a problem.
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#3
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#4
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I'm sorry, I didn't mean to imply that you'd run into a kid on purpose! But on a crowded session, you obviously have to have your wits about you, and expect to have to go around people. If a kid is in a lesson and concentrating on a moves pattern or something, they're not as likely to notice you coming through on footwork or a jump setup. You just have to go around them. I've had kids accidentally run into me when I've been in a lesson, but I don't think I've ever run into anybody while doing my program. If everybody's paying attention, collisions should be very rare. When we've had the most trouble, it's been either because we've all gotten a little careless about watching out for each other (like when everybody's ultra-focused on their own work right before a competition), or because some individual is acting like they own the ice and it's everybody else's job to watch out for them. Usually, an announcement about the need to be courteous on a crowded session and keep each other's safety in mind takes care of the problem (at least for that session!).
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#5
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I don't coach on freestyle sessions, but I do have my own lessons on them, with a coach who is extremely courteous. The general rule is that students in lessons have priority over everyone else, then skaters doing programs, then MIF, and finally everyone else. My coach has always called out a "sorry" to any skater who was displaced by her lessons, and always tried to find the least crowded area for whatever she was working on and attempted to avoid interfering with program skaters. There are times when nothing works, and everyone ends up frustrated. The biggest problems I've seen have not been from skaters in programs, but from coaches who are not respectful of other coaches' lessons.
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"We are a nation of Christians and Muslims, Jews and Hindus - and non-believers." Barak Obama, 44th President of the United States of America
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#6
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Re: Question for Coaches
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I don't know what conditions are like for you exactly, obviously, but it seems like you are relatively often posting about problems like this. Is it possible for you to discuss with your coach? Pat |
#7
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If in doubt, hit the coach, not the pupil - they are stronger and less likely to fall over!
![]() Seriously, though, remember that you will go where you are looking, so don't look at the skater, or you will inevitably skate straight into them (I've seen this happen on a very empty rink!). Look at the space in front or behind them where you want to go.
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Mrs Redboots ~~~~~~~~ I love my computer because my friends live in it! Ice dancers have lovely big curves! |
#8
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I don't normally coach on freestyle sessions (mine are too young or inexperienced), but I'm on them constantly for lessons and practice. Unless I go to a session I'm not used to, basically my coach and I know everyone's programs and where they are going to be, so we try to get out of the way of someone with their program on. However, this doesn't always work and if we're in the middle of something major then we try to steer around, but we don't move.
I have the same problem, however, on some of my freestyle sessions. We do not have any dance-only sessions, which is just bad. I've often been on a pattern, with music on, and encountered someone that just won't move. One time I actually had a coach and two students just standing and talking, and they refused to move from the same place TWICE. It is frustrating, but everyone has to make some sacrifices on a crowded session.
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"Without a struggle, there can be no progress" ~ Frederick Douglass |
#9
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Re: Re: Question for Coaches
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#10
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Re: Re: Re: Question for Coaches
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Pat |
#11
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Re: Question for Coaches
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#12
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At my club, the person skating their program (with music) has the right of way, not the person in a lesson. This seems to work very well for everyone.
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#13
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Same as above, at my rink if your music is on, you have the right of way. You are also required to wear a fluro armband (coaches give them out) so people know it's your turn. Of course, there's a few skaters (namely certain ice dancers, ahem) who think they have right of way ALL the time, and will give you dirty looks and stomp off in a huff if you happen to be skating NEAR them.
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#14
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I feel like such a jerk for posting stuff like this. Sometimes, when I'm having a bad day, stuff like this just gets the best of me.
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#15
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You're not a jerk. Everyone gets frustrated sometimes when the ice is crowded. There are definitely days when you can't seem to find an inch of ice or one minute without interruption. One time I nearly collided with the same person three times in about half an hour, and neither of us were at fault.
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"We are a nation of Christians and Muslims, Jews and Hindus - and non-believers." Barak Obama, 44th President of the United States of America
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#16
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Actually, I collided with this little girl having a lesson after I'd (successfully!) finished my program and was taking a cool-down lap (I could barely walk--much less skate--in a straight line. Fortunately, she had one of the nicer coaches at the rink, one who seems to like me okay and is easy to talk to. I helped the girl up and asked, "Are you okay?", and that was that.
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#17
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Anyway, it went something like this... (He's following me through the pattern, mind you...) "Okay, go toward the door, and toward the blue line, now go towards Coach X, now go towards the window... now go around the hockey circle and Coach Y... keep going... go towards Coach Z... now go curve towards Coach L..." You get the idea... ![]() ![]() Quote:
![]() ![]() To end this... we had a nasty accident on this session with two skaters colliding doing back crossovers at really REALLY fast speeds. Collision worthy of Midori Ito... DOH!!! One skater, unfortunately, is down for the count, b/c her back got messed up from the crash... AAAIIIIIEEEE!!! ![]()
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Cheers, jazzpants 11-04-2006: Shredded "Pre-Bronze FS for Life" Club Membership card!!! ![]() Silver Moves is the next "Mission Impossible" (Dare I try for Championship Adult Gold someday???) ![]() Thank you for the support, you guys!!! ![]() Last edited by jazzpants; 08-01-2003 at 12:32 PM. |
#18
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At our club both the people in lessons and whose music is playing have the right of way...it works fairly well, but their are some who are especially ignorant. im actually only speaking of one skater who doesnt much like moving for people and yells at us to get out of her way even when we're not in her way...one day i got really mad because my music was playing and she was standing right in my way talking to another skater so i just said very loudly "can you please move!?" my friend burst out laughing...i thought that might force her to be a bit more considerate but alas it hasn't.
In lessons, my coach will tell me if someone is going to hit me, for my own safety. |
#19
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Well...
Accidents do happen, especially on crowded sessions! At my club the skater given priority of the ice is:
1. skater with music in a lesson 2. skater with music 3. skater in a lesson 4. others For skaters with their music on, we used to have these neon pink arm bands that worked really well until the club decided that we didn't need them anymore. (yah, right!) Just ry to be careful while you're out there and try not to hurt yourself or anybody else. And yelling "Jump coming!" or "Program!" or even "Coming through!" while your music is on and you're skating your program heps kinda...What I hate is when I'm in a lesson with my music on and there are people who just stand around doing nothing. Even after I yell, they don't move so I'M the one who has to move around them, to avoid colliding with them! Grr...
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Until later, *Lily* |
#20
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In the olden days we said "excuse me" a lot, which I will respond to much better than being yelled at by someone who is trying to skate through me.
Just my personal opinion. |
#21
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Re: Well...
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beks~ "winning isn't everything... wanting to is." " the only place where success comes before work is in a dictionary" "It’s not necessarily the amount of time you spend at pracitce that counts; it's what you put into the practice." |
#22
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Yah, well...
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Until later, *Lily* |
#23
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I was in a jump today, and somebody skated dangerously close to me. We were all in a lesson, and this isn't the first time this has happened. So -- I figure that if I had taken a slice out of somebody's leg in this instance, I would have had right of way since I was in the air. Grrrr - can't wait until I am in the fall session without this hassle (I'll be at a different club)!
BTW, as far as the original question goes, at my club it is: 1. Program (and we have an ice monitor to ensure nobody hogs the cd/tape player) 2. Lessons 3. Everyone else (although people try really hard to avoid others in a dance or MIF pattern). People in their program have to wear an orange vest. I find this very helpful, especially at the start of a new season/session because I might not know everybody's program (and they might not know mine ![]()
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"The only place where success comes before work is in a dictionary." -- Vidal Sasson "Never give up on a dream just because of the time it will take to accomplish it. The time will pass anyway." -- Unknown |
#24
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Re: Yah, well...
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I think it's just another way that our society is deteriorating, just in terms of common courtesy, etc. I have been appalled by some of the attitudes I have seen at some rinks at some sessions, where I overhear kids saying, "Just run 'em down" and things like that. It is appalling. I even had one coach tell me to just "knock them down" when people tried to skate dangerously close to my dance patterns, etc. I didn't stay with him very long. I wish we had separate sessions for Moves because it's hard to practice some of them on crowded sessions, especially when you are getting ready to test. I had a young woman slam me on the ice 2 months ago -- she was practicing Junior Moves (Power Cross-overs?) and as she was coming out of the move in a long arabesque backwards on one foot she slammed me back-to-back (I was doing figures near the center of the rink) -- I didn't see her coming and was hurt very badly -- in fact I'm seeing the chiropractor again tomorrow. Her coach just smiled and said, "You were in each other's blind spots" -- in MY opinion she could have seen me especially since I was working all in one spot. Sometimes you just can't help but crash, but I will not tolerate rudeness out there! |
#25
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Re: Re: Yah, well...
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We do have seperate sessions for moves! It's ridiculously dangerous because over the summer, on a skills (moves) session, you can't even do a full pattern without stopping or crashing into someone. And some of the moves are done backwards. I've had some pretty nasty accidents on moves sessions. Including one that landed me in a hospital. Were both of you backwards when she slammed into you? Because if you both were, then neither you could have seen each other.
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Until later, *Lily* |
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