PaddyMonty
Well-Known Member
As you didn't get much in the way of a constructive answer to your post I will attempt to answer your observations in this thread as original will most likely disappear as soon as admin gets in.
Show jumping is a very simplistic sport in that the aim is very clear cut, leave the jumps up and get round faster than any other competitor.
No other discipline is like this. Dressage has a huge set of requirements as to how the horse moves and how the rider interacts. As a result in dressage you tend to get most of the riders working in the same way to achieve these goals.
Similar situation in eventing but again, once the DR phase is out of the way the styles start to diverge.
With SJ its all about the horse and rider finding a way that suits both on them. There is no rule book on how this is achieved. Just watching the huge differences in style should show that.
Some worked in an outline, some didn't. Some riders released contact one stride before fence, others held the contact to take-off point. Some gave complete freedom over the fences, others maintained a light contact throughout the jumping phase.
Some riders sat up until takeoff, some lent forward one stride before takeoff.
But what they all did was leave most of the fences up
Each rider tends to develop a style that works for them and the will tend to go for horses that suit their style.
I find it quite disturbing that so much emphasis is placed on correct style when people are being taught to jump when at the end of the day there isn't a correct style other than the one that leaves the fences up.
Far too much emphasis is placed on lower leg over the fence, correct jumping position etc often to the detriement of the partnership forcing both horse and rider to work in a way that, rather than enhance their ability actually limits them.
Far better for an instructor to look at the partnership infront of them and find a common ground that works for both rather than try to enforce a mythical text book.
JMHO
Show jumping is a very simplistic sport in that the aim is very clear cut, leave the jumps up and get round faster than any other competitor.
No other discipline is like this. Dressage has a huge set of requirements as to how the horse moves and how the rider interacts. As a result in dressage you tend to get most of the riders working in the same way to achieve these goals.
Similar situation in eventing but again, once the DR phase is out of the way the styles start to diverge.
With SJ its all about the horse and rider finding a way that suits both on them. There is no rule book on how this is achieved. Just watching the huge differences in style should show that.
Some worked in an outline, some didn't. Some riders released contact one stride before fence, others held the contact to take-off point. Some gave complete freedom over the fences, others maintained a light contact throughout the jumping phase.
Some riders sat up until takeoff, some lent forward one stride before takeoff.
But what they all did was leave most of the fences up
Each rider tends to develop a style that works for them and the will tend to go for horses that suit their style.
I find it quite disturbing that so much emphasis is placed on correct style when people are being taught to jump when at the end of the day there isn't a correct style other than the one that leaves the fences up.
Far too much emphasis is placed on lower leg over the fence, correct jumping position etc often to the detriement of the partnership forcing both horse and rider to work in a way that, rather than enhance their ability actually limits them.
Far better for an instructor to look at the partnership infront of them and find a common ground that works for both rather than try to enforce a mythical text book.
JMHO