Exactly. |
Regularly, a child will go to the lifeguard on duty and ask if s/he can work on starts in the deep end of lane 4/5/6. Usually lane 6 because they can use the ladder to get out and not swim back to the end of the pool. The lifeguards say yes. Nobody gets hurt because it carries no additional risk. |
| There is a big difference between diving off blocks and diving from the side of the pool. We’ve had accidents at club practice where kids who know how to dive off blocks have slipped and cut their legs and feet up, so I understand why pools do not allow swimmers to use the blocks unless they are under their coach’s supervision. |
A lifeguard saying yes is not the same as something being the rules. Most summer pools are littered with “no diving” signs outside of the dive well, and diving from the edge is limited to practices and meets. |
This. There’s a good chance PPs issue is acting entitled and just getting on the block. I’d always go to the guard first and ask nicely (assuming the pools not crowded). If it’s a young guard who’s uncertain I’d offer to talk to the pool manager myself to cover the guard. My daughter has done this several times before meets and explained she has a meet coming up. It’s not like she’s doing it every lap. Just 5-10 min on starts then on to the rest of her workout. Still might not work depending on pool policy but I’d go through those steps before complaining here. |
Not really, there were a whole room full of supervised coaches that looked the other way when untrained kids were requested to go off the blocks that weren't certified and the coaches weren't using the protocol. https://www.usaswimming.org/docs/default-source/coaching-resourcesdocuments/teaching-racing-starts.pdf Head coaches are supposed to keep a record of all kids under a certain age that are certified to use the racing blocks, but they don't. At least for all intents and purposes they don't care. https://www.usaswimming.org/docs/default-source/coaching-resourcesdocuments/racing-start-certification.pdf |
Please see bolded section of my comment. |
I don't understand how you can think that your request carries any honor. |
DP. I don't understand what you want, PP. You've called this incident to people's attention and they have read about it and can respond as they want/need to. What is your desired action item? |
*standing slow and loud golf clap* |
| Anyway, after becoming somewhat educated on racing dives. There are a number of things that can go wrong in a racing dive. It's like those kids diving torpedos. Whenever you drop them in the pool they never go straight into the water. The front hits then they turn almost randomly. Also, depending on how you hit the water, you can convert the gravitational energy into an intense amount of forward speed. I am untrained large adult, and I often have issues with hitting the bottom of the pool even doing racing dives from the sides of the nine/ten foot pools. It's like wow, that floor in the six/five-foot section is coming at me fast. You have to be able to control it. Furthermore, what I took issue with my daughter during the tryout, is you can end up doing a belly flop or cause strain on your neck, and just totally ruin the rest of your tryout (Those coaches definitely didn't have enough taste to give us a second tryout, or calm her down after that). Also, there are issues with collisions kids in other lanes remember those diving torpedoes etc. they can spin sideways as well as down. They won't let them do racing dives even from the springboards in the deep diving wells, because there just isn't enough space for them to slow down before hitting the crowded areas. |
You should also demand to use the pool manager's office when they aren't isn't using it, you know, because of your tax dollars logic. |
It's only his tax dollars if he lives here. At RSFC they only let Potomac residents use the racing blocks. |
My tax dollars is code for rules shouldn't apply to me. |
| Competitive swimming at a pool used by hundreds of competitive swimmers doesn’t fall under the category “niche hobbies”. |