Thanks for helping me understand my biggest skiing form problem. Now I have a far better way to envision and work on lower/upper body separation. This is exactly what I needed!
Tip for everyone, sit on a sofa and lift your feet up so your legs are horizontal. Rotate your feet left and right and that's the movement you want without moving your hips.
I can get about 90 degrees of external rotation but only about 45 of internal rotation while lying down with zero knee flex. Is this something I should be working on with stretching?
I actually gave my daughter the standard shoulder lesson today. I now realize I have to do it again tomorrow after seeing this video. I made the exact mistake you’re emphasizing here. Big thanks!
That really resonated with me - I think I'm overly focussed on the shoulders, as that's what everyone tells you. Next time skiing, I'll def try the drill and try to shift the focus on the hips/leg rotation. Great vid!
Thanks for your wonderful ski lesson with perfect demonstration. I'm a ski trainer at DRSA ski team since 1983 in korea where Yongpyeong that held in men and women winter Olympics for GS, SL last 2018. I totally agree with you. The ski resort where I'm working is going to open this weekend. I respect your teaching method. It probably a lot helpful when I coaching the students. Thanks. Have a great winter. I'm looking forward to next video of you.
Hi there Jimy, Thanks so much for watching the video and providing your feedback! Please just let us know if you have any specific content recommendations and have a great winter ⛷⛷⛷
You raise an important issue of communication. One of the problems many of us have in learning to ski is that we take what instructors say at face value and, unless the context is specified, assume the advice applies to all skiing always. So "keep the shoulders down the hill", to us, means exactly that. So we can become fixated as you rightly point out but that is because we are trying to do what instructors have told us. It strikes me that instructors often score 10 out of 10 for skiing but only 3 out of 10 for clear communication. As many Brits try to learn from foreign language instructors that often makes things worse. Having said that, your vid is a welcome clarification and I think a lot of YT content is now improving in this regard. Also I notice that, like many disciplines, skiing has recruited various words to mean very specific things in a skiing context and instructors sometimes forget that pupils do not necessarily know this lexicon. So 'shorten the inside ski', with a saw presumably? 'Soften' the leg, with a mallet? etc. Bit of a rant but not aimed at you so please don't take it personally!
You are right what you say Ed Secretan. The problem with ski instructor systems is that 90% of training is spent on how instructors ski and only 5% on how to teach. The trainers have also been through the same system and so they don't really know how to teach properly and therefore the issue is prolonged over generations. This is why, once people have had some lessons when they were beginners, very few go back and have more and more lessons because essentially most ski instructors are poor teachers.
good one, ive never seen that exact lesson before, demonstrating the turn by rotating the femur from the hip socket. its spot on, about the shoulder part too
This is good stuff. You are right about separation. The legs should turn with the skis and the whole torso turn much less. The torso should not turn in the waist at all, the work must be done in the hip joints. Many times you can hear the term of upper/lower body separation. This is a bad name, because the border between the upper and lower boy is at the waist.
Thanks for the insight and comment Janos. We will take this onboard. The core point Tom was trying to make, is that simply focusing on keeping your 'shoulders down the hill' is not enough to create good separation. We hope you are having an awesome winter ⛷⛷
@@melissalund6198 you are right, but this is not different from what I have said. I said that the border between the upper and lower body is at the waist and so it is the wrong place for separation. Separation should happen in the hip joints.
@@melissalund6198 yes, you are right. The legs join the body in the hip joints. But what about the body part that we call hips. Are the hips part of the upper body or the lower body? Normally we consider the hips as part of the lower body and so the name upper/lower body separation is wrong.
Thanks for watching Andrew and apologies for taking so long to get back to this comment. If you have any feedback about trying out these drills then don't hesitate to let us know! Have a great winter ⛷
The highlight of this video for me is the shift in technique at 4:33 from jerky hockey stop turns to letting legs and feet edge and carve and follow the ski radius through each turn, flowing seamlessly from one to the other.
Big turns will usually have the shoulders square to the skies. Short turns will have the shoulders facing downhill as there usually isn’t time to move with the skies unless you are sliding the tails.
While the desired end state of dynamic skiing and flow remains the same, for a 180 degree opposed perspective about how to conceptualize torso rotation based on Leading Joint Theory check out Natalia Dounskaia's approach.
#TomWaddington - not saying you are wrong but in the plough wiggle the whole of your upper body followed the skis round the turn so please explain where the separation is?
It looks like you are having the weight on the both skies when carving, do you? When I'm skidding I can keep my weight on the both skies and keep them parallel but if I edge them well I feel how they bite strongly in the snow but then they have their own separate paths which diverge or converge and I no longer able to force them going together parallel.
Hi there, We're not 100% sure what might be happening with your ski technique, however, It certainly sounds pressure related. We have just brought out 3 different 'technique teardown' lessons that you might find helpful. Check out the first one of the series as this could help you get to the bottom of your problem: th-cam.com/video/RGgF-hQrZqc/w-d-xo.html We hope this helps!
Hey there, The main focus here is to keep a relatively stable torso, while feeling those legs rotate in the pelvis. We hope this makes sense! Thanks for watching ⛷
TIP: keep your hands and shoulders the same angle as your ski tips. ie: If your turning left your right ski tip will be behind your left ski tip, try to keep your hands and shoulders the same angle.
This guy is obviously a great skier but I don't think the way he explains things here is the best. I have been skiing a long time (over 30 yrs) and started ice skating at two. Personally I think a better instruction is to keep your chest pointing down the slope rather than shoulders. There's less chance that people will over rotate the shoulders. External rotation for hips when skiing? Have I missed something because the only time you do this is with a kick turn or a skating step. As I said, great skiier and I know what he wants people to do but am not sure about the clarity of the instructions.
I think we'll stick to making skiing content Wen 😅 However, we take content requests seriously so if you'd like a dance video then let us know and we'll see what we can do during the off season 😎😎😎 Thanks again for watching 👍
What you say and what you show, isn't the same. When you overfocuses on "shoulders pointing down", you twist them more than ever while holding your arms down the piste. You are confusing everyone with this. In stead, just explain what you do from @4:33 - it will be so much better. It would help if you explained WHY we should keep our shoulders pointing down the slope. It is more than what the good skiers do ;-) If you want a really good drill on this; try to ski down the piste with a big/heavy backpack. The backpack will pull you around each turn if you don't keep your upper torso pointing down the slope.
Hi there, Thanks for the feedback about this lesson. Would you be kind enough to share what exactly you found most confusing about the lesson? We're always striving for clear straightforward lessons!
The language is messy here. He doesn’t do a good job of distinguishing between the hip sockets, hips, waist and spine regarding the different options of rotary up and down the chain. Technically, it is not the hip but the hip sockets and not the waist but the spine that actually is performing the rotary motor patterns being discussed. These are the relevant biomechanics that make the differences discussed in this video and a misunderstanding that will continue to plague a students ongoing dev.
This is a typical traditional method with leg steering that will never get you to proper counteracting. This instructor obviously doesn't understand biomechanics.
Thanks for helping me understand my biggest skiing form problem. Now I have a far better way to envision and work on lower/upper body separation. This is exactly what I needed!
Tip for everyone, sit on a sofa and lift your feet up so your legs are horizontal. Rotate your feet left and right and that's the movement you want without moving your hips.
Wow,
Love it, thanks for the insightful comment Drew.
With 27 likes so far, this must be a quality tip!
Please include a visual to be certain we have it right.
I can get about 90 degrees of external rotation but only about 45 of internal rotation while lying down with zero knee flex. Is this something I should be working on with stretching?
This video is a keeper. Terrific, clear instructions from start to finish on an important fundamental movement.
I actually gave my daughter the standard shoulder lesson today. I now realize I have to do it again tomorrow after seeing this video. I made the exact mistake you’re emphasizing here. Big thanks!
Glad you found the tips useful Daniel! Stay tuned for more ski content 🎿
That really resonated with me - I think I'm overly focussed on the shoulders, as that's what everyone tells you. Next time skiing, I'll def try the drill and try to shift the focus on the hips/leg rotation. Great vid!
Glad you liked it! Let us know how you get on and stay tuned for more skiing content 🎿
Thanks for your wonderful ski lesson with perfect demonstration. I'm a ski trainer at DRSA ski team since 1983 in korea where Yongpyeong that held in men and women winter Olympics for GS, SL last 2018. I totally agree with you. The ski resort where I'm working is going to open this weekend. I respect your teaching method. It probably a lot helpful when I coaching the students. Thanks. Have a great winter. I'm looking forward to next video of you.
Hi there Jimy,
Thanks so much for watching the video and providing your feedback!
Please just let us know if you have any specific content recommendations and have a great winter
⛷⛷⛷
You raise an important issue of communication. One of the problems many of us have in learning to ski is that we take what instructors say at face value and, unless the context is specified, assume the advice applies to all skiing always. So "keep the shoulders down the hill", to us, means exactly that. So we can become fixated as you rightly point out but that is because we are trying to do what instructors have told us. It strikes me that instructors often score 10 out of 10 for skiing but only 3 out of 10 for clear communication. As many Brits try to learn from foreign language instructors that often makes things worse. Having said that, your vid is a welcome clarification and I think a lot of YT content is now improving in this regard. Also I notice that, like many disciplines, skiing has recruited various words to mean very specific things in a skiing context and instructors sometimes forget that pupils do not necessarily know this lexicon. So 'shorten the inside ski', with a saw presumably? 'Soften' the leg, with a mallet? etc. Bit of a rant but not aimed at you so please don't take it personally!
You are right what you say Ed Secretan. The problem with ski instructor systems is that 90% of training is spent on how instructors ski and only 5% on how to teach. The trainers have also been through the same system and so they don't really know how to teach properly and therefore the issue is prolonged over generations. This is why, once people have had some lessons when they were beginners, very few go back and have more and more lessons because essentially most ski instructors are poor teachers.
Wow thanks for posting I think I have been moving my lower body too much instead of rotating my legs in the hip joint more.
Glad you found some insight in our video Patrick! Stay tuned for more content 🎿
I love it that you took this right back to basics with the “plough wiggles” and variations. You can only build well on strong foundations 👍
Couldn't agree more Richard! Glad you enjoyed the video, stay tuned for more content 🎿
good one, ive never seen that exact lesson before, demonstrating the turn by rotating the femur from the hip socket. its spot on, about the shoulder part too
Thanks for the feedback Steve!
Glad to hear that this lesson was useful for you.
All the best putting these tips into practice ⛷
This is good stuff. You are right about separation. The legs should turn with the skis and the whole torso turn much less. The torso should not turn in the waist at all, the work must be done in the hip joints. Many times you can hear the term of upper/lower body separation. This is a bad name, because the border between the upper and lower boy is at the waist.
Thanks for the insight and comment Janos.
We will take this onboard.
The core point Tom was trying to make, is that simply focusing on keeping your 'shoulders down the hill' is not enough to create good separation.
We hope you are having an awesome winter ⛷⛷
Actually, the border between the legs and torso is where the leg meets the body. It's not the waist.
@@melissalund6198 you are right, but this is not different from what I have said. I said that the border between the upper and lower body is at the waist and so it is the wrong place for separation. Separation should happen in the hip joints.
To me this is simple -.separation between upper and lower body is not at the waist.-.it's.where the leg joins the body.
@@melissalund6198 yes, you are right. The legs join the body in the hip joints.
But what about the body part that we call hips. Are the hips part of the upper body or the lower body? Normally we consider the hips as part of the lower body and so the name upper/lower body separation is wrong.
Thank you. We were working on this last week.
Thanks for watching Andrew and apologies for taking so long to get back to this comment.
If you have any feedback about trying out these drills then don't hesitate to let us know!
Have a great winter ⛷
That was an incredibly helpful video !! Thank you ! Going to get Carv for next season for sure.
Hey Jen, no problem! Glad it helped 🙌
Was waiting for him to get back his poles by climbing up the hill again haha
We can assure that the poles were picked up!
We decided to hold off recording the pole rescue 😅
@@CarvSki I was reminded of a movie where King Philip threw his gloves to make a statement. Cool !!
The highlight of this video for me is the shift in technique at 4:33 from jerky hockey stop turns to letting legs and feet edge and carve and follow the ski radius through each turn, flowing seamlessly from one to the other.
The plow wiggle is a drill that is excellent, that my Olympic coach made me do in my teens. Great revival. 👊🏽
Glad you liked it Otis, stay tuned for more ski content 🎿
Big turns will usually have the shoulders square to the skies. Short turns will have the shoulders facing downhill as there usually isn’t time to move with the skies unless you are sliding the tails.
Thanks for the insight Norm!
We hope you enjoyed this lesson from Tom ⛷
I think this is a fair comment, but it takes some flexibility and skill in order to get to that final level of quickness!
I am guilty of this!!! thanks for explaining the correct technique! looking forward to trying to get better!
Excellent- thanks
Bravo majstore, bas si se potrudio pomoci nama amaterima kako napraviti skolski zaokret. 👏
Thank you Tom.
Thanks for watching Anthalas,
We're really happy to hear that you have enjoyed Tom's lesson!
Stay posted for more content 👍
Great 👍 👌 👍 👌 video!
Thank you 😊
Glad you enjoyed it Sarah! Stay tuned for more ski content 🎿
EXCELLENT, EXCELLENT, EXCELLENT! 👍
Glad you enjoyed it Michael! 🎿
@@CarvSki I never wished for anything more than a Carv Digital Ski Coach. I so badly wish I had one..
While the desired end state of dynamic skiing and flow remains the same, for a 180 degree opposed perspective about how to conceptualize torso rotation based on Leading Joint Theory check out Natalia Dounskaia's approach.
Thanks for the insight Andrew!
📖
I counter rotate my body wayyyyy to much, probably leads to a lot of A framing. Great vid!
#TomWaddington - not saying you are wrong but in the plough wiggle the whole of your upper body followed the skis round the turn so please explain where the separation is?
It looks like you are having the weight on the both skies when carving, do you?
When I'm skidding I can keep my weight on the both skies and keep them parallel but if I edge them well I feel how they bite strongly in the snow but then they have their own separate paths which diverge or converge and I no longer able to force them going together parallel.
Hi there,
We're not 100% sure what might be happening with your ski technique, however, It certainly sounds pressure related.
We have just brought out 3 different 'technique teardown' lessons that you might find helpful.
Check out the first one of the series as this could help you get to the bottom of your problem:
th-cam.com/video/RGgF-hQrZqc/w-d-xo.html
We hope this helps!
Ive experienced this feeling when learning how to carve. Like you are going to trip yourself up or catch an edge. Need more practice
The upper body and the femur are connected via the hips. Working on keeping the hip 'stacked' is key and should be part of this instruction.
Next Tuesday [ 15/10/24 ] at 'Chill Factore' I'm going to try that hip rotation method for working on short turns.
Profesjonalista ! 0:30 ! Ok! + 5....Pozdrowienia z Pol-ski
Thanks. It's very helpful.
Wonderful ski tips and demonstration
Glad you liked it! Stay tuned for more ski content 🎿
3:42 you're pointing the poles with your hands lol
Hey there,
The main focus here is to keep a relatively stable torso, while feeling those legs rotate in the pelvis.
We hope this makes sense!
Thanks for watching ⛷
great camera work - skiing backwards ? vg
Thanks for watching Fred,
We won't give all the secrets of our cameraman 😉
But definitely a bit of backwards skiing involved!
Great video guys!
Glad you enjoyed it! 🎿
Is Tom on the Blizzard Firebird SRC’s?
He sure is!
Thanks for watching Peter 👍
Damn, this is me... Thanks for the tip!
The Instructor is actually doing full body rotation while demonstrating the wedge turns. Is that not a mistake?
That's quiet impresive, most of the instructors can't fake a crappy technique so well.
TIP: keep your hands and shoulders the same angle as your ski tips. ie: If your turning left your right ski tip will be behind your left ski tip, try to keep your hands and shoulders the same angle.
Extra points for the Dr Who reference .
Спасибо
Lol at the dalek reference
Your hips are moving right and left with your skies at 2:40
This guy is obviously a great skier but I don't think the way he explains things here is the best. I have been skiing a long time (over 30 yrs) and started ice skating at two. Personally I think a better instruction is to keep your chest pointing down the slope rather than shoulders. There's less chance that people will over rotate the shoulders. External rotation for hips when skiing? Have I missed something because the only time you do this is with a kick turn or a skating step. As I said, great skiier and I know what he wants people to do but am not sure about the clarity of the instructions.
Got to have these drills to keep little kids interested while mom and dad ski the blacks.
Haha, be careful.
The kids will soon be skiing double blacks while mom and dad stick to the blacks 😉
We hope you are having a great winter ❄️
Brill 👍🏻
Glad you enjoyed the video! Stay tuned for more ski content 🎿
At 40 seconds, I thought this is a dance video ☺️
I think we'll stick to making skiing content Wen 😅
However, we take content requests seriously so if you'd like a dance video then let us know and we'll see what we can do during the off season 😎😎😎
Thanks again for watching 👍
EXTERMINATE-The Daleks 🤣
Hey look! Free poles!
Не понимаю почему я должна учиться в плуге.😢
What you say and what you show, isn't the same. When you overfocuses on "shoulders pointing down", you twist them more than ever while holding your arms down the piste. You are confusing everyone with this. In stead, just explain what you do from @4:33 - it will be so much better.
It would help if you explained WHY we should keep our shoulders pointing down the slope. It is more than what the good skiers do ;-)
If you want a really good drill on this; try to ski down the piste with a big/heavy backpack. The backpack will pull you around each turn if you don't keep your upper torso pointing down the slope.
In coming skiers impale themselves on discarded ski poles. 😂
I love his way of teaching😁🤾🏽♀️
This was a confusing lesson for many I'm sure. Read the comments, they will help.
Hi there,
Thanks for the feedback about this lesson.
Would you be kind enough to share what exactly you found most confusing about the lesson?
We're always striving for clear straightforward lessons!
@@CarvSki Like the goal of that drill and how it applies to making a better turn just wasn't as clear as the other ones.
What an accent! Arnold Schwarzenegger, is that you?
yes, dont be a "dalek"!
The language is messy here. He doesn’t do a good job of distinguishing between the hip sockets, hips, waist and spine regarding the different options of rotary up and down the chain. Technically, it is not the hip but the hip sockets and not the waist but the spine that actually is performing the rotary motor patterns being discussed. These are the relevant biomechanics that make the differences discussed in this video and a misunderstanding that will continue to plague a students ongoing dev.
You are turning wrong
This is a typical traditional method with leg steering that will never get you to proper counteracting. This instructor obviously doesn't understand biomechanics.