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matthewbrown

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Posts posted by matthewbrown

  1. @MillerTime38 no, I also typed humanistic which can be used interchangeably with Agnostic as no one was 100% sure of what he believed. I agree with @horton that the belief or non belief of God is irrelevant in this particular forum which is precisely why I was shocked to see a bible quote and then a mic drop as if that settles all issues. Uncertainty is part of life and it’s those who are the most certain to be aware of.
  2. I actually saw a bible quote in this discussion somewhere, a freaking bible quote. On that note I reckon an appropriate atheist/humanistic counter quote would be in order and one that would appear to be more relevant to this discussion.... ” The whole problem with the world today is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, but wiser people so full of doubts.” -Bertrand Russell
  3. The first goal is getting to the wakes as quickly as possible with as minimal as possible load on the back of the ski. The second goal is to take as long as possible to bleed off this speed and transition from one edge to the other. This is usually best accomplished with higher hips which helps manage the load into the wakes and also serves to keep your body and ski on the handle path all the way out to the buoy. That being said, you can accomplish nearly the same thing in a more squatted position if in your acceleration phase your body is leading your ski, and if in a deceleration phase you are taking your sweet time to transition from one edge to another by keeping the ski on the natural handle path arc. Basically, Fred is more squatted than Nate but they are both masters of the acceleration and transition phases so it really doesn’t matter that much. The problem is that most mortals who squat, drop their hips back...Fred doesn’t.
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  4. @Horton her upper body needs to be stacked on top of her lower body in this view of her cuts into 1.3.5. The ski is swinging too far away from the boat, causing her upper body to fall inside the ski arc too soon. As a result the ski loses speed and direction. This is why her 1.3.5 turns were on the tail at the shorter line lengths. Being stacked doesn’t just apply to the boat plane of view.
  5. As soon as the line gets tight after your gate move, right after your left hand gets back on the handle, your hips drop back and collapse, the ski moves out in front of your mass and you ride hard and heavy on the tail into 1. Then at every buoy the same thing happens. It’s easy to fix but you just have to be aware that this is happening so that you can consciously try to keep your hips higher and moving towards the wakes right over your feet. Probably start with the gate first and then see how that translates down the course.
  6. I broke my ankle skiing at Great Lakes in 1998. Ended up swimming to the shore right in front of Doc who was in the judges tower and he scrambled down to take a look at it. He got some ice in a matter of minutes and helped carry me to my car for the long ride home to AZ. I’ll never forget how caring he was.
  7. There is nothing wrong with the gate width. The problem is in the coast for the gates and the balance point on the turn in. Your center of mass is well behind your feet on the gate coast and as a result on the turn in for the gates your ski comes underneath the line first, ahead of your shoulders and feet. This creates a slower loaded position.

     

    Think about it, you start to lean toward the wakes but then you stop that lean to allow the ski to catch up. That costs you time and demands that you hold an overloaded position. Basically, you are waiting until the ski comes completely underneath the line to begin your acceleration and this is what’s costing you everything.

     

    Stand taller on the glide, keep your hips rotated out more toward the shore and when you commit to the turn, your upper and lower body must move toward the wakes as quickly as possible leading your feet and ski. The ski should not come between you and the boat until you are at least at the first wake, you are doing this from the very beginning.

     

    Getting as wide as possible does nothing to alleviate this problem, the problem of being able to stay inside the turning arc with your body for as long as possible, that’s how you create the speed you need without the overload which undoubtedly is popping you to the inside of the line into 1 ball. One only needs to look at a Nate Smith gate to see this happening.

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