The Big Question…Is Cheerleading A Sport?
THE CASE FOR:
- Most cheerleaders compete,
on all levels, in competition. - Cheerleading is primarily
based on tumbling (gymnastics) and stunts (usually involving one girl to be
held, tossed, and caught, by other cheerleaders.) - Cheerleading is reported
to be one of the top three most dangerous high school sports. - Competitive cheerleading
teams attend annual training camps in the summer. - Competitive cheerleading
teams go through extensive physical training throughout their entire two
seasons to maintain the adequate body strength for what they do.
AGAINST:
- Cheerleaders wear little
skirts and tight tops instead of jerseys or other common uniforms. - Cheerleading does not
require a strategy like most sports do. - Cheerleaders simply jump
around and try to persuade the crowd to join their cheers. - Cheerleaders do not work
as hard as other teams do physically. - Cheerleaders are annoying,
get in the way of spectators watching games, and the stereotypes often prove
true.
CONCLUSION:
The question of whether or
not cheerleading is a sport is a controversial question. The answer lies in the
team you are watching. If you go to a school whose cheerleaders have little
talent or skill it would be easy to write cheerleading off as not a sport.
However, it is rare to see a school write football or soccer off as not a sport
if their team is terrible.
As someone who has been a
part of great cheerleading teams, with an amazing cheerleading coach; someone
who has seen the best cheerleading teams in the country compete, I do believe
cheerleading, when done right, is a sport. If you still have questions, if the
team you are watching doesn’t inspire much confidence in cheerleading as a
sport, I suggest you take a look at better teams, like the UCA team, and then
you can decide.


An interview with football player Dan Byrne
Dan
Byrne, a Tri-Valley senior, has been on the varsity football team for 5 years and has put his heart
and soul into the team. This is the year he has been waiting for to make his
mark in TV football history.
However, he finds himself out for three months due
to a broken back. Dan managed to finish last season after injuring his back in
last year’s game against Ellenville, but he is out once again. Dan tells what
it feels like to be a dedicated high school athlete out on injury in their senior
year.
“I
have been waiting for this moment for five years. I was so pumped last year
playing as a junior and even more ready this year. I worked out and got faster
over the summer. I was up at 5:30 every morning. Now this happens,” Dan says in
total honesty.
“Every game and every practice I wanted to play so bad,” Dan
says of watching his teammates face Ellenville, “Just watching my team suffer
and play hard and play hurt, I wanted to help them out as a friend and as a
teammate. That’s the game I went out on and I just wanted to be on the field
and dominate. I knew I could have made a difference and I knew I could have
held their rushing to lower yards.”
“It
screws with your head,” Dan says about the emotional effects of injury, “you
want to play so bad but you can’t and when it’s something you love so much it’s
even worse.”
Sustaining a sports-related injury must be hard at any age but
when it’s your senior year the effects must be so much more crippling.
“You
think so many different things in your head, like when you know you could help
the team when an opponent is doing well and you know you can stop them and that
you’re better, it just kills you inside.”
Dan
has always had plans to play football in college but now realizes that his back
injury has most likely hindered his chances.
“I don’t want to mess with my
life,” he says. “I’m just proud of myself for playing last year with a broken
back and not letting my team down. I would love to play one more game; I would
do anything for it. Experiencing TV football has been amazing. I love the heart
and soul that has been at this school. Even though we have been small over the
years we have worked the hardest, been faster, and hit the hardest. It is
starting to fade slowly but I know with coach Rusin it will be back and he will
have the young kids turned into true Tri-Valley Bears in no time.”
No one could have described this school, its
heart, its spirit, and its determination to exceed all expectations than its
favorite football player, Dan Byrne, a true Tri-Valley Bear.