Originally Posted by
Bazarov
The argument against an S curve seems to come down to two points: balance around the center of mass and wasted energy. I think it's worth noting that proponents of an S curve aren't pushing some dramatic sweep of the bar. It seems to me that the area (not point) of the mid foot over which the bar must stay for everything to remain in balance is large enough to accommodate the very flat S curve these guys have in mind -- it's quite obvious when this S curve becomes too dramatic that things go wrong (I don't think anyone would argue otherwise). Furthermore, I'm not sure the area of balance remains static: it's often been noted that during the first pull, balance is shifted from the balls of the feet to the heels, followed by a shift back on to the toes after the second pull. So an S curve doesn't necessarily imply things are going to get out of balance -- perhaps it keeps things in balance.
Further along that vein, I would also note that if a lifter is going to "move the body around the bar" (which is definitely what he should be doing, I think) he will do so by moving the knees back out of the way of the bar as it comes off the ground. It seems to me that if the knees are moving back so must the hips, and if the back angle is maintained (or even partially maintained) with the shoulders over the bar, the bar, too, must move back as it comes off the ground. That is, the initial inward movement of the S curve is, in fact, an attempt to keep the bar close the body (i.e., directly over the center of gravity) as the lifter moves his knees back out of the way of the bar. That makes sense to me, anyways -- if I'm way off here, please correct me.
If horizontal movement off the floor doesn't move the bar outside the center of gravity, the argument against such movement comes down to wasted energy: any energy spent on horizontal movement can't contribute to vertical movement, the main objective of weightlifting. Two things: moving the bar horizontally, so long as that movement doesn't throw the whole system out of balance (which is, obviously, absolutely key), shouldn't require much energy: the bar isn't being moved against gravity. Furthermore, we can't consider the mechanical efficiency of a vertical path in a vacuum: the human body is stronger in certain positions, and thus better suited to imparting vertical force from certain positions, and that simply might not accommodate a vertical bar path (to a greater or lesser degree, given individual anthropometry). That would mean human beings (prepare to be shocked) aren't designed to move loaded barbells from the floor to overhead in the most mechanically efficient manner (i.e., a straight line ). Thus the human body might have to waste some energy by moving the bar horizontally in order to get the bar, and the body in relation to the bar, to a position from which it can apply the most vertical force. Such movement might not be 100% mechanically efficient, but it might be the most efficient way for a human body to move a loaded barbell (the two aren’t necessarily the same).