History
of Cheerleading
Cheerleading
first started at Princeton University in the 1880s with
the crowd chant, "Rah rah rah, tiger tiger tiger,
sis sis sis, boom boom boom ahhhhhhh, Princeton Princeton
Princeton!!" as a way to encourage school spirit at
football games. A few years later, Princeton graduate Thomas
Peebles introduced the idea of organized crowd chanting
to the University of Minnesota in 1894, but it was not
until 1898 that University of Minnesota student Johnny
Campbell stood in front of the crowd, and directed them
in a chant, making Campbell the very first cheerleader.
Soon after that, the University of Minnesota organized
a "yell leader" squad of 6 male students. Although
it is estimated that 97% of today's cheerleading participants
are female, cheerleading started out as an all-male activity.
Females started to participate in cheerleading in the 1920s,
due to limited availability of female collegiate sports.
By the 1940s, it was a largely female activity.
Cheerleading
is most closely associated with American football, and
to a lesser degree basketball. Sports such as football(soccer),
ice hockey, volleyball, baseball, and wrestling rarely
have cheerleaders. The only Major League Baseball team
with cheerleaders as of 2006 is the Florida Marlins.
In 1948,
Lawrence "Herkie" Herkimer formed the National
Cheerleaders Association (NCA) as a way to hold cheerleading
clinics. The National Cheerleaders Association held its
first clinic in 1949 with 52 girls in attendance. The next
year, the clinic had grown to 350 cheerleaders. By the
1950s, most American high schools had formed cheerleading
squads. By the 1960s, cheerleading had grown to be a staple
in American high school and collegiate sports.
Organized
cheerleading competitions began to crop up with the first
ranking of the "Top Ten College Cheerleading Squads" and "Cheerleader
All America" awards given out by the International
Cheerleading Foundation (now the World Cheerleading Association
or WCA) in 1967[citation needed]. In 1978, America was
introduced to competitive cheerleading by the first broadcast
of Collegiate Cheerleading Championships on CBS.
In the
1960s National Football League (NFL) teams began to organize
professional cheerleading teams. It was the Dallas Cowboys
Cheerleaders who gained the spotlight with their revealing
outfits and sophisticated dance moves, which debuted in
the 1972-1973 season, but were first seen widely in Super
Bowl X (1976). This caused the image of cheerleaders to
permanently change, with many other NFL teams emulating
them. Most of the professional teams' cheerleading squads
would more accurately be described as dance teams by today's
standards; as they rarely, if ever, actively encourage
crowd noise or perform modern cheerleading moves.
The 1980s
saw the onset of modern cheerleading with more difficult
stunts and gymnastics being incorporated into routines.
Cheerleading organizations such at the American Association
of Cheerleading Coaches and Advisors (AACCA) started applying
safety guidelines and offering courses on safety training
for coaches and sponsors.
According
to latest studies, there are nearly 3.5 million cheerleaders
in the USA alone, and half as many dance team members and
gymnasts, taking the total number of participants involved
in cheerleading and allied activities in the USA to above
5 million. There are also tens of thousands of cheerleaders
in Europe, Central America, Australia, and Asia.
All
Star Cheerleading
In the early 1990s, cheerleading teams not associated with schools or sports
leagues, whose main objective was competition, began to emerge. All-star cheerleading
involves a squad of anywhere between 5-35+ females and/or males.
The squad
prepares almost year-round for many different competition
appearances, but they only actually perform for up to 2½ minutes
during their routines. The numbers of competitions a team
participates in varies from team to team, but generally,
most teams tend to participate in six or seven competitions
a year. During a competition routine, a squad performs
carefully choreographed stunting, tumbling, jumping and
dancing to their own custom music.
Teams
create their routines to an eight-count system and apply
that to the music so the team members execute the elements
being performed with precise timing and synchronization.
All-star
competitive cheerleaders are placed into divisions which
are grouped based upon age, size of the team, and ability
level. Judges at the competition watch for illegal moves
from the group or any of its members. Here, an illegal
move is something that is not allowed in that division,
due to difficulty and safety restrictions. More generally,
judges look at the difficulty and execution of stunts and
tumbling, synchronization, the sharpness of the motions
in the dance, as well as the cheer (if applicable), and
overall routine execution.
All-star
cheerleading is a relatively young activity, but is gaining
popularity at a rapid pace.
USASF World Cheerleading
Championships
The foremost competition for all-star cheerleading is the annual USASF World
Championships held at the Walt Disney World Resort in Orlando, Fla. Since its
inception in 2004, teams must qualify for the event by finishing at or near
the top at one of several qualifying competitions.
US teams
have won the vast majority of the medals, but an increasing
number of strong teams from around the globe have come
to compete in the event in recent years. This competition
has grown in popularity and prestige since its beginning
as a small competition in 2004. In 2006, over 100 teams
from 11 different countries competed in the event.
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Cheerleading. (2007, January 16). In Wikipedia,
The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 03:20, January 16, 2007,
from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cheerleading&oldid=101000080 |