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What is "heavy on the boots"?

Started by jjane45, October 01, 2012, 04:41:20 PM

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jjane45

It probably already came up before but I am still uncertain what makes a skater "heavy on the boots".

Suppose 2 skaters of the same weight and height, same age, same boots, working on the same skill levels in same practice patterns. What factors would make one skater particularly heavy on the boots? I am guessing it's more likely technique related? Does it have any correlation with power and flow? Is the skater likely to be wearing the blades down faster too?

Thanks in advance!

sarahspins

I don't know that it's always technique related (in my mind somehow I associate "technique" as meaning poor technique).. every skater is a little different in how they use their edges, knee bend, ankle bend, etc.  Fit matters a lot as well.. if it's off (too wide/narrow or long/short) that will contribute to premature breakdown.

I've always been hard on boots (though I skate in stiffer boots as a result, I don't feel like I'm breaking them down too fast), but I don't think I am hard on my blades.. they don't seem to wear down excessively.  I've been getting my paramounts sharpened about every 12 weeks.

jjane45

For blades there are even more factors: consistent use of blade guards (and cleaning them!), smoothness and hardness of ice surface, expertise of sharpener etc.

Great point that poor fit wears down the boots!

I totally do not associate "heavy on boots" with bad technique. Maybe poor choice of wording on my part. If the skater is pushing harder and bending more, I could see the boots breaking down faster :)

hopskipjump

My daughter is one - jumps big, power, falls hard, fearless.  We saved her axel skates because we have never seen any skates quite so beaten up.  Not broken down - just abused.

Ice dancers (and judges) have commented positively on her power, edges, and speed.

She uses hard guards before she leaves the ice, stores them well, her blades are in beautiful condition.  By hard on skates, it's all about her boot.

sarahspins

Quote from: jjane45 on October 01, 2012, 05:05:24 PMI totally do not associate "heavy on boots" with bad technique. Maybe poor choice of wording on my part. If the skater is pushing harder and bending more, I could see the boots breaking down faster :)

I didn't think you meant that, I just meant that every time I hear that, it's immediately what I think of which is why I mentioned it :blush:

jjane45

Sure :)  I was thinking efficient pushing vs. inefficient pushing a little earlier. If a lot of power is applied, both could be heavy on the boots, but skater with efficient pushing will be flying at top speed while the skater pushing (hard!) inefficiently is no faster than a skater barely pushing but with very good technique.

SynchKat

I think I am hard on boots.  I like to bend a lot and push hard.  I don't jump but I like to skate into the ice as much as possible. 

To me this means just what I described.  Nothing about technique really. I think it is just someone who really uses their skates and skates hard.