fisac-irsf judges training presented by molly metz fisac judges trainer

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FISAC-IRSF Judges Training Presented by Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

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FISAC-IRSF Judges Training Presented by Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer. Summary of changes in the 2011 – 2012 FISAC-IRSF Rule Book Please review the attached information on changes. This information is a supplement to this powerpoint presentation. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

FISAC-IRSF Judges Training

Presented by Molly Metz

FISAC Judges Trainer

Page 2: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Summary of changes in the 2011 – 2012 FISAC-IRSF Rule Book

Please review the attached information on changes.

This information is a supplement to this powerpoint presentation.

Page 3: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Single Rope FreestyleHead Judge

Announcing and recording time and space violations, counting and notating mistakes

Difficulty Judge50% of the score

5 judges on the panel

Presentation Judge35% of the score

5 judges on the panel

Required/Variation Judges15% of the score

6 judges (3 of each) on the panel (these judges also count and notate mistakes)

Page 4: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Double Dutch FreestyleHead Judge

Announcing and recording time and space violations, counting and notating mistakes. Ensuring each jumper does at least 3 skills. (these skills can be a level 1 skill.)

Difficulty Judge50% of the score

5 judges on the panel

Presentation Judge35% of the score

5 judges on the panel

Required Elements JUMPER/Variation TURNER Judges15% of the score

6 judges (3 of each) on the panel (these judges also count and notate mistakes)

Page 5: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Difficulty Single Rope

Page 6: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Difficulty elements, levels and exceptions

There are 5 levels of difficulty in Single RopeLevel 5 being the most difficult

There are 5 elements to judge – Crosses – Multiples – double, triple and quadruple unders– Releases – release of the rope handles– Power – special position of the body– Gymnastics

Page 7: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Difficulty Maximum points per level

Level 2 skills – maximum 10 pointsLevel 2 skills are equal to 1 point.

Level 3 skills – maximum 20 pointsLevel 3 skills are equal to 1.6 points.

Level 4 skills – maximum 30 pointsLevel 4 skills are equal to 2.3 points

Level 5 skills – no maximumLevel 5 skills are equal to 3.5 points

10 tricks should be completed to reach the maximum

13 tricks should be completed to reach the maximum

13 tricks should be completed to reach the maximum

unlimited tricks should be completed, as there is no maximum

Maximum total points: _______

Page 8: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Difficulty Level 2• Crosses

• All ISOLATED crosses are level 2 (Except for the regular cross which is a level 1)• *Exceptions listed on level 3 slide

• Multiples• Double unders with regular cross• Doubles unders landing in a level 2 cross• Triple unders (without crosses)

• Releases• Basic release (the basic release is when the handle is released and then caught.)

• Power• Coming out of, or completing a “basic” power move

• Gymnastics• Basic gymnastics – cartwheel, front roll

Page 9: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Difficulty Level 3• Crosses

• *Backwards behind the back crosses (AS, TS, CL)• *T-Toad, jumping out of a caboose, inverse T-toad• *Cross/cross switch of a different skill – toad/elephant, elephant/toad – 2-4

• Multiples• Doubles with completion of level 2 crosses (*TS, toad, AS, TS, CL)• Doubles landing in a level 3• Triples with basic cross• Quadruple under with no crosses• EK full twist

• Releases• Catching 2 handles• The cord made a loop during the release• Catch the handle in a special position (trick)

• Power• Coming out of, or completing a “more powerful” power move. (one handed frog, one handed pushup)• Power to a level 2 skill

• Gymnastics• Handspring, back and front, supported with hands, round off,.

*Exceptions

Page 10: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Difficulty Level 4• Crosses

• Same skill cross/cross – AS/AS, CL/CL, TS/TS – it is noted for a judge as 2-4• Multiples

• Triples with level 2 crosses – TJ, jammies, triple TS.• Quadruples with crosses• EK with cross

• Releases• Loop, catch and complete the jump (MIC)• Loop, catch 2 handles

• Power• Going from a level 2 skill to a power (this can be a multiple or a cross)• Coming out of a “more powerful” power to a level 2 skill. One handed frog to CL• Power to power skill – such as a kamikaze, high frog • *Backwards push-up or frog

• Gymnastics• Front or back flip, or also known as a salto with 1 or 2 turns of the rope.

Page 11: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Difficulty Level 5• Crosses

• *Same skill cross/cross behind the back backwards– AS/AS, CL/CL, TS/TS noted: 3-5• Multiples

• Quadruples with level 2 crosses• Same skill cross/cross in a double under• Behind the back backwards in a triple• *Triple under T-toad

• Releases• Catch handle while in a special body position

• Power• Going from a level 3 skill to a power (this can be a multiple or a cross) • Going from a level 2 skill to a “more powerful” power skill.• *Backwards Kamikazee. AS to frog, CL to frog.

• Gymnastics• Front or back flip, or also known as a salto with a triple under or level 2 skill or greater.

Page 12: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Difficulty Summary

When scoring a jumper in difficulty please remember:• Tricks are only counted or should be scored if they

are done in isolation or in a different combination. • Tricks done backwards can be counted again.• Identical tricks done on the right side of the body,

then again on the left side will not be counted again. (Example: side swing cross on the right, then the left). Or identical tricks within a series or combination of tricks will not be counted again.

Page 13: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Difficulty Double Dutch

Page 14: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Difficulty elements, levels and exceptions

There are 5 levels of difficulty in Double dutch.

THE BIG PICTUREThe judge is to view the double dutch routine as

a “snapshot” meaning, they should watch what the turners are doing as well as the

jumpers.

Page 15: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Difficulty Double Dutch JUMPER

LEVEL 2 skills- Going into a special position/power move- Coming out of a special position/power move- *Leap Frog

Gymnastics- Round off- Front roll

Page 16: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Difficulty Double Dutch JUMPER

LEVEL 3 skills- Transition of a special/power move then directly to

another special/power positionGymnastics- Front handspring- Back handspring- Kip- *Assisted flips, such as a toe pitch, supported back flip.

Page 17: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Difficulty Double Dutch JUMPER

LEVEL 4 skillsGymnastics- Front or back flip also known as salto*Assisted flips/saltos are one level lower.(level 3)

Page 18: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Difficulty Double Dutch JUMPER

Receiving additional levels for Interactions- Physical contact with another jumper, but not

assisting such as: friend “hug” frog, frog on a push up. (both jumpers must be performing a level 2 or greater in level skill)

- Interaction without contact, such as: Subway

Page 19: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Difficulty Double Dutch fancy feet “DANCE” moves

Fancy feet, or dance moves in double dutch, when done correctly, can result in a level 5 skill.

Level 5: Jumpers are “dancing/footwork” jumping at an extremely fast pace, with movement, the turners are involved in the “dance/footwork”, the turners are also utilizing their arms in a crossing or restricted position, as well they are moving across the floor.

If one of the movements or elements is missing from the definition of a level 5 “dance” set then the score is decreased by 1 and continues to decrease by one as elements are missing.

*In order to achieve a fancy feet difficulty score, this must be completed in a series of 8 counts.

Page 20: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Difficulty Double Dutch TURNER

The LevelsAdd a level if:- Turner turns a double under- Turner jumps a rope- Jumper jumps over a rope that is limited by one turner.Add 2 levels if:- Turner turns a triple/quad- Jumper jumps a rope that is limited by two turners. (same rope)- Turner is jumping over a rope with one limited armAdd 3 levels if:- Turner jumps the rope with 2 limited hands – such as the chinese wheel with a cross.

*Only the first time a limited rope is jumped with that “speed” or “style” of turning the extra level(s) is given for the snapshot. The turners will not get scored for turning that remains in the same position continuously.

Page 21: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Presentation

Page 22: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Presentation Judges Checklist

Single Rope- Music – 15%- Movement – 5%- Execution – 5%- Impression – 10%

Double Dutch- Music – 15%- Movement – 2.5%- Execution – 5%- Impression – 7.5%- *Interaction – 5%

Page 23: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Presentation

Music

BeatsThe routine should be on the beat of the music, jumpers feet are “in sync” with the

beat.

AccentsThe routine “accents” powerful sounds in the music

Notation Suggestion: try making a note on your paper when the jumper uses an accent during their routine, such as an M. Then sum up the total M’s at the end of the routine. If the jumper gets “off” beat make a negative notation such as a M- when this occurs. You can then deduct the M- marks from the total maximum for beats.

Page 24: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Presentation

Movement

Single Rope: The jumper is continuously moving across the floor. (The jumper is not required to “hit every square of the floor)

Double Dutch: the jumpers/turners are continuously moving across the floor, in circles, etc

Notation Suggestion: try making a note on your paper when the jumper stops moving. When the routine is finished you can deduct each mark from the total maximum score. This can be done using a / mark.

Page 25: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Presentation

Execution

Position of the body/form of the body while performing a skill.

Position of the rope/form of the rope while performing a skill

Notation Suggestion: when a skill or body position is out of form, try notating this on your paper with an F. At the end of the routine you can deduct the number of F marks from the total maximum score.

Page 26: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Presentation

EntertainmentInteresting and special moves- Do you see a skill that is interesting and unique?

Entertaining/enjoyment- Does the jumper entertain you?- Are you enjoying the performance?

Spectacular moves- Do you see any moves that are AMAZING?

Notation Suggestion: Try notating an interesting move with the letter I, and a spectacular move with an S. Total the number of I’s and S’s to complete your scoresheet. If you felt enjoyments and entertainment from the routine you can note this by your overall enjoyment and entertainment at the end of the routine.

Page 27: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Presentation

Interaction

The interaction element only applies to double dutch- Does the turners switch and conduct exchanges- Do the jumpers interact with each other such as a subway

Notation Suggestion: Try making a notation on your scoresheet with an I whenever an interaction occurs with the jumpers. Total the number of I’s at the end of the routine and note this on your scoresheet.

Page 28: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Required Element Judge Required Variation Judge

Single Rope

Page 29: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Required Elements Single Rope

There are two types of Required Elements Judges

1. Required Elements Judge (3 on a panel)Three judges are dedicated to noting required

elements, such as a checklist of “skills”.

2. Required Variation Judge(3 on panel)Three judges are dedicated to noting the variation of

required sets of skills.

Page 30: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Required Elements Judge Single Rope

Required Element Judge is responsible for

- 3 different wraps (3 points total)- 4 different gymnastics (4 points total)- 6 different power moves (6 points total)- 3 releases of which at least one of them is a level-4 difficulty release.

- *If judging a pairs routine, 5 different pairs interactions must be completed. 1 must be a “difficult” interaction. - *A difficult interaction is a level 3 skill/interaction or greater with your partner.

Example: Triple under with cross or a *MIC release and both jumpers jump over the release together.

Notation Suggestion: Try using the following judges notations:W – wrapsG – gymnasticsP – powerR – releasesI – Interaction

Page 31: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Required Variation Judge Single Rope

Required Variation Judge is responsible for

- 4 clearly separated sets of at least four different crosses, of which are more difficult than the basic cross, in single bounce or multiples (but not combined).(4 points)

- 4 clearly separated sets of at least 4 different multiples of which at least 2 sets are triples or faster. (4 points)

- 3 times at least 4 skills (not sets) are done backwards. (3 points)- These skills do not have to be in a row

*Sets of skills must be clearly separated by at least 3 skills that are “not like” the set that was just performed.

Judges Notations:

Page 32: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Variation Examples

- toad – crougar – toad – crougar – 1 point- Toad – crougar – toad – 0 points- toad - double under toad – crougar – double under AS – 0 points (because they are

combined with multiples and single bounce tricks)- Du EB cross, double under TS cross, du AS cross, double under CL cross – 1 point- double under toad, double under eb, double under TS, double under cross/cross – 1 point- TJ triple under – EB triple under – TS Triple under – EK full twist – 1 point- Toad – crougar – toad – crougar – eb – jump – jump – jump – ts – ts – as – as – cl = 2 points

*A jumper can suffice a judges requirements in 1 combination such as in this combination: ALL Backwards TJ, Inverse, triple AS, triple TS – got 1 point for 4 skills backwrds, also a set of 4

triples in a row, and a set of 4 crosses in a row.

Page 33: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Required Element JUMPER Judge Required Variation TURNERJudge

Double Dutch

Page 34: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Required Elements Double Dutch

There are two types of Required Elements Judges

1. Required Element JUMPER Judge (3 on a panel)Three judges are dedicated to noting required elements of the jumpers. This judge is

watching all the jumpers involved.

2. Required Variation TURNER Judge(3 on panel)Three judges are dedicated to noting required turning skills. This judge is watching all

the jumpers involved

Notation Suggestion: when notating the required elements per jumper you may simply use the first letter of each element and mark this down accordingly on your judges scoresheet. When noting the variation of the turner you may make a notation of T on your scoresheet each time you see the turner participate in a turning skill

Page 35: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Required Element JUMPER Judge Required Element JUMPER judge- 2 power skills series, of at least 4 power skills. (A series is defined as an unbroken series of skills,

no single bounces in between skills) (4 points) - 4 power skills of a high power level. (4 points)

- High power levels are power skills that require extra power such as: one handed, double under, 2 foot)

- 4 gymnastics skills of which at least 1 of these skills is a salto, or aerial (unassisted flip) (3 points, plus 2 points for the flip)

* Skills will not be credited again just because the turning is different. For example: a high frog done in the ropes, is now done again later in the ropes and one turner was turning in a crougar. It is a repetitive high frog skill.

Notation Suggestion: when notating the required elements per jumper you may simply use the first letter of each element and mark this down accordingly on your judges scoresheet. S – series, P – power, G – gymnastics, G+ for advanced gymnastics.

Page 36: FISAC-IRSF  Judges Training Presented by  Molly Metz FISAC Judges Trainer

Required Element TURNER Judge

Required Element TURNER judge- 10 turning skills as a turner (2.5 points)

- 5 jumping skills as a turner (2.5 points)

* The sequences of turner skills cannot be the same. For instance, if one turner does a cross, then this cannot be repeated in isolation later in the routine.

Notation Suggestion: When noting the number of turning skills of the turner you may make a notation of T on your scoresheet each time you see the turner participate in a turning skill. When noting the variaton of the turners jumping skills you may note this as a J.