Alpine Skiing: Inside the Ski Boot - Ankle and Foot Movements

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  • Опубликовано: 21 дек 2024

Комментарии • 19

  • @DM-sv6jb
    @DM-sv6jb 3 часа назад

    Excellent information. Thank you!

  • @Bushwacked487
    @Bushwacked487 Месяц назад +2

    This channel fills a big gap in the serious ski mechanic discussion! Thanks for clarifying so many questions I’ve had!

    • @OzoneSkiing
      @OzoneSkiing  Месяц назад +1

      Thank yo so much! There are many ideas in the queue, just need to find the time for them.

  • @travisbacon1974
    @travisbacon1974 Месяц назад +1

    Keep making this type of high quality content. Thanks

  • @eskuAdradit0
    @eskuAdradit0 Месяц назад

    Thanks!

  • @Studio42Brooklyn
    @Studio42Brooklyn Месяц назад

    wish i could understand the older videos too. great content!

    • @OzoneSkiing
      @OzoneSkiing  29 дней назад +1

      Thank you!
      I plan to subtitle or remake some of the previous videos.

  • @eskuAdradit0
    @eskuAdradit0 Месяц назад +1

    I'm really thankful for this channel because it deep dives into the mechanics under consideration of our biomechanics. Do you also do clinics or private lessons? I'm interested in a technique that reduces injury risk.

    • @OzoneSkiing
      @OzoneSkiing  Месяц назад

      Thank you! :)
      Yes, you can find the in-person options on the ozone-skiing.com website.
      There are also plans to introduce online coaching.

    • @canadianskimonger
      @canadianskimonger Месяц назад

      I have been taking lessons with Mickey over the past couple of weeks. I can't overstate how effective these sessions have been. Highly recommended

  • @JanosKoranyi
    @JanosKoranyi Месяц назад +1

    For all of you who think you have understood this video. I am a physician, who is very interested in movement physiology. I want to inform you that there is a decisive difference between "pronation-supination" and "eversion-inversion". The latter movements are passive, we do not have muscles and suitable joints for these two, so we need external forces to get these movements and they can seriously damage your ankles if you make them happen. Spraining the foot, with damage to the outside of the ankle is the result of an inversion injury.
    For downhill skiing we need active ankle movements and they are the pronation on the outside of the ski turn and the supination on the inside. For optimal carving turns, these movements should be made together with the crossing over the skis, when we have obtained zero edge angle. Pronation means that you push down the big toe side of your foot at the same time as you lift up the little toe side and supination is the opposite movement. These movements can edge your skis. You should feel, that your ankle presses the sides of your ski-boot, when you make these movements.

    • @lourosenfeld6589
      @lourosenfeld6589 28 дней назад

      Why should you feel your ankle press the sides of your boot? In my experience it just hurts and it also reduces your range of motion. Your boot will follow the bottom of your foot.

    • @JanosKoranyi
      @JanosKoranyi 28 дней назад

      @lourosenfeld6589 this is about active ankle edging, that you can do just when your skis are flat during the cross over. Ankle edging can highly increase your edge angels during your turns. The ankle movements are pronation and supination.

  • @shooter7a
    @shooter7a Месяц назад +2

    You can't actually move your ankle in the way described here. In a well fitted performance boot (say a race boot) the fit is so tight, and the boot is so stiff that there is literally NO WAY you are moving your ankle as described. But TRYING to move the ankle as described does work to put the inside leg in the right position....

    • @lourosenfeld6589
      @lourosenfeld6589 Месяц назад +2

      You actually can if your boots are fit properly

    • @shooter7a
      @shooter7a Месяц назад

      @@lourosenfeld6589 LOL...nonsense. Ex racer, and current Masters Racer. I wear WC Nordica Doberman RD5s, 93mm last, fit by Start-Haus. Aint nothing moving around in the boot.

    • @OzoneSkiing
      @OzoneSkiing  Месяц назад +5

      Yes, absolutely. The same muscle activity in a tighter boot without a bigger displacement becomes more isometric.
      As an isometric "movement," the muscle contraction affects the ski and the upper part of the leg instead of moving the foot.
      So, all the visible movements in the video are much more effective in a perfect boot than in a big one.
      The muscle activities are practically the same; our muscle control (brain) learns the same coordination, but the effect is better.

    • @shooter7a
      @shooter7a Месяц назад

      @@OzoneSkiing yes....That is a good way to explain it.

  •  Месяц назад

    Thanks!