In Figure 4, the handler is also performing a front cross. As soon as the dog lands from the first jump, the handler steps to the takeoff of the second jump. This achieves commitment and is also the start of the cueing for the front cross. Since the handler is connected and is looking at the dog's eyes, she can see that the dog is committed. Therefore, she continues through her front cross, focusing on completing it and moving away toward the next line before the dog takes off. The handler is connected with the dog so that the dog knows what side of the handler to come to and can see the next intended line. 4 A video is available. Watch at https://youtu.be/wNV_Yezm4PQ or from the October 2017 playlist on the Clean Run magazine YouTube channel. Compare Figure 4 to Figure 5. Here the handler is too early and she steps to the takeoff before the dog has landed from the first jump. The dog cannot commit this early. At the moment the dog is landing, the handler's chest laser, feet, and direction of motion are not toward the takeoff point of #2; therefore, an error occurs because the dog does not commit and gets a refusal on jump #2. 5 A video is available. Watch at https://youtu.be/-l7gYKrwySM or from the October 2017 playlist on the Clean Run magazine YouTube channel. 30 Clean Run | October 17http://youtu.be/wNV_Yezm4PQ http://youtu.be/-l7gYKrwySM