We as a society should be talking more about this crazy Ina Bauer of Junhwan Cha when the music goes into a complete void.
It's a shame that this exhibition is only performed once. (As far as I know)
@clarinetsncats@rockerskating took drawing myself a diagram to see what's going on, but isn't that technically also true of LBO and RBI? tho tbf the only standard jump on either of those is a lutz which is a toe jump.
had to make myself a diagram to keep track but RBO and LBI being possible (for a righty) makes sense bc you're already turning ccw. it's RBI and LBO where you're turning against the rotation of the jump, but i would assume the swing of the free leg (1/2)
I wish I really understood the physics behind that. But the way that it feels is that when you do a walley or a toeless lutz, the momentum that you get from your speed and your backward edge rip allows you to jump and counterrotate. There’s something about a forward edge pull that doesn’t allow that to happen, but it could also be that no one has really tried them
These are literally some of the hardest singles to learn (I’d say harder than the axel - I didn’t land my first walley until after I landed double jumps, but I also wasn’t working on the walley on a daily basis, so chicken or egg?)
allows you to change the rotational direction. in that case, i don't see why RFO and LFI couldn't work: swinging the left leg back on a RFO edge and swinging the right leg forwards on a LFI edge should in theory give you the momentum needed to do a ccw jump, no? (2/2)