- Joined
- Nov 12, 2011
Don't know that banning the element is necessarily the solution, so much as perhaps encouraging girls to adopt a less extreme posture when performing it - thinking of the girls who are so flexible they can press their heads to their legs. At any rate, this sent me off to see what sort of injuries, if any, are specifically associated with the Biellmann, and came across a 2018 article, 'Epidemiology of figure skating injuries: A review of the literature', by Han et al., published in Sports Health. Re the Biellmann it had the following to say:
The article is open access, so the whole thing is freely available. It's an interesting read; not all the literature it touches on is open access, but some of it is, if anyone wants to go more in-depth into the various injuries that figure skaters can be susceptible to.
yes, injuries from a biellmann are pretty common but banning it is definitely not the solution. i think if skaters did more targeted strength training and stretching for the area most affected by it, maybe the risk of injury would be less. and then there are the hyper extended biellmanns which are nice to look at, but probably have a higher risk of injury.

topic: and maybe can be discussed in another thread 

