|
October 4, 2002
Kicking up their heels
Arctic Sport athletes
prepare for performance of a lifetime
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Steve Amarualik
practises the Alaskan high kick.
(PHOTO BY KIRSTEN MURPHY)
|
KIRSTEN
MURPHY
Days before Arctic Sport
athletes were stretching and kicking for Queen Elizabeth, Steve Amarualik was
considering the future.
"We shouldnt
fall," Amarualik dead-panned from the carpeted stage in the middle of Inuksuk
High Schools gym.
Four athletes from Nunavut
are kicking up their heels as part of a 20-minute Arctic sports demonstration
for Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip on Oct. 4.
Amarualik, 17, holds the
Baffin Inuit Games record for the two-foot jump. The Resolute Bay teen won three
gold medals at the 2002 Arctic Winter Games and was named athlete of the year
by Sport Nunavut.
Last minute details for
the royal performance were being worked out by press time on Oct. 2.
"I like the idea of
the stage, but there are cracks," said Amarualik while pacing the stage
one metre above the ground. "Its different, its exciting."
The royal visitors will
be seated a stones throw from the wooden stand and sealskin target. The
athletes have been instructed not to speak to the Queen unless spoken to.
All four athletes were
hand-picked by Sport Nunavut based on their performances in past competitions.
The other three athletes are Heather Kolit from Coral Harbour, Andrew Atatahak
from Kugluktuk and Hannaq Ikkutisluk from Gjoa Haven.
Some last-minute kinks
included finding replacement uniforms for the shirts and sweat pants that never
arrived and scheduling the order of events.
As of Wednesday, the athletes
were starting with the one-hand reach and finishing with the one-foot high kick
an event typically billed as the premier jump.
The triple jump was dropped
because the 3.5-metre by 3.5-metre stage is too small to accommodate the takeoff.
Because athletes are demonstrating
kicking and pulling and are not actually competing, Amarualik said the usual
pressure to win is gone. The absence of rivalry, however, does not eliminate
all nervousness, Amarualik said.
"Its not competition
but we are showing our sport to the Queen. Its a once in a lifetime thing."
|