Guest guest Posted January 27, 2004 Report Share Posted January 27, 2004 Thanks for your input ...Your so correct about USAPL having different standards in practice on depth and the wide stance may not work for everyone in the USAPL. I've been having problems lately getting my wide stance squats deep enough. Now I gotta start a different thread and comment/beef on that. First let me say the USAPL is my organization of choice for holding the line on equipment advances, and drug free lifting. Ok, nuff said defending the finest sanctioning body in powerlifting. Now lets talk convincingly deep, and the disparity between organizations. On the USAPL web page USAPL president Larry Maille discusses convincingly deep, and gives a little background on the prevailing standards as he saw it. He suggested part of the reason our standard is so strict is because of the influence the IPF has on the USAPL. The Europeans who are involved in powerlifting have such a strong olympic background. In the article Dr Mallie was just trying to encourage the reader to remove the subjective component away from the judges and to not bomb out, but is the implication is that the higher up the echelon of powerlifting/judging the more you have to go below parallel to pass? When did the written rules change??? Hey they didn’t! Its still the top of the hip insertion dipping below the top of the knee. period!!! Of course if you used some type of electronic monitoring a person could satisfy the requirement in such a small increment that it would be impossible to tell visually or the lifter himself to feel...so the argument to lift convincingly deep is valid and sound. But convince who? A Judge with an olympic bias intentionally requiring a person to go way below parallel...I'm sorry he's wrong. (the Judge that is) I know I'm just a duffer and will never lift internationally, but rules are rules, and non powerlifting judges (oooooo did I just let a little bias of my own out? ) requiring lifters to break parallel beyond what is necessary to be visually observed by a trained eye. Bottom line is this...the lifter must break parallel, and any Judge visually discerning the breaking of parallel by any amount ...I repeat ANY AMOUNT BELOW PARALLEL, should pass the lift. What you should be seeing occasionally is experienced/trained judges observing the breaking of parallel by amounts to small for the spectators/inexperienced judge to tell. It's the inexperienced judge that needs to see more depth below parallel to be sure, whereas the more experienced judge is able to discern smaller increments below parallel. So in the international arena with the most experienced judges and lifters, the breaking of parallel by smaller amounts should be getting passed, not the other way around, Any idiot can observe a squat one inch below parallel, and see that parallel was broken. Sorry for the rant...but hey what do you guys think...All comments are welcome of course. Hal Lloyd Nome Alaska Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 5, 2004 Report Share Posted February 5, 2004 The IPA? I think you mean the IPF, International Powerlifting Federation. IPF is quite a different matter from IPA, a federation that notably does NOT have the same strict standard from most observations! Thank you for including the interesting article. What I find most interesting is that this has been a subject of stress to lifters for years now, that it is still quite an arguable topic and I do sincerely wish some conclusive and lifter comprehendable standard would be once and for all, given. This would also help encourage people to meet the standard at the higher levels on the local levels from the beginning and prevent what I feel is preventable, the bombouts of less experienced yet capable lifters at the national level due to the questions some have in preparing for the actual required depth standard. Ideally the local meets prepare for the nationals, which then select successful teams to represent the USA against the international standard of judging. So clearly the standards must be improved in some fashion to ensure fewer extreme disappointments NOT felt to be solely the choice of say, a lifter's attempt at an aggressive or PR opener (i.e. failure of the lifter to do the lift due to overenthusiastic guess of strength on a given day)? But as it has been said, the judges are human and they are the living instruments of interpretation. I've long given the counsel that you should open VERY light, and gauge the standard on that given day. I myself train to a depth that is well, generally without question. I hate to bomb out of meets, it is my own opinion that one should plan to be IN the meet. Others are far more aggressive in their lifting and I admire their bravery in opening a more challenging lift. For me, one bomb out was sufficient. I'd like to avoid that terrible feeling for the rest of my career if possible! The choice of opener and how you execute it is well in the control of the lifter. The referees volunteer their services and until we sit in their place, we can only do our best to execute the lift within the rules and the interpretation of the referees. In some ways, this seems to be similar to the US Constitution and the Supreme Court? <grin> where there are rules and then the rules are interpreted by persons appointed to do so? The Phantom aka Schaefer, CMT, CSCS, competing powerlifter Denver, Colorado, USA It was written: I agree with your concerns about the IPA going over board in requiring lifters to go way below parallel to be passed. Better trained judges is the answer rather than making the powerlifting squat look like the bottom of an Olympic lift. Below is a copy of the article I wrote for PowerMag magazine now Monster Muscle Magazine. Larry " Iron " Columbus, Ohio Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 10, 2004 Report Share Posted February 10, 2004 , My mistake in my rush. The IPA and the IPF are too entirely different organization. The IPF is of course the International Powerlifting Federation which is the premier amateur drug tested federation in the world and probability powerlifting's best chance to get into the Olympics. In the USA the USAPL (United States of America Powerlifting) is the approved stepping stone into that arena of international competition. It is in the USAPL/IPF that the question has been repeatedly been asked if their squats have been required to be too low. The IPA is the International Powerlifting Association and is privately owned by Mark Chaillet out of York, PA. He has both a Professional Division (non-tested) and an Amateur Division (tested). The IPA is known to put on some of the best meets in the world with all the bells and whistles. Other federations and meet directors do also but the IPA is known for their consistent standard of quality meets. The controversy that sometimes follows the IPA is that in the past they have been to be too liberal in their passing questionable squat for legal depth. In the meets that I have attended in the past 2-3 years, I believe they have been in line with the judging standards of most other federations. How ever in every meet of any federation there will always be some questionable calls. As points out, the referees are human and are subject to making some errors. And so it goes. Larry " Iron " Columbus, Ohio Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 10, 2004 Report Share Posted February 10, 2004 Hi , I appreciate and agree with most of your thoughts on the issue of squating depth. Perhaps I could add two long-standing observations to this discussion, from my perspective as a USAPL National referee and also as a several time member of our World teams. 1) IMO: The interpretation, as opposed to the written IPF/USAPL rule, of squat depth is unduly influenced by European practices, no doubt due to their OL background and control of their PL by OL. 2) IMO: Most of the skewed expectations of " deeper than written " comes from judges who are not competitive lifters themselves. " Do as I say, not as I do. " I have NEVER witnessed a judge getting reprimanded for red-lighting a squat that most reasonable people would agree was deep enough-NEVER. This is what the jury should be overseeing. Does it work?? I have no solutions to offer to remedy this, but I imagine I've stirred the nest... Regards, Jim Klostergaard Houston, TX Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 24, 2004 Report Share Posted February 24, 2004 , Your killing me! I know your intentions are good and you're only trying to help resolve the depth problem in powerlifting, but your suggestion would be the death of Masters age powerlifting. The very thought of doing a pause with a full squat with maximum weight with my 58 year old knees is one of the most frightening thoughts I can imagine outside if they were to quit making Viagra. It's just too depressing! In all seriousness, well trained referees with clear instruction of the definition of a parallel line between the top of the lifter's knee to the top of the hip bone is the real answer. Judges in other sports like the finish line of a close race or a base runner sliding into home plate have to make instant decisions. Why can't powerlifting referees? They can without making it " easy " on them by adjusting the acceptable line downward. By the way they would still have to decide if the lifter went low enough. A parallel line is a parallel line no matter how low it is set, i.e., when the hip bone is below the middle of the shin? Or in your suggestion, my big butt gives me an unfair advantage over the flat butt competitors. No, lets keep the rule the same as it has always been but fine tune our referee's ability to make the hard decision as is done in other sports with close calls. Have mercy on my aching knees, Larry " Iron " Columbus, Ohio Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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