- Joined
- Sep 22, 2019
Just popping in to point out that the toepick is always involved in edge jumps too... Something one learns very quickly even at the single jump stage is the unpleasant splat caused by not getting to the toepick before trying to take off! When you press down on the edge and rise up, it tightens the takeoff curve (which generates rotation) but to actually translate this horizontal momentum into vertical movement you roll from the middle of the blade up to the toepick. That's why you *normally* can't jump in hockey skates (a coach at my rink can do waltz jumps wearing hockey skates for fun, but he skids the edge to generate the necessary friction in lieu of a toepick). Also why switching to a curvier blade or different heel height makes your jumps funky till you get used to it :scowl:
You might possibly be referring to a scratchy takeoff (rising onto the toepick too early) or a skidded one (weight too far back on the blade). Both cases actually make it harder by reducing momentum, because it's basically the same technique that you use to stop on ice (hockey stop or rising to toepicks). Exception is skidding the triple axel - I guess some skaters e.g. Javi prefer to sacrifice the extra momentum of a clean takeoff edge for more grip.
Disclaimer: Not a pro, just repeating the corrections my coach has given me when I've screwed up jumps.
You might possibly be referring to a scratchy takeoff (rising onto the toepick too early) or a skidded one (weight too far back on the blade). Both cases actually make it harder by reducing momentum, because it's basically the same technique that you use to stop on ice (hockey stop or rising to toepicks). Exception is skidding the triple axel - I guess some skaters e.g. Javi prefer to sacrifice the extra momentum of a clean takeoff edge for more grip.
Disclaimer: Not a pro, just repeating the corrections my coach has given me when I've screwed up jumps.


