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photofr wrote: There are a lot of positive things here, mainly that you are wanting to get better. That's seriously a huge step that (unfortunately) few people aim at.
Here are some things to help you:
1. BODY POSITION
It's slightly back. This will prevent rotation. Try sitting up tall and slightly forward.
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WingSuit wrote: I am far from an elite paddler, but try this drill: go 10 strokes on each side, get a good powerful catch by plunging the vertical blade in with purpose, then the powerful straight arm pull as you finish. Bending the elbow causes you to arm pull the paddle too close to the boat. Plus it will eventually overwhelm your elbows.
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zachhandler wrote: I agree that the first video shows more arm bend than most elite paddlers.
On the second video i actually think he has great rotation. Rotation of the hips is more important than rotation of the torso relative to the hips. He seems to have great connection from leg drive to hip rotation to torso.
I think it is a pitfall to focus too much on rotation for the sake of rotation. I know paddlers who go through beautiful big rotation, but they are just going through the motions without actually converting leg drive into pressure on the blade, and they cant go fast. A few years ago i took a 90 minute private lesson with sean rice. He actually told me i was over-rotating if anything and told me to forget about rotation.
Making rotation the goal is backwards. Rotation is the result of using the glutes to drive the hip backwards. Rotation is not in and of itself a powerful force. In a way it is like running. The torso rotates in running, but it is a merely consequence of what the legs are doing. If you are running along and start to sprint, rotation will increase as a result. But if you are running along and decide to rotate really hard, you will not go sprint speed as a result.
For what it's worth that zolt video is quite old, and zolt has since changed his stroke drastically. I listened to a podcast by him. If i recall correctly, he went paddling with greg barton, and had an epiphany that delivering power at the catch was way more important than going through the big rotation he had been taught as a team paddler in hungary.
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SurfskiEstonia wrote: I would also suggest that You learn how to sit on a swiss ball and do the following drill:
It may seem impossible at first, but if You manage to simply sit on it and twist a little, it would give You a lot of extra stability to rotate freely on a ski. That's what I did in the winter for a couple of months and in spring was able to learn how to paddle a K1 in a rather short period of time. I think this is one of the easiest things You can do off-water to improve on stability and understand core rotation.
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