Question: Do people train wwe wrestlers how to land?
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Answer #1:
thats one of the main things.. Because if you dont know how to land you could end up breaking something like Lex Luger his leg or Sabu when he broke his neck..Answer #2:
this is a really dumb queston teach people how to do moves but lets them figure out how to landof course they do
Answer #3:
The ring isnt soft at all. It hurts like a "brother trucker" when you land. They aren't "trained". They get hints and while doing the moves they can figure it out and the vetrans show good techniques. They figure it out and if they dont sucks for them. But no matter what it hurts really bad to land on the ring floor. Its mostly metal under there and then like the canvas thing.Answer #4:
One, it's the first thing someone must learn or they will never step inside a ring...and the rings for WWE and TNA have springs underneath and added cushioning on the mat to help talent take bumps and minimize the chance of injury. Back in the day, wrestling companies used boxing rings -- which had no give and had only a very thin layer of cusion, which is one reason there was minimal high flying (guys like Flyin' Fred Curry were rare)....talent could bust something easily on this "concrete" by doing everything right.Answer #5:
nope, the rings offer little protection i'm training to be a pro wrestler it hurts like fucking shit manAnswer #6:
yea they have a dvd with some wwe supoerstar and tna training,and it shows how 2 land,BUT I NEVER REALLY SEE THEM LAND THE WAY THEY WAS TAUGHT 2Answer #7:
the ring, or more to the point the surface between the posts which they walk on and land on, is a metal frame with parallel 'joists' also metal, with 2x12s running cross ways a sheet of ply wood and 1-2 gym mats, covered in canvas which is stretched taut, to hold the mats in place and prevent them from shifting -- this also reduces some of the absorbencyyes they are trained... the primary thing is to keep your head tucked chin to chest (to prevent head and neck injuries) until the moment of impact, then to let your head drop the few inches to the mat so it looks like you hit your head also by having your arms to the side it spreads the impact through your entire body (the bed of nails principal)
seek out a copy of a season of Tough Enough -- pretty sure each season devoted at least 1 episode to the 'back bump' which is the impact you describe... you might even find some of it on You Tube
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