Street Cheer was featured on Radio 4´s Woman´s Hour programme last week.
You can listen to it here – the Street Cheer part starts at 22 minutes.
by UKCA Admin
Street Cheer was featured on Radio 4´s Woman´s Hour programme last week.
You can listen to it here – the Street Cheer part starts at 22 minutes.
by UKCA Admin
Saffron and Kim from Maddisons were interviewed by Gabby Logan on BBC Radio 5Live yesterday. You can listen to the ten minute interview here:
Listen to Saffron and Kim talking about Street Cheer on Radio 5 Live
The interview starts at 1-18-37 – use the bar at the bottom to scroll the time along.
by UKCA Admin
The ECC Cheerleading Championships 2011 will take place on the 2nd and 3rd of July in Ljublijana, Slovenia.
Winners of several 2011 Elite & Club National Cheerleading and Cheer Dance Categories will be eligible to represent the UKCA at this prestegious competition.
More information will be supplied to coaches immediately after the Award Ceremony on Sunday 21st March 2011.
by UKCA Admin
Britain’s greatest ever Olympian Sir Steve Redgrave has spoken of the critical importance of investing in school sport as he launches Matalan Sporting Promise.
Matalan has partnered with the Youth Sport Trust and launched a new initiative to get more young people taking part in sports.
Pat Hawkins, President of UKCA said:
The UK Cheerleading Association are excited to be working in partnership with the YST on the Matalan Sporting Promise project, delivering Street Cheer to hundreds of high schools throughout the UK within the next 12 months.
The Matalan Sporting Promise aims to get kids active by providing support to schools on two levels. At primary level, it provides resource and training that will help teachers to deliver high quality PE and sport. It also aims to re-engage those secondary school pupils who are not attracted to traditional sports by offering a range of new and exciting sporting choices.
Over 3,000 schools and 15,000 teachers will benefit from Matalan Sporting Promise in the first year, with a view to covering a huge number of schools over the next three years.
With the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games less than two years away, five-time Olympic Champion Sir Steve Redgrave believes that, despite the economic challenges the country currently faces, there has never been a more important time to be increasing sporting opportunities for young people.
Street Cheer is one of the sports being offered as part of the Matalan Sporting Promise. Hannah Goulding, present at the launch said:
The launch was an exciting and inspiring day for all involved.
The energy from the Street Cheer Crew was evident for all to see and feel. It was an absolute pleasure to work with the group of young people who were so eager to get involved and try new skills. We all had an absolute ball and there was some great potential within the group.
Tom, our young athlete Ambassador was welcomed into the group and he had some killer moves tucked away that impressed us all.
It was a wonderful experience and it is fantastic to be involved in such an exciting new project.
by UKCA Admin
Saturday 2nd October marked a major milestone for Cheerleading in Northern Ireland as UKCA Regional Representative Karen Graham held inaugural auditions for an ALLSTAR Squad with newly appointed Squad Coaches Cathy Bell-Allen and Sara McNeilly.
30 young athletes turned up at the audition venue and were put through an intense series of workshops to select the final team under the watchful eyes of Karen, Cathy and Sara.
The outcome of the day resulted in a Junior Cheerleading Squad and Senior Dance Squad.
The standard was very high and set the bench mark for what will be an exciting year ahead.
Tumbling and stunting skills matched the expectations of the Squad Coaches as did the standard of dance.
The Auditions will now be an annual part of Northern Ireland’s Long Term Athlete Development Plan as it strives to follow UKCA’s model and Competition Pathway to prepare its athletes for Elite, European and World level Championships.
The newly appointed squads are now preparing for their first Elite UKCA Championships in March 2011.
As Squad Director I am excited that the establishment of an ALL STAR SQUAD will raise the bar on Cheerleading both here and in the UK and will further achieve the recognition that Cheerleading deserves.
TEAM UK NATIONAL COACH VISIT
Saturday 30th marked the first visit to N.Ireland of Team UK National Coach Tarren Smarr.
Tarren put the newly appointed squad through their paces in a 6 hour training schedule and the squad did not disappoint.
Workshops were delivered in tumbling, jump technique, stunts and transitions and flexibility.
Tarren certainly left the squad and coaches enthused and very much inspired as her passion and drive for Cheerleading were infectious throughout the day.
We all look forward very much to our next training day together.
Karen Graham
UKCA N.Ireland Representative
ALLSTAR SQUAD DIRECTOR
by UKCA Admin
WIGAN and Leigh’s unsung heroes of sport were duly honoured at the tenth annual Borough Sports Awards.
Coaches, teams and sports clubs gathered at the DW Stadium on Friday night for the award ceremony.
Everest expedition leader and ex British Forces mountaineering specialist Dave Bunting was the special guest of honour at the event which recognised all the hard work and dedication put in by competitors, coaches and sports clubs from all over the Wigan Borough during the past year.
A staggering 85 nominations were received with eight awards presented on the night including Highfield Cricket Club being named Club of the Year and Mike Hack from Astley and Tyldesley Cycle Speedway Cycling Club picking up his award as Coach of the Year.
For Cameron Foster the night marked a triple celebration. The 15-year-old was awarded the Wilf Brogan Unsung Hero In Sport Award for his work with disabled children as a volunteer coach with Wigan Sports Development Unit. It follows the Westleigh High pupil’s British Red Cross Humanitarian Citizen Award he picked up earlier in the week when he was also named their fundraiser of the year.
When Cameron was nine-years-old he fell 40ft out of a ski lift in Italy dislocating both ankles, breaking both legs and his left arm. Since then Cameron has taken part in countless fundraisers raising £10,000 for a variety of causes including Wigan Disability Sports Forum.
Cameron, who has since made a full recovery, said:
“It’s been quite a week. It’s great to be given these awards but it’s not something I do for the recognition.
“I was in a wheelchair for six weeks after the accident and I realised that some people aren’t as lucky as me and I felt they should have an equal chance as the rest of us to take part in sport.”
The event was organised by Wigan Leisure and Culture Trust’s Sports Development Unit.
Wigan Leisure and Culture Trust Executive Director for Sport and Healthy Living, Martin Eden said:
“The stories we have heard tonight have been truly inspirational. These awards recognise the wealth of talent and commitment in community sport in Wigan and Leigh which make this borough one of Greater Manchester’s true hotspots for sport.”
Dave Bunting added:
“This was a truly wonderful evening and a fantastic way to celebrate so many unsung heroes of sport.”
The 10th Annual Wigan Borough Sports Awards was sponsored by JJB Sports, as well as individual award sponsors Wigan Borough Sports Council, Wigan Athletic Football Club, Wigan Disability Sports Forum, Wigan Sports Development, Wish FM, Ferryman Blue, Healthy Stadia and the School Sports Partnership.
Each of the winners receives a trophy and personalised t-shirt from ADM Direct as a memento of the night and will automatically be nominated for the Greater Manchester Awards in November.
Awards presented in 2010 were:-
Club of the Year 2010 – sponsored by The Wigan Borough Sports Council
Winner – Highfield Cricket Club
Runner Up – Tyldesley Swimming and Water Polo Club
Finalist – Highfield Grange Football Club
Coach of the Year 2010 – sponsored by Wigan Athletic Football Club
Winner – Mike Hack – Astley and Tyldesley Cycle Speedway Cycling Club
Runner Up – Gill Fitzpatrick – Standish All-Stars Cheerleading Club
Finalist – Joe Galvin – Leigh Harriers Athletics Club
Volunteer in Sport Award 2010 – sponsored by Ferryman Blue
Winner – Martin Gaskell – Highfield Cricket Club
Runner Up – Cameron Foster
Finalist – Nick Clarke – New Springs Lions Amateur Rugby League Football Club
Sports Achiever of the Year 2010 – sponsored by Wigan Sports Development
Winner – Laura Riches – Leigh Harriers Athletics Club
Runner Up – Daniel Greaves – City of Liverpool Gymnastics Club
Finalist – Grace Morley – Tyldesley Swimming and Water Polo Club
Disabled Sports Achiever of the Year 2010 – sponsored by the Wigan Disability Sports Forum
Winner – Isaak Dalglish – Bryn Badminton Club/Lancashire FA Disability Centre of Excellence
Runner Up – Daniel Dawoud – England Table Cricket Team
Finalist – Graham High – Whitley Badminton Club
The Wilf Brogan Unsung Hero in Sport Award 2010 – sponsored by Wish FM
Winner – Cameron Foster – The British Karate Academy/Westleigh Basketball Club and Wigan Sports Development
Runner Up – Mick Hatch – Norley Hall Cricket Club
Finalist – Lev Baddley – Atherton and Leigh Swimming Club
Team of the Year 2010 – Sponsored by Healthy Stadia
Winner – Standish All-Stars Cheerleading Team
Runner Up – Tyldesley Swimming and Water Polo Club Girls Water Polo Team
Finalist – Tyldesley Lightning U16 Netball Team
The Martin Lynn Special Contribution to Sport Award 2010 – sponsored by the Wigan School Sports Partnership
Winner – Stuart Isherwood – Aspull Church Primary School
Runner Up – Victoria Glen – Standish All-Stars Cheerleading Team
Finalist – Anne Waltho – Wigan School Sport Partnership/Westleigh Hockey Club and Astley Tennis
Congratulations to Standish High School’s cheer leading and Street cheer team who were voted Wigan’s team of the year. The team beat off strong competition to clinch their title, overall their dedication and perseverance was the key factor in them attaining their success.
“….Winners in cluster festivals, local borough competitions, borough wide winners and finally to be crowned KS4 Street cheer champions at UKCA National schools in June….. The team are passionate about their sport and constantly strive to improve their performance. They grasp every opportunity to train and to learn from other groups coaches and each other. A true team!”
Other successes for Cheerleading on the evening was a runner up position for assistant coach Victoria Glenn, in the Special Contribution to school award. Victoria beat off stiff competition from teaching staff to be placed in the top three. She truly deserves the recognition for all her hard work in training and coaching. Head Coach Gill Fitzpatrick was also voted runner up in the Coach of the Year award. “What a great honour to be recognized amongst Wigan’s sporting elite for the coaching hours she puts in. This is testament to the value that the sporting community place upon people like Gill and her cheerleading team, in developing exciting new pathways for young people to participate in sport.
by UKCA Admin
This post has been re-published from www.luciebartlett.wordpress.com with kind permission of Lucie.
It is no secret to this blog that I’m a big advocate of cheerleading. As a former cheerleader myself – in support of our American football team at University, and competitively in London squads for the three years following – this is perhaps no surprise. I don’t pretend to offer an unbiased viewpoint, but I do hope to offer an informed one.
Long-standing has been the debate over whether cheerleading can be deemed a ‘sport’. Yesterday, in a strongly voiced opinion piece for The Guardian, Victoria Coren (daughter of Alan, brother of Giles, star poker-player) made her position on the point crystal clear. She’s entitled to her opinion, but I wanted to respond – if only to expand on the rantings from many a disgruntled cheerleader who posted some of the in response to the original piece.
What provoked Coren’s opinions was a news story that ran two weeks ago, presenting the latest statistics that show picked up by school P.E. departments across the UK. In a nation of growing obesity, where the inactivity of our children regularly hits the headlines, one would think the discovery of a discipline that engages children in this way would be celebrated. Apparently not.
(c) Ascension Eagles Cheerleaders
For me, focusing on the sport question tends to overlook the inherent values of the discipline, but more on that later. For now, let’s entertain the harshest critics for a moment and deal with the debate at hand, which requires two distinct definitions: firstly, which section of cheerleading is being referred to and secondly, the definition of sport being put forward.
Let’s talk about sport for a moment. The Olympics, generally considered the ultimate global representation of sporting excellence, makes a discernment between sports (a single or group of sports represented by an international federation) and disciplines (multiple events that can fall under the same sporting umbrella). Thus Aquatics is a sport, fielding activities in the disciplines, swimming, diving, synchronised swimming and water polo.
Now, don’t mistake me here, I am not for one moment purporting that cheerleading should be made an Olympic sport (or, for that matter, convinced that synchronized swimming should be classed as such either). But take a closer look at the IOC’s catalogue and you will find that not only is Gymnastics and its three disciplines (artistic, rhythmic and trampoline) on the official list of Olympic sports, but that ‘Dance Sport’, while not included in the Olympic program is fully recognized by the IOC and therefore could be added to the Olympic program at any given time if sufficiently supported by IOC membership vote.
What I am certain of is that competitive cheerleading represents the ultimate combination of Dance Sport and Gymnastics (artistic, rhythmic and, given the impact of a sprung floor on which all competitions are held, arguably trampoline). Just take a look at the most recent World Championship holders (for the fourth year in a row) and see if you disagree:
And this brings us to our second definition – what sector of cheerleading are we considering here? The competitive squads like the Stingray Allstars are a different kettle of fish entirely to the NFL dancer cheerleaders who bring glitz and sizzle to the football sidelines every Sunday and Monday night. But both have their value – on and off the field of performance. The point of the NFL girls on game day is to entertain the crowd – by their own admission they are first and foremost dancers – and do not enter into the gymnastic stunts of competitive cheer.
However, not even NFL cheerleaders should be cast aside with the aspersions so forthcoming from Ms. Coren in yesterday’s unfounded diatribe against cheerleaders the world over. NFL cheerleaders are a combined force of college students and professionals who give up their evenings, weekends and annual holidays to support their football team, fundraise for charity events, promote local businesses, teach cheer camps to local kids, entertain the forces abroad and promote their game around the world. Quite apart from the commitment to honed athleticism and the upkeep of physical excellence that is required to keep their appearance and performance up to the standard required.
NFL cheerleaders, New Orleans’ Saintsations, visit Kandahar Airfield in 2009
Whether their activities combined could be deemed a sport? Even I find that hard to argue. But to focus solely on the ‘ass-shaking’ of their poms in scantily clad costumes and over-sexualised dance numbers, is an easy observation to make, but is also a crass devaluation of their role and responsibilities.
But when it comes to the competitive cheerleading that I know so well, it is an entirely different story. It is a form of cheerleading that, sadly, seems to have escaped the research of Ms. Coren. I have seen firsthand this incredible discipline inspire thousands of youngsters to dedicate years of their lives to routines that display such athletic excellence – in the quite astonishing synchronisation of gymnastics and dance – that arguing the case for it to be classed a sport is, frankly, a pretty easy task.
Of course, British sensationalist press, the narrow-minded opinions formed from limited exposure to American high-school movies and a British viewpoint partial to condescension of our American cousins for their brash lack of culture means it is all too easy to make the ‘boots and hot pants’ picture the prevailing image of the cheer world. There follows the outrage of parents who (rightly so) find the concept of their child being taught to shake their booty in hotpants and boots quite horrendous. As would I, were that what was being taught in schools. Obviously, it isn’t.
And therein lies the problem, wrought by stereotype and informed by press exposure of the most commonly portrayed ‘cheerleader’ – that we overlook the athletic, competitive form that can indeed be classed as a sport.
Were these folks to turn up to any one of the several weekly training sessions of a UK cheer squad – national champions AEC a primary case in point – they would see a rather different world. Children who happily sacrifice listless evenings in front of the TV, weekends at the local park with friends; not to mention their adult coaching staff who volunteer their own spare time to inspire them – all in the name of athletic excellence.
AEC were selected to perform at last year’s NFL game at Wembley
Perhaps the solution is to take a lead from the IOC, deeming cheerleading as a whole to be a discipline, but discerning the divisions that fall within it – the sport, the competitive/gymnastic cheer (the likes of AEC and the Stingrays), and then the pom dance (the NFL variety) – a system of division that already effectively provides the structure for cheer competitions all over the country.
Cheerleading teaches them teamwork, trust and commitment and gives them a cause to focus on, learning that with enough dedication and practice, great outcomes can be achieved. And with this, combined with the tough athletic program that cheerleading requires, what more could we want to teach our kids?
Head down to Trafalgar Square on 30th October to see the 49ers Gold Rush in action ahead of the NFL International Series at Wembley on 31st.
by UKCA Admin
The second international cheerleading competition in ITALY:
organised by Cheerdance Millenium from Trieste will take place on Saturday, March 19th 2011 in the biggest sportshall in Trieste – “Palatrieste”.
The deadline to register your group is February 19th 2011 on this e-mail: info@cheerdancemillenium.com
You can fly in to Trieste, we can also find the accomodation in hostels from 16-20€ per person.
The following age divisions exist:
*PEE WEE: 1998 and younger
*JUNIOR: 1993 – 1999
*SENIOR: 1996 and older
The following cheer divisions exist:
*Allgirl Cheer
*Coed Cheer
*Groupstunt
*Partnerstunt
*Individuals
The following team dance divisions exist:
*Cheerdance groups
*Cheerdance double dance
The registration fees for the championship depend on the number of divisions an individual person competes in. Coaches and assistants have free entrance:
1 division p. person = 12€
2 and more divisions p. person= 15€
We hope to see you in Trieste!
Best regards
Nastja Milic
ASD Cheerdance Millenium – Trieste – Italy
by UKCA Admin
A big ‘Thank You’ to all Coaches and your Helpers for their hard work helping to put our show opening display on at CCPR’s Royal Albert Hall On Show last Saturday.
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80 Cheerleaders from Seven squads – Enfield Blaze, Hawks, Gemini, IndepenDance, Maddisons, Maximum Cheer and Pioneers – joined together and delivered a fantastic routine entertaining thousands of dance and movement lovers.
Positive comments about the energetic performance and positive attitude of the whole UKCA ‘Team’ kept coming from top level VIPs at the end of performance.
The Cheerleaders were an absolute credit to their individual squads and the association.
This once in a lifetime performance, in a majestic venue, will stay in the memories of all who took part for a long time to come.
The Cheerleaders loved it:
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by UKCA Admin
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