opposite goes in front
you go left right is in front
you fo right left is in front
Nailed it. Except for backward diag/oblique moves.
"The norm" for crabbing seems to change every 5 to 7 years. When I was in high school it was mostly "trailing foot behind" (e.g. right foot behind when moving left) and drum corps started using "left foot always behind", so after a while that became "normal." Now corps have gone to "trailing foot in front" and *that* is becoming "normal."
It's all in what you're used to doing.
Really...guess I haven't noticed "the norm" changing like this. I think what HAS changed is that there is better instruction and more attention to detail in the way the battery moves.
From the way that you describe the high school technique you used, it seems like there would be a "hitch" in the crab step because you couldn't extend all the way.
drum corps started using "left foot always behind", so after a while that became "normal."
Did you march in a corps that did this? I would love to hear where you received your information on this one.
My thing is, I highly doubt that anyone in drum corps would subscribe to the "left foot always behind" method. On certain moves (uhm, moving right at a forward diagonal!) they wouldn't be able to extend as far, thus limiting their movement...or mashing their taters. Either way doesn't make for a good summer!
The activity is just too fast to have any limitations of movement.