- May 21, 2011
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I'm pretty sure that the only people at my school that know the difference between a backhand, tuck or full would be my friends. They rest just call everything a flip.
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Oh dear, calm down hunny.
Though I could go on for days and days about what is hindering the progress of cheer, and the safety therin, Im not going to. All Im gonna say is that, my full, though not perfect, is much safer than most of what highschoolers in my area are doing. Idk about the rest of the country, but where Im from (The Midwest) most teams havent even seen a full. Like ever.
State sophomore year, a girl broke her arm in 3 places doing a chair. A CHAIR.
My full is leaps and bounds above the sketchy sketch tucks and extended libs other teams do (two of the HS we compete against can only lib with two elevator braces). Me doing a full and touching with my ariel awareness is safer than the tucks that girls are falling out of at every game.
Silly question: Are all school cheer teams subject to these rules? I honestly don't think our HS coaches are aware of them. My freshman CP throws her full all the time during basketball season (football too) on the turf and court. I know that if they knew it was illegal, they would not allow it.
Silly question: Are all school cheer teams subject to these rules? I honestly don't think our HS coaches are aware of them. My freshman CP throws her full all the time during basketball season (football too) on the turf and court. I know that if they knew it was illegal, they would not allow it.
I want to say yes it is illegal for them but I am honestly not 100%. I know that in some states they follow different guidelines (WV is one of them).
WV follows AACCA rules, don't they? They compete without mats, but cheerleaders don't do released twisting skills or tosses on the court.
If your daughter is not on a cheer team or doing tumbling at or during a non-cheer activity, it is an absolute NO!.....not that there is a rule against it; however, it is natural for other kids to follow, even though they may have never done it before, but because it looks cool. The adult supervising can get in a great deal of trouble if one of the kids, including your daughter gets hurt. It is just not a good idea. Now if your daughter loves tumbling, put her in gymnastics or cheerleading. I am sure her coaches will let her know not to do any of her tumbling/stunting unless she is being supervised by one of her coaches or at a minimum, an educated (to the activity) adult.This is only half way on topic. Since people are talking about tumbling at school I have a question for them. My daughter is currently in elementary school in TN. No she is not on a school cheer team or anything like that but maybe someone can answer this for me.
Last year in kindergarten she did her back walkover 1 time at school and the teacher told her to not do it again.
This year I know she has threw her RO BHS several times and no one cares that she does it. I don't care if she throws her BHS but I did tell her that she better not throw her tuck just because she just got it.
So should she not be allowed or is there suppose to be a rule that she isn't suppose to do this?