The Jumpers Clap! Why they do it and How it Started!

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Jumpers Junction

Jumpers Junction

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 114
@bankshwutube
@bankshwutube Жыл бұрын
Hey, thank you for your explanation, you did a great job of getting the facts straight. Also, thank you for letting people know the origin of the clap. But, most of all, I appreciate you explain how to do the clap and make it useful for jumpers. Let me know if I can help! @WillieBanks
@JumpersJunction
@JumpersJunction Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for you comment! I gathered much of the data from second hand sources so please let me know if there is anything that could be clarified. Also, I have a question that i was really curious about but i think you are the only one in the world that could answer: How did the trend spread from you to other athletes? Did other athletes start initiating it, or was it the crowds that really pushed it onto other athletes?
@bankshwutube
@bankshwutube Жыл бұрын
At first some athletes thought I was showboating and they accused me of being a jerk. Once I explained the situation, the other athletes started to get behind it. But, it really took off after the 1983 World Championship. I helped the eventual Champion win by getting the crowd to clap for him. From then more and more athletes started to use the clap. Also, in Finland, where the 1983 World champs was held, they call the clap, the “Banks”.😂
@JumpersJunction
@JumpersJunction Жыл бұрын
@@bankshwutube It’s just a wild story. And that is what I really love about the jumping community, that even though they are competitors, we are all friends out there and support each other. Willie, I’d love to get you on a podcast style video to talk about it and your take on this years athletes. It will be similar to this: 2023 Outdoor Track & Field Season Jumps Preview with @TheFinalLeg & Couro kzbin.infosPeKCohWgoU?feature=share My email is in my KZbin bio. Send me a message if your interested.
@DanielCho1997
@DanielCho1997 Жыл бұрын
@@JumpersJunction please do an update and actually interview him
@muemamuema8020
@muemamuema8020 Жыл бұрын
@Willie Banks 👏👏👏
@tyroneward8465
@tyroneward8465 Жыл бұрын
100% Psychological! Extreme boost. I was a long jumper in college and I used the clap to "pump me up"! All of my furthest jumps came when I had the clap!
@JumpersJunction
@JumpersJunction Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the comment. You know I would love to a deeper dive and see what is the percentage of jumpers who use it vs not and how that correlates to performance.
@stevenwang6398
@stevenwang6398 Жыл бұрын
Search up "the clap"
@xijinpig7978
@xijinpig7978 Жыл бұрын
i clap in bed too. The cheer my buddy to go full speed. OMG did i say buddy? no homo
@snowcow1173
@snowcow1173 Жыл бұрын
​@@stevenwang6398 haha
@scotthuffman3916
@scotthuffman3916 Жыл бұрын
Great video! I was fortunate enough to spend the last week coaching clinics with WILLY BANKS in Billings, Montana, and in Casper, Wyoming. During the course of the week I asked him to tell me the story about how the clap began. What a great experience to hear how it began directly from the originator. WILLY BANKS - legend.
@mrgold3591
@mrgold3591 Жыл бұрын
I met Willie Banks as a kid in the early 80s when they use to have the Sports Festival in Colorado Springs at the Air Force Academy. He came over to our house for dinner with my older brother that ran the 200m/400m with UCLA and both of them were participating in the Sport Festival. He played basketball with us and neighborhood kids at Monterey Elementary School. We were all in awe on how high Willie could elevate and it seemed he could look down on the 10 foot basketball rim when he went after rebounds. Fast forward +30 years and I took my high school long jumper son to Willie Bank's long jump camp in southern California. It was ran by Willie Banks and Dick Fosbury (inventor of the high jump Fosbury flop).
@JumpersJunction
@JumpersJunction Жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing that. I feel like he has been apart of so many stories and touched so many. And he just now was reinstated to the world athletics international board!
@TheFinalLeg
@TheFinalLeg Жыл бұрын
The clap is easily one of the best parts of the sport. I love that even if you don't follow the jumps, if the clap starts in the stadium, you can jump right in and start clapping getting excited like everyone else. Crazy Willie Banks had no idea what the clap would become, but he kept it going and now its an integral part of the sport.
@JumpersJunction
@JumpersJunction Жыл бұрын
So true! It’s now just apart of the sport. It’s a tradition!
@RK-um9tu
@RK-um9tu Жыл бұрын
"Crazy" Wille Banks. Let me guess, you are a white male, correct...
@PaulVinonaama
@PaulVinonaama Жыл бұрын
I've always hated it.
@calebleich
@calebleich Жыл бұрын
My best jumps as well have happened when I get the crowd involved! I've even jumped close to my PR by imagining the crowd is clapping for me when it's a much smaller setting
@JumpersJunction
@JumpersJunction Жыл бұрын
Visualization!!!! It’s a powerful technique
@Scorpeon_27
@Scorpeon_27 Жыл бұрын
I've only used the clap once and that was on my final 8'6 pole vault attempt at a meet. Gets you so hyped.
@SheargalFarkey
@SheargalFarkey Жыл бұрын
Man I got goosebumps all over when you told that Willie Banks story! Brilliant!
@JumpersJunction
@JumpersJunction Жыл бұрын
It’s amazing right
@t.s.9656
@t.s.9656 Жыл бұрын
I remember very well when Willie Banks started this phenomenon. That same year is when the USA 4x100 meter relay team started to drop the button, it was at the inaugural World Championships in Helsinki. Since then, the USA 4x1 was always a crap shoot.
@rickya.livingston5110
@rickya.livingston5110 Жыл бұрын
Man…. Big Thanks. I was a real big Willie Bank fan as a kid & learned triple jump by watching videos of his jumps. Be cool brah 😊
@JumpersJunction
@JumpersJunction Жыл бұрын
He’s a living legend! Thanks for watching!
@TheTyisawesome
@TheTyisawesome Жыл бұрын
The History of Willie Banks and how this clap came to be is so interesting and very cool. Willie was entertaining and a skilled athlete! Thank you for sharing this story!!
@regolith1350
@regolith1350 Жыл бұрын
This is a FANTASTIC story and you told it brilliantly! Thanks!
@JumpersJunction
@JumpersJunction Жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@revenevan11
@revenevan11 Жыл бұрын
I'm not a track & field guy by any means, just played tennis in high school and ran a casual 5k a few years ago... but man this is a beautiful story! Makes me glad I stumbled upon your channel tonight, initially from the "banned techniques" series.
@JumpersJunction
@JumpersJunction Жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching
@euan1234
@euan1234 Жыл бұрын
Your video appeared in my recommended list, so I clicked it out of curiosity. 15 minutes later :) What a fantastic presentation and you were so clear and engaging with the story. And how awesome that Willie Banks himself left a comment! Thanks so much, I learned something new and looking forward to more videos.
@JumpersJunction
@JumpersJunction Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your kind words. Keeping me motivated to make more!
@akmadsen
@akmadsen Жыл бұрын
This is one of the more esoteric rabbit holes I've jumped head-first into but it's super awesome and interesting. Also super cool that they got Frodo explaining it all.
@JumpersJunction
@JumpersJunction Жыл бұрын
Lol 😂
@lestermount3287
@lestermount3287 Жыл бұрын
Willie told us this story at the USATF annual meetings when he was running for our representative to the IAAF
@mikegrindstaff
@mikegrindstaff Жыл бұрын
It modifies the body chemistry of the jumper. It creates adrenaline. I used to compete at an international level playing soccer. I shot PKs for the finals for major International tournaments where the game and the attention of everyone is on you. All the conversations stop in the crowd...every player...every coach and trainer...everyone. The clapping here alters the "headspace" of the athlete because it focuses attention on them. There is a chemical response to being in this situation...it is intense and even 20 years later describing it I get a different chemical response with different emotions...its a powerful thing.
@AugustMoon67
@AugustMoon67 3 ай бұрын
Very interesting story! To think that a bunch of drunks, with the addition of this great athlete, Willie Banks, started this thing. That nowadays seems so natural, and possibly helping amazing performances become even better. And I'm proud it happened at that actual stadium, which is close to where I grew up. My grandmother did some voluntary work for the 1912 Olympics there. And I saw some football (soccer) there, and also some athletics. The last time in 1978. I must have seen about this 1981 event in the newspaper afterwards, but don't remember it. I had been enthusiastic about triple jump for a few years by that time anyway.
@MichaelTV44
@MichaelTV44 Жыл бұрын
My guess for the clap is to help the jumper pace their steps and help with cadence and timing.
@bxllerdav5786
@bxllerdav5786 Жыл бұрын
(If u don’t wanna read all that down there.. Im saying that I PRd by 6ft in the triple jump, by doing the clap for the first time..🙌🏾🙌🏾) When I was in high school, I was always messing up doing the triple jump, I thought I was good but I really wasn’t.. I was always fouling, I had no form, and it was always just messing up my legs.. I finished the year with 37 ft not even placing in county championships.. A year later, when my season started, I missed my first two triple jump events purposely, until I had an invitational that I had to do and show out.. I had 5 events that day including the 300 hurdles so my legs was basically done really.. When I did my jumps, I fouled all 3 of my jumps and I couldn’t even reach the pit.. My coaches saw and was gettin mad were confused, They eventually told me to try and change my mark but that was just making it worse.. I finished that day fouling all 3.. I was tryin and it honestly made my legs hurt like crazy.. The next meet I was able to get one mark down and I hit 37 ft not even PRing the last year I did it.. so I was already doubting the event and told myself I wasn’t gonna do it again.. The event that I thought was my favorite soon came to be my most hated.. All that hurting, risking Achilles, all those shin splints, and couldn’t even satisfy.. I remember I wanted to do sports in college, and told myself I have to get on the radar immediately.. My coach had a d3 coach fly all the way to a 3 hour flight to come and visit us, since we already had some good talent on our team.. He came to us, and there were atleast 7 seniors on the team and talked to all of us, of all grades.. At the end I was telling myself if I should go talk to him, and I went and talked to him.. He asked my pr, and I was lowkey feeling disappointed saying that, saying my pr was only 37 ft, and that I didn’t pr in over a year.. So I went out and told him that I didn’t do the event yet this year I’m pretty sure.. So he said that he will be at the next meet watching me, and that honestly suprised me.. I didn’t know he was coming to watch, and he said he needed some athletes so I was pumped definitely.. So the day the meet came, my school hosted a big meet, and about 30 schools from different areas went there.. I was double thinking about this day about if I would even show out.. And I remember my friend telling me that I better show out that day, and I remembered him saying jokingly “Imma start clapping for you” and I was like nahh nahh, cus at the time I did not want to embarrass my team, trying to do the clap and my pr is only 37 feet, I can’t just start up the clap and end up jumping something like a 34.. So prelims was starting, and I was looking for the college scout, but he wasn’t here yet, so I was just using that as my advantage.. So it was just me, my coach, and my teammates.. And a lot of my teammates were sitting down watching me, so I warmed up, but I remember my legs being so hurt from my past 3 events, so I went and took off my spikes and put on my running shoes, since I knew that triple jumping would hurt even worse, especially in spikes.. So I was warming up, and started off slow approaches and I felt pretty good, but I didn’t have enough time so I just got my mark and warmed up like one time.. So then it started.. My first jump was a whopping 39.9 ft, and my coach was so pumped.. And told me to go for that 40.. I went and triple jumped and jumped a perfect 40.2 ft, I was amazed and even my coach wanted to push my to go for more length so then he pushed my board back to the 40 board, I knew this was crazy, especially cus i only jumped 2 inches past 40 ft and my legs was starting to feel sore already so I just did it anyways, but then remembered it was only prelims.. So I jumped, scratched, and didn’t even reach the board.. So coach just told me rest my legs.. Some of my teammates were watching and were glad as I told them.. So then I found out I made it to the finals.. The scout got note, and came over to the pit but I didn’t know.. I moved my board back to the 38 board since I wasn’t sure what my legs were capable of after prelims.. My first jump I scratched, but I got so far into the pit and my coach was so suprised and told me “that’s atleast a 41” but the girls were still long jumping on the other side so he had to go over there at that time.. So then my teamed were hyping me up, because I remember that there was a scout here, and they were telling me to get 41, so I was pumped.. Then my friend came up to me, “U want me to start up the clap?” And I remembered that I was officially a consistent 40 jumper now.. So I told him I don’t know yet cus I was still not sure.. So then my turn came in and I was on the board ready to pr in the TJ a 3rd time today.. I looked at the pit.. Then The board, The camera that my friend was using to record, then my friend, then he put up a “thumbs up” indicating and asking if he could start the clap, then I nodded, and I remember my friend telling me to jump 41 ft, and I promised I would do so, and then he started clapping, and with everyone watching me.. I clapped slowly.. then fast.. Then had my face towards the board.. With all my strength and speed at that time, I ran into the board without thinking about anything else as the claps got faster, then with all the power, I Jumped, Hopped, and then leaped into the pit, and it felt so good, I couldn’t believe it, I turned around and I was halfway into the pit, so I ran into the mark, and even I heard my coaches screaming so he ran from the girls pit to my pit, and we all waited to hear what the mark was.. As soon as they said 41- my coaches and all my teammates ran up to my and tumbled onto me as I fell, I finished that jump with a 41’7, and it was all on camera.. The scout walked up to me and gave me a validation and he looked real proud.. at that moment I could just only thank god.. But yet did people know.. That wasn’t even my last jump yet, and I still had it approaching.. And someone else PRed and placed above me when I was in 1st, so I was already pumped with so much confidence.. All my coaches came over to watch, the scouts, my friends and teammates.. And it was just me and the board.. I held my hands above my head this time, slowly clapping, as everyone followed.. Then I stared at the pit, and ran full sprint, all I heard was “go!, go!, go!,” then I hopped, skipped, then leaped again, this time with my 3rd phase jumping so high, I promise u I felt like I was floating for a good 3 seconds up there until I landed.. and I was way farther into the pit then I was last time when I turned around, I was almost at the end.. So I couldn’t believe it and I thought I fouled, so I just wanted to see validation.. When I saw the white flag go up, I just told myself “no… No… No..” I just couldn’t believe it, The officials walked to my mark and everyone was around the pit waiting for what they would say.. And jumping that, I remember my friend that was recording me telling me to jump 42 ft.. I instead told her I was gonna jump 43.. Then the official held his head up and said “43ft” Everyone was screaming, and I was too, my coach tumbled on my again, and the scout came up to me and got my number and my contact immediately and came to recruit me.. That day I PRd by 6 feet.. In running shoes.. My other coach even came up to interview me, it felt amazing, and later on I got my medal, but then the scout came and wanted to tell my head coach the news, so the scout told him “did you hear what he did??” And my head coach said, “yea I know he jumped 40 feet good job”, but then the scout said “no, he jumped 43ft!” Then my head coach stopped and said “really?? Wow man that’s crazy!, head to the field and I will go and talk to you soon and get your medal”, I felt amazing that day so I went and posted it all on social media, I also found out that I made it to nationals, and I even was tied for top in the state for TJ and the 300h, I was also good in my other events, that I made the all-county team.. I had the improved of the year award, and the unsung hero award, and soon, I had so many colleges coaches hitting me up, and I had tens of offers, and committed to a college to become an NCAA athlete.. But anyways other than this insanely long story.. The clap is truly legendary as it really pumps u up, and it can really help you a lot.. I am still till this day saying how crazy that was that I did all of that in flats and running shoes..
@JumpersJunction
@JumpersJunction Жыл бұрын
This is amazing! Read the whole thing and I can see how much of an impact this had on you! I absolutely love hearing stories like this and I thank you for sharing it. You should post the video in the discord! I’d love to see it.
@Dougie5352
@Dougie5352 Жыл бұрын
I remember competing in Ullevi (big and pretty crowded arena) and I clapped before my last jump. That feeling is so hard to explain, you kinda feel like the main character tbh. It motivates me to give it my all because it feels like everyone is specifically watching and cheering for me. When you need that extra energy clapping will give you that.
@Grant-H2O
@Grant-H2O Жыл бұрын
The acoustic, rhythmic sound resonates in you. I feel like music can clear my mind and put me in tune with my focus. I hope that even a deaf person would feel the energy from that many people in the crowd.
@fullercrane1795
@fullercrane1795 Жыл бұрын
It's interesting. When hearing the sound. Your body after a while your body will tend to follow the same tempo of it. But this would take time for that to happen. The jumpers can still use it as a que though to peace themselves off. Same with listening to music can help. However I do not think it's good for long term training. Can resulting in pushing yourself to much and not recovering in good time. The army don't use this technique where performance can mean life or death. There habit of it to. At some point I was jogging then every time I started to listen to music while jogging. Once my mp3 was damaged from falling out of my pocket. I stopped jogging when there was no music.
@RunnerBeanzDad
@RunnerBeanzDad Жыл бұрын
At the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow, one of the athletics sessions was just concluding, with the men's hammer as the last event in progress. With a couple of rounds to go, the stadium announcer, having ignored the hammer for most of its duration, noticed that it was still in progress and drew the spectator's attention to the event by encouraging them to commence rhythmic clapping while the throws were in progress. This caught my attention because a few weeks earlier at the English Schools Athletics Championships one of the teenage throwers asked the spectators to clap for him for his last round throw. These are the only occasions I have heard rhythmic clapping for throwers.
@CopperLabsSupport
@CopperLabsSupport Жыл бұрын
Awesome Job! I knew it was Willie Banks, but I did not know the whole story. It was fun watching the "Bouncing Barrister" back in the day.
@jackbaxter-williams8059
@jackbaxter-williams8059 Жыл бұрын
I don't give a shit about the triple jump or long jump. Excellent video and what an excellent athlete
@GrueneErde
@GrueneErde 10 ай бұрын
I was there on that day in Stockholm back in 1981!
@JumpersJunction
@JumpersJunction 9 ай бұрын
Ah wow, I would have loved to experience that. The atmosphere must have been incredible!
@JDkonsult
@JDkonsult 3 ай бұрын
In what stadium? It does not lock like Stockholm or Göteborg?
@GrueneErde
@GrueneErde 2 ай бұрын
@@JDkonsult You're absolutely right. The footage in this video is from the 1983 World Championships in Helsinki, where Willie Banks won the silver medal. But the whole thing started in Stockholm 1981, and it really was an unforgettable evening at the old olympic stadium.
@StarComet7
@StarComet7 Жыл бұрын
I was at grand prix meet as a spectator a month ago. It was fully sold out and the crowd was really engaged and most jumpers didn't even have to start it. The top 3 in the mens division were just 3 cm apart. Will definitely try to go next year again. As that energy can't be felt on the tv
@TWFitnessAcademy
@TWFitnessAcademy Жыл бұрын
Wow you got the great @WillieBanks to join the conversation
@JDkonsult
@JDkonsult 3 ай бұрын
He was in Finland
@larzop5848
@larzop5848 Жыл бұрын
So this was this year outdoor season and I was high jumping. It was at 5’8 which was the best in the state for freshman and best In my school’s history for freshman. Every other event was done and all the teams at the meet were there and I said that if I got that far I would do it. And I did and it was very epic
@SeanFarrar-b5u
@SeanFarrar-b5u 2 ай бұрын
Great storytelling.
@BirdingwithNick
@BirdingwithNick Жыл бұрын
Great origin story.
@einerreklov4304
@einerreklov4304 7 ай бұрын
Awesome story! Thanks!!!
@JacobCanote
@JacobCanote Жыл бұрын
Love this story!
@yadavdhakal2044
@yadavdhakal2044 Жыл бұрын
KZbin algorithm at the worst. 343 views for channel with 285k subscriber in 19 hrs, what? Just subscribed btw!
@JumpersJunction
@JumpersJunction Жыл бұрын
Thank you I appreciate it. Ya KZbin has been really weird lately.It has stopped sending out notifications even if you have the notification bell turned on.
@tyronium2
@tyronium2 10 ай бұрын
i'm a jumper and i personally really hate the clap because for me it can really throw off the rhythm of steps
@Car19-ln4tw
@Car19-ln4tw 6 ай бұрын
I think that the jumpers clap still exists because it gets their brains more stimulated, and they get excited, so they jump farther and put more effort into every single step
@nocturne7371
@nocturne7371 Жыл бұрын
My first thought were, "this had to have started in Europe", mainly because of the culture of Ultras. The audience is probably already primed to be cheerleeders if they get a hint of direction (that usually comes from the Ultras).
@tigahstyle
@tigahstyle Жыл бұрын
Works the same for strength sports as well. The audience yelling charges you UP, man!
@paz_y_amor_cabrones4233
@paz_y_amor_cabrones4233 3 ай бұрын
I understand what you say about the feeling for spectators to be a part of it ! Yesterday ar la defense (paris) I had the luck to assist at both final swimming of Léon Marchand. On the last 50 meters of its 1st gold medal of the evening, we did so much noise that the sound kind of reversed into my ears into the whole body... couldn't hear a particular sound it was just a huge noise that I have never heard before. And we couldn't think otherwise that this huge sound pushed him like a back wind to win that race. It was amazing for everybody. Edit: must share with you as I feel I was into the pool and won the race too at the end we were so noisy you barely hear commentators while they also scream : kzbin.info/www/bejne/oX3Ek3mLnqllac0si=qIQhCJfD5-Y8OErY
@JavierBonillaC
@JavierBonillaC Жыл бұрын
I believe that you are not jumping alone; your whole tribe has its attention on you.
@alienkirsch5157
@alienkirsch5157 Жыл бұрын
I know throwers use the clap as well shotput, discus
@haba3000
@haba3000 Жыл бұрын
In here Finland javelin throwers also use the jumpers clap.
@MeepMeep88
@MeepMeep88 Жыл бұрын
LOL someone should start the butt clap for track 😂
@ChubbyChecker182
@ChubbyChecker182 Жыл бұрын
That Willy Banks story is quite brilliant.
@noquartergiven1332
@noquartergiven1332 Жыл бұрын
The only time I’ve ever had the crowd clap for me I added an extra 10 inches to my jump.
@medogerty6013
@medogerty6013 Жыл бұрын
I would do the clap, but I’m not good enough 🤣 21’/6.4m puts me at one of the worst at our meets (D3). Woulda done it in HS but we had no fans.
@zoniaks3940
@zoniaks3940 4 ай бұрын
I never asked people to clap, but The only one time i look Up in my National competition i screame loud as i coud, and i can remember some people in my team and some in The other side of track and field clapping to, that's The day i jumped 2,00 meters first and only time till now
@jimbones155
@jimbones155 Жыл бұрын
I think it primarily began with professional track & field, and the sponsors thought that would be a good way to get the spectators involved. It probably helps the extroverted athlete more than the introverted, but I have yet to see it make much difference one way or the other.
@JumpersJunction
@JumpersJunction Жыл бұрын
Ya it would be quite the case study to validate to wether athletes using the jumpers clap has a positive effect and how to establish a baseline
@brigidmurphy7636
@brigidmurphy7636 3 ай бұрын
Maybe physics? The audience energy force boosts the athlete’s physical energy. Quantum connection.
@MrCmon113
@MrCmon113 Жыл бұрын
I thought this was about softening the air by stirring it.
@redravenrages6321
@redravenrages6321 9 ай бұрын
12:48 The sound from my bathroom at 2 am.
@CarryOnRTW
@CarryOnRTW Жыл бұрын
And here I thought the "Jumpers Clap" was an STD common in the athlete's Olympic villages.
@MrTracknut
@MrTracknut Жыл бұрын
😂
@RobKandell
@RobKandell Жыл бұрын
As a coach, do you really want your jumpers getting the clap? 😊
@KlamparDafenrad
@KlamparDafenrad Жыл бұрын
wth?
@shaikhmullah-ud-din1964
@shaikhmullah-ud-din1964 3 ай бұрын
I think it would have something to do with the rhythm of the heart.
@pinballpsycho
@pinballpsycho 3 ай бұрын
I don’t remember it in my day. My sense is it would have been a distraction.
@arrrg3846
@arrrg3846 3 ай бұрын
Musicians, athletes, and comedians usually having great timing - this is not the typical composition of a stadium full of fans. I wonder, do jumpers train, or should they train, with a mis-tempoed cacophony of claps? 🤔
@KalijahAnderson
@KalijahAnderson Жыл бұрын
I've never done this, nor have I participated in it.
@favoritethings3065
@favoritethings3065 3 ай бұрын
Seems like a request for an ego boost….”look at me, look at me!”
@fullercrane1795
@fullercrane1795 Жыл бұрын
Would of thought you're more likely to get an adrenaline boost. With fans clapping for you. Feeling more presser as you're awere the focus of all them claps is on you.
@nealrasmussen4832
@nealrasmussen4832 Жыл бұрын
Does adrenaline have anything to do with it?
@stafforddavis5638
@stafforddavis5638 Жыл бұрын
It's called a "Spirit Bomb".
@GenJuhru
@GenJuhru 3 ай бұрын
✋😓🤚
@luckyspurs
@luckyspurs Жыл бұрын
I still feel awkward about the fact it gets used on literally every Long and Triple Jump these days. So many of which are fouls or just really average jumps; loses something with overuse. High Jump and Pole Vault is at least a little more selective.
@Albert_Einstein_not
@Albert_Einstein_not Жыл бұрын
As a high jumper I find the claps distracting and disruptive to my own rhythm
@KeXous
@KeXous Жыл бұрын
15 minutes for a simple question?
@BinalakaBibine
@BinalakaBibine 7 ай бұрын
Do you think god exist ? explain in less than 15 min pls.
@Poney01234
@Poney01234 Жыл бұрын
Willie Banks telling the story himself: kzbin.info/www/bejne/i167fHefnduYr68
@pullt
@pullt Жыл бұрын
How is it a banned technique?
@jakerussell135
@jakerussell135 Жыл бұрын
where does it say it's a banned technique?
@MrMali22
@MrMali22 Жыл бұрын
@@jakerussell135 It's in a playlist about banned techniques
@AmberJames-t3y
@AmberJames-t3y 7 ай бұрын
13:10 that's what i thought
@joepauly2311
@joepauly2311 Жыл бұрын
"I'll try to summarize it as best as I can." Too late.
@LaceSwapFrm559
@LaceSwapFrm559 Жыл бұрын
Bro looks like logan paul
@boredincan
@boredincan Жыл бұрын
I think you're a bit too late with your history of the jumper's clap. The Ancient Greek athletes used to use musicians during training. The rythym and spectacle, as well as envoking Euterpe, helped the athletes train.
@mikekinsella2822
@mikekinsella2822 Жыл бұрын
Its ANNOYING IMO use to be they wanted quite which i prefer.
@danrose3233
@danrose3233 Жыл бұрын
It was special for Banks. Today it is overused and dull.
@KjStrunk
@KjStrunk Жыл бұрын
You’re the dull one bud
@mannkidd6774
@mannkidd6774 Жыл бұрын
I appreicate the explanation, and I may be in the minority, but I find the "jumpers clap" to be one of the more annoying and cringey things in track and field. It's like nowadays every single jumper, on every single freaking jump, automatically starts doing the overhead clapping motion. Just jump already.
@TheAlienPoison
@TheAlienPoison Жыл бұрын
Wrong playlist.
2.46m. The History of the Human Jump Limit.
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