- Nov 10, 2015
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Thanks. Good to know about the inversions. Does that mean the stunts I listed above that popped to extension would be legal if we landed in a prep first? Here they are again, for reference:
C. Cheer Extreme, at the 2:39 mark ("plank" to extended stretch).
E. Top Gun, at the 3:32 mark ("handstand" stunt to extended stretch).
G. Cheer Sport, at the 5:38 mark (extension down to load, push up into handstand inversion, pop to extended lib... but ours would have the flyer's hands on bases' shoulders).
H. Cheer Athletics, at the 6:36 mark (backward roll into handstand, pop to extension).
I. Cheer Extreme, at the 7:26 mark ("plank" into extended lib... I think this is the same one as the Cali one above but I'm not sure).
Also, could you explain why these are illegal:
D. Cali, at the 3:32 mark (front walkover into load into full around?).
F. Cheer Athletics, at the 4:52 mark (leap into load).
Lastly, if ball ups aren't allowed from a load, can you explain why it worked for Bishop McCort last year? At 1:17:
Is there something else happening here I'm not seeing that makes it legal?
Thanks.
Pretty sure I said I thought the Cali thing was legal, but I would send a video of it to the powers that be to make sure I didn’t miss anything.
The cheer athletics leap into load actually leaps into a suspended split at a load-in level. Suspended splits have to have 3 bases. I’m pretty sure this one is illegal, but I would send a video of it to the powers that be to make sure. I would be hopeful that we could do it, but I would be anticipating a “no-no.”
Bishop McCort started with one foot on the ground, not both feet in a load. They probably got away with it as a modified form of a switch up.