'This is our Olympics': St. John's cheerleaders headed to biggest competition in the world - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 04:38 PM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
NL

'This is our Olympics': St. John's cheerleaders headed to biggest competition in the world

A team based in St. John's is headed to Disney World for the biggest competition of the cheerleading world.

The Max Athletics Cheerleaders are the only team from Atlantic Canada to ever attend The Summit

The Max Athletics Cheerleaders are the first Atlantic Canadian team to head to The Summit All Star Cheerleading Championship. L-R: Barbara Badcock, Maggie Traverse, Catherine Drake, Julie Reardon. Top: Kera Whitten. (Anna Delaney/CBC)

Ateam from St. John's is headingto the world's biggest cheerleading competition and its the first team from Atlantic Canada to do so.

"It doesn't get bigger than this. This is our Olympics," coach Amy Oakley told CBC Radio's St. John's Morning Show.

The Max Athletics cheerleaders are heading to the SummitAll Star Cheerleading Championship in May a funand prestigioushonour, taking place at Disney World in Orlando, Florida.

"Knowing that this is such a big competition and that we were the first team from Atlantic Canada to get the privilege to go there is just amazing," cheerleaderCatherine Drake, 14, said.

The Max Athletics Cheerleaders in studio speaking to the St. John's Morning Show. (Anthony Germain/CBC)

The coed team, which has 20 members, is one of 11 from Canada attending the competition.

And Oakley said if people think cheerleaders simply shout rhymes from the sidelines of sports games, think again.

"All star cheerleading is a little different in that people cheer for the cheerleaders in our sport," said Oakley.

'We need really strong girls who can lift [teammates] in the air.- AmyOakley, coach

"There's no team they're cheering for, so rather than speak like the traditional football cheerleaders you're used to seeing, these athletes just do stunts and tumbling and dancing and it's all choreographed to music."

The team members come from many backgroundsincluding volleyball, diving and gymnasticsand play a variety of roles depending on strengths and skills.

"We need our shorter, flexible people to go on top[and] we need tall people with long arms to reach up and hold their ankles," shesaid.

"We need really strong girls who can lift them in the air."

Barbara Badcock, 18, Maggie Traverse, 14, and Kera Whitten, 14, will be in Florida at the beginning of May to compete in an international cheerleading competition. (Paula Gale/CBC)

For Drake, cheerleading combines everything you could want in a sport.

"There's not much not to like you can just have fun with it," she said.

"The performance all the energy the competition. I love it all."

With files from the St. John's Morning Show