There's actually two different techniques being presented here. The instructor at the beginning of the video at about 0.25 is telling the girl to start rotating once the arms are down and the free leg is close. The other instructor at about 1.25 is telling the class to bring the arms and free leg in front then snap and turn. One technique gives height and the other gives a fast rotation. If you look in slow motion at videos of roller skating double axels, it seems most skaters use the first technique.
One thing missing from the technique being taught is kicking the free leg heel to the free leg glute qhile pushing the left foot out in front of the body as the skater leans onto the take off edge. There is a lot of power to be had here where the right foot heel to glute is done against the left leg pushing out in front of the body on the stretch... You sure can't argue with the height and distance of Tanya Romano's Axel though.......
En zapatillas es facil, si no te sale hacerlo de un pie a un pie intenta empezar con los dos pies y caer con los dos pies. Despues lo podes empezar con uno y caer en dos, despues caerlo en uno. Y una vez que salga lo haces con patines
The Italian roller skaters are very good from a technical standpoint, but they do tend to look robotic in some of their jump approaches even at the world class level. They upped the ante with things like triple loop combos, but unfortunately they lack the poise and finesse of past skaters like Eric Anderson and Scott Cohen.
yes you are right ,its all about content how many jumps can you fit in a program..the skating between jumps and spins are lacking. iam a judge,, past national champion in mens freestyle..so i know what iam talking about...