Actually Kirk, I'm 130lbs
![Crying :crying:](./images/smilies/crying.gif)
[I put a sad face because when I last jumped at Tech, all the big jumpers were TANKS (except for Mike Uhle who's my new hero for jumping on a 15'7, rated 35lbs over his weight!)]. When I first started, I was on a 12' 130 (weighing about 120 at the time). If I remember correctly, I only used this pole because I liked the green (it was a skypole haha). I spent my first season (outdoor season, sophomore year) straight-poling with probably a 10' grip. I jumped 10'6 like this, with no coach. Then at the start of my indoor season, junior year, I started working with a private coach (Mike from Vertical Assault) and he worked me up to a 13'7 140 with a 12' grip and that got me to 12' feet. Then, when I stopped working with Mike, I raised my grip to around 13' [stupid, but I didn't know any better] and PR'd at 13'1 (first post I ever posted on this site)...go figure, BUT NOT RECOMMENDED!! Then I started working with a club that got me onto a 14' 150 with a 13'-ish grip (it was around this time that I weigh about 130) in the summer between junior and senior year and jumped 14' with a 13' grip. It was then that I branched off with other coaches and started becoming a vaulter (and I'll never consider myself a vaulter, any earlier than that). Now, after learning the basics and STILL ATTEMPTING TO MASTER THEM, at 5'7 1'2, 130lbs, I can vault on a 14' 170 from 6 lefts and a 15' 160 from 7 lefts (though those numbers will probably change a bit more, this season).
MY POINT IS: I fully believe that a vaulter should NEVER vault on a pole rated below their weight. Unfortunately it's impossible to know what the minimum rating for certain vaulters should be (per Kirk's football-player bending the crap at of a pole, with a rating, equal to his own weight), HOWEVER, if a vaulter can bend the snot out of a pole matching their own weight, they probably have enough sense to be on a stiffer pole anyway (though that's possibly a reflection of coaching, and the amazing coaching job of high school vaulters {insert sarcasm here} has already been covered in other forums). ALSO, as for Kirk's dilemma of having a vaulter on a pole matching their weight and that still being too stiff for them...their coach should lower their grip and have them completely straight-pole, until their run and plant is decent. At that point, the vaulters MAX-grip on the non-bending pole, should be moved to a pole that matches (or is greater, depending on skill level) the aforementioned vaulters weight, and while NOT swinging up, the grip should be SAFELY moved up (while still landing safely into the pit), until the pole begins to bend, and then the vaulter can begin to swing on the pole [provided they're still landing safely in the pit while not swinging up (JAGODINS)]. -6P