Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Positions

Being a good cheerleader also requires you to know your position and to make sure you do it right. You have 3 different positions you can be, base, flyer or backspot (sometimes frontspot) Being a base is all about lifting the flyer and making sure she is not going to fall and eat shit and to lift her up and keep her steady. Without the bases (yeah its plural meaning you have a secondary base and a main base) the flyer will not get up. To be a base you really do need to have good upper body strength and all the lifting is in your legs. If you use your arms to lift your going to have some serious back pain (believe me!). Being a base you always need to catch your flyer no matter what , even if the stunt is falling or your coming down from a stunt. Next you have your flyer (top girl) that goes up and hits whatever it is that she needs to do, the flyer seems to get all the attention because she is the one getting thrown in the air and doing the tricks. Being a flyer from experience is alot of work, you may think its not but it is, the flyer needs to hold her weight and make sure she is tight. Squeeze everything you have in your body and smile! don't forget to smile or you will end up looking scared (and that is not cute). If the flyer falls it can most of the time be her fault if she isn't doing what she is suppose to do. That is why it is very important to communicate with your team mates and help each other out. Finally you have your backspot, the backspot is THE most important person in a stunt group in my opinion. The backspots job is to lift the ankles of the flyer and to pull up and relief some of the weight for the bases. Especially when the flyer comes down from a stunt (cradle, full down, or double etc) the backspot catches under the arm pits and makes sure that flyers head and top part of her body is safe. key thing to always remember... NEVER LET YOUR FLYER HIT THE GROUND!!... ever. Being dropped sucks and it hurts really bad. The flyer can get seriously injured ( it has happend) that is why you work together and communicate. Being a cheerleader takes alot of work, more than people give us credit for...

1 comment:

  1. These are great tips. I did competitive cheer for a few years and my team struggled a lot with stunting, but once we came together and listened to eachother it got a lot easier and we had almost unbeatable stunts. And yes cheerleaders do not get enough credit! You have to be really fit and diciplined when you're dealing with liftnig teammates into the air, and that does deserve a lot more credit than what's given.

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