Vaulting alone is tightrope walking without a net

Masters pole vaulter Doug “Bubba” Sparks passes along this chilling but ultimately hopeful note:
I got this from a friend that most of us know regarding a recent dangerous situation resulting from a pole break. Greg Charles is a three-time USATF Masters Champion and a friend for many years. Rule #1 — No matter how experienced you are, do not vault alone. Greg is one of the most intelligent people I have ever met and the father of triplets. I’m not saying I would not have gone out myself alone as I have from time to time. I won’t again. Have fun and be safe. Bubba


Doug,
There’s good news and bad news.
First, what happened? Well, on June 1st I was jumping (by myself) from a 5-stride on my 15-150 with a 13’4″ grip. I had a bungee at 14′ and was having a great session. I had already decided that 25 was the total number of jumps I’d take for the session. Well, I made 24 excellent jumps (finally swinging fast and early). On jump #25 the pole (which was no brand new – it was made in 1981) broke. The top piece hit my forehead and somehow put a deep cut in my right deltoid. The problem came from the bottom part of the pole – it hit my square across the ribcage. I landed in the pit, with one hand on my head and one on my ribs – I strained to take a breath. I looked up, but UCI on a Sunday morning is not a busy place – there was no one in sight. After about a minute, which seemed like forever, I rolled off the pit and crawled on my knees and elbows to my bag. I got my phone an called Wendy – I told her to bring ice and Band-Aids (as I was bleeding from the head and shoulder). At one point, while waiting from Wendy, I thought that maybe I just pinched a nerve in my back and that’s why it was so hard to breath. I actually stood up and contemplated taking another jump in order to “jolt it back into place” – only a Pole Vaulter would understand that type of thinking. I relented and layed back down in a heap by my bag. In the 15 minutes it took Wendy to arrive, I had started to go into shock – when she got there I told Wendy to call the paramedics (this coming from me who won’t even ask for directions).
When the paramedics arrived, my blood-pressure was 75 over zero – I was now officially a “Trauma” situation. They started an IV, put me in the ambulance, and proceeded to take every bump known to mankind on their way to Western Medical Center. I was rushed in, my vitals had improved, so they gave me 4 cc’s of morphine (by the end of this ordeal I had consumed 130 cc’s of morphine). I could now breath a little. We did an MRI and a CT-Scan. The result showed that the pole hit me so hard and so fast that it compressed my ribcage so violently that the force actually blew a hole through the bottom of my left lung. I now had a collapsed lung (which explains the agony and not being able to breathe), a pneumothorax, bruised ribs, damaged intercostal muscles, and a really bad headache (which I could care less about since my internal organs were giving me pain to a level that I cannot begin to describe).
After 4 days in the hospital (and the 130 cc’s of morphine), I was allowed to go home. By the way, Wendy and I had planned (and already paid for) 8 days in Hawaii (without the triplets) Our tickets were for June 2nd (not 24 hours after my injury) – needless to say “I missed it”. Luckily I was as hurt as I was, or Wendy would have killed me.
The story goes from bad to worse, when upon arriving home I decided to simply “sit in a chair”. Now I had been laying down for 4 days, so I didn’t expect any problems – wrong again! The pain in my lower back had me screaming in agony. I returned to a laying position, the next day saw my Chiropractor and Orthopedic Surgeon who scheduled an MRI. The results of the MRI showed that the ribs and lung weren’t the only thing that took a beating – two disks in my back had been ruptured during the accident (who noticed the pain of that when I had so much more pain in my chest?). I had a 50% paralysis of my right leg. Constant back and sciatic pain. And the medication only “dulled” the pain.
I since then have had 3 epidural steroidal injections. The first two did wonders, but the 3rd provided no benefit. I’m left now with partial paralysis of my right leg (about 20%), and intermittent pain associated to moving, walking, sitting, etc.
Now for the good news. A week and a half ago I was given the Spinal Specialists version of “Death Counseling” – where he painstakingly explained that this is “as good as it’s going to get” and that I will have to get used to my “new lifestyle – that doesn’t include athletic activity”. That all sounds bad, but I figured it was simply a license to “push the envelope.” Doug, you and I have talked about this before — I’d rather not walk than walk and not vault. So I went out last week and “rimped” (it’s kind of a run-limp combo) down the runway from 3 lefts — I “held on” to a 13-140, but could only wobble it slightly. I figured that even having to “rimp” down the runway I’m still faster than Pete!!!
This past Saturday I was determined to really push the limit. I grabbed a 14-160, took a step where I could walk into a 4-lefts run, and went for it. I got rejected like a dog. Determined to “rimp” harder, I got rejected again, and again, and again. I finally told one of the guys to put a bungee at 11 feet. What? He said to me — you haven’t made it to the other side of the box yet. So what? I told him, and proceeded to “rimp” down the runway, bent the pole, and made it — but it was sloppy.
Now since nothing hurt (at least it didn’t hurt too bad), I had the bungee put up to 12 feet. I took about 6 more jumps at 12 — and was close on many, but no cigar. Wayne Lambert showed up right when we were finishing, so I decided to take “one more” at 12. With God (and Dan) smiling down at me — I got a tailwind, the adrenaline flowing, the “rimp” was nearly gone, and I cleared 12′ with a ton of room to spare. Wayne said that I looked better than I did before the accident.
I still have the paralysis in the leg — but I swear, the harder I push it, the less paralysis there is. The other muscles and nerves are simply “getting the job done.” So I’m going to donate my 15-foot poles to UCI, buy a whole new series of 14 foot sticks (I’m thinking 175, 180, 185, 190? But I don’t know yet – that 14-160 was too light from a “rimp” 4-stride).
I’ve always given a great deal of thanks to God giving me the opportunity to Pole Vault, but now that I’ve been given another “lease on life” — after it all looked so bleak — I have a new dedication to make the most of every single chance I get.
So what can I say — things aren’t perfect, but perfection is all relative. Now that I can jump again — the sky’s the limit.
Talk to you soon,
Greg

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  3. Jim Roth tries to explain joy of vaulting to dimwit reporter
  4. Paul Babits vaulting for 30th time in Sea Ray Relays
  5. The walking hurdler’s tale: Suffering, scoring for Brianna

September 18, 2003