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March 7, 2003
Leaps of faith
Members of Iqaluit's
gymnastics club spring forward to new heights
KIRSTEN MURPHY
Nunatsiaq News
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
The gym at Nakasuk
School is a blur of activity each Saturday morning the enthusiastic arrival
of Iqaluit gymnastics club members.
(PHOTOS BY KIRSTEN MURPHY)
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Two-year-old Faith Higgins
locks her tiny fingers into her mother's hand and leads her to the balance beam
set up in the gym of Iqaluit's Nakasuk School.
No words are spoken as
mother lifts daughter onto the wooden beam. Using her mother for balance, the
pony-tailed toddler, one of a hundred youths registered with the Iqaluit Gymnastics
club, traverses the suspended structure with careful heel-to-toe steps.
The gymnastics club was
reborn two years ago partly due to the persistence of Isabel "Issi"
MacDougall. The 17-year-old represented Nunavut at the 2002 Arctic Winter Games.
Fiercely dedicated to the sport, MacDougall took it upon herself to track down
the equipment, the gym time and five other volunteers needed to restart the
club.
"It just all fell
together. The idea was I wanted to train and get more people into it,"
MacDougall says.
Her plan worked. Today,
100 youths, mostly girls, jump, spring and roll during one of three classes
held every Saturday morning. The introductory classes focus on basic tumbling,
approaches and landings. MacDougall has also organized a Tuesday night training
session for the more advanced youths.
Aguo
Peter is one of the few boys in the club.
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Turn back time 15 years
and it was Cindy Higgins, Faith's mother, who was surrounded by thick blue mats
and gymnastics equipment. Higgins belonged to the Iqaluit gymnastics club from
1988 to 1996.
Back then, the athletic
youth, along with Christine and Wendy Bens, Aleathea Baril and Susie Pearce,
made up Iqaluit's first female gymnastics team. They represented the Northwest
Territories in national competitions.
By 1997, Higgins' sporting
interests shifted and she traded in her body suit for hockey skates. At about
the same time, the gymnastics club disbanded because there weren't enough coaches.
"I've always loved
gymnastics. It was the best time of my life," says Cindy, whose childhood
nickname was Road Runner. "We used to say, 'My kid is going to be in gymnastics
and they're going to be the best.' Now I have a daughter and I want Faith to
be a part of what I was a part of."
Government groups have
come out in support the club. Sport Nunavut and the City of Iqaluit have chipped
in the money needed to purchase shirts, upgrade equipment and train coaches.
An $8,000 removable spring
floor, donated by the Royal Canadian Legion, was installed at Nakasuk for the
Arctic Winter Games last year.
Community support makes
the club stronger, wrote parent and coach Carolyn Mallory in a recent letter
to the editor published in Nunatsiaq News.
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Madeleine Genn lathers
her arms in chalk for better grip on the uneven bars.
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Going for gold
To witness the gymnastics
classes is to see teamwork in action.
An hour before the children
arrive, five volunteers drag out the mats and equipment.
All classes start with
stretching exercises. From there, the youths are divided into groups and assigned
to various pieces of equipment: the uneven bars, beam, rings or vault. Coaches
carefully supervise all activities and the kids are encouraged to participate
at their own pace.
Those too small to reach
the uneven bars are given a hand by the coaches.
Some little athletes,
though, are already going for gold.
"I did not get it
right the first time," says a little girl whose forearms are covered in
chalk. Before undertaking a new exercise on the lower bar of the uneven bars,
she insists on perfecting the first maneuver.
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Ron Kennedy helps
Rosie Etunagat on the uneven bars.
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Such determination gives
MacDougall hope.
"There is a group
of older girls, from about eight to 14 years old. They have a lot of potential
and they're really focused. The problem is there just aren't the facilities.
To get to a higher level, like the Arctic Winter Games, you have to be training
more than an hour a week. Maybe something will change," MacDougall says.
Ron Kennedy is already
thinking about what has to change.
Kennedy, a gym teacher
for 20 years, has identified a group of girls who have the ability to spring
forward to new gymnastic heights. None of the participants are ready for competition.
However, that may change following a Level 2 coaching class this month.
Training higher level
coaches is one in a series of steps needed to groom high-calibre athletes. Another
important step is finding long-term residents, those less likely to move away,
to get involved with coaching.
"It would be nice
if parents were as involved with gymnastics as they are with hockey," Kennedy
says.
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