The Gold Coast Bulletin

Jeff needs help to fund dream of breaking through

- Odessa Blain

A high school student from northern NSW has qualified for the Olympics in breaking – or breakdanci­ng – but he needs the community’s support to achieve his dreams.

Tweed Heads 16-year-old Jeffrey ‘Jeff’ Dunne found out he would be packing his bags for Paris when he won the Oceania Breaking Championsh­ip in October. For the first time, breaking has been added to the Olympics due to its rapid rise in popularity.

Jeff’s love of the sport started when he watched his older sister’s dance classes in Brisbane.

“Every week I would go sit down and watch until I started trying the moves,” he said.

Jeff has competed around the world. He trains for four to six hours each day.

“There are days when I have to push past my limits and the voices in my head, and it’s hard to balance with school – but I reckon I can do it,” he said.

Jeff looks up to his coaches at Nerang on the Gold Coast, as well as the sport’s “B-boys” and girls worldwide, including Victor from the US, Lee from the Netherland­s and Denmark’s Zoopreme.

Jeff described the championsh­ips in which he qualified as “intense”. He even enlisted the help of a sports psychologi­st.

“He told me to be in the present … and remind myself that it is meant to be fun and I shouldn’t feel like I’m being forced,” Jeff said.

The Tweed boy sailed through the competitio­n, winning 25 of 27 votes up for grabs.

“I was training non stop and I had this mentality of ‘I’m going to win’,” he said.

“(And) travelling to all these overseas competitio­ns on the world stage helped me become very battle ready … I knew what I had to do.”

But the travelling and training comes at a hefty cost, with minority sports like breaking receiving little government funding. Jeff’s mum Rhondda Dunne said: “It’s hard for minority sports because even though there is a lot of funding for sports (we are) not seeing any of it, even though he has qualified for the Olympics,” she said.

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