Hawke's Bay Today

Rhythmic gymnast eyes NZ glory

Dedicated Hawke’s Bay teen joins 12 other athletes competing at national championsh­ips next month

- Anendra Singh

Lia Horsley was always mindful she had a rapport with the hidden language of her body from the time she graced the floors of dance halls and gymnastics centres from a tender age of 5.

Horsley knew the discipline­s weren’t just the essence of who she is but also an artistic expression that could potentiall­y open myriad doors of opportunit­ies.

By the time the youngster from Hawke’s Bay was 11 she had a calling of sorts to raise the bar at the Omni Gymnastics Centre in Napier and she grabbed it.

“I picked up the apparatus and I really enjoyed it,” says Horsley, whose introducti­on began with the ball routine in rhythmic gymnastics.

Not that the former Pukehoumoa­moa School pupil from Crownthorp­e needed any incentives but her coach, Annemarie Earwicker, of Napier, was there to reinforce the belief “because she thought it would be interestin­g”.

That Horsley is the only rhythmic gymnast, in a contingent of 13 from Hawke’s Bay, who will compete in the discipline at the New Zealand Gymnastics Championsh­ip in Tauranga early next month speaks volumes on the dedication and commitment required to take up the challenges.

“People are quite impressed with my flexibilit­y and I think they are interested in it for their own perspectiv­e but they don’t really want to do it,” says the Year 12 pupil from Hastings Girls’ High School when asked if her name appears on the honours board along the road to the entrance to the school.

The 16-year-old, a former ballet and contempora­ry dancer, will be competing in her third consecutiv­e nationals.

“One of the main things gymnastics has taught me is that I’m never giving it up because it takes time to get better,” says Horsley, who was sold on it as a spectator with her family members at the nationals staged in Napier in 2013.

Rhythmic gymnastics can be an individual pursuit or in groups of five athletes who manipulate one or two pieces of equipment — rope, hoop, ball, clubs, ribbons and freehand (no apparatus).

It combines elements of ballet, gymnastics, dance and juggling.

A panel of judges declares a winner based on maximum points accrued for leaps, balances, pirouettes (pivots), apparatus handling and execution.

The choreograp­hy must cover the entire floor and contain a balance of

jumps, leaps, pivots, balances (a certain number is required depending on the gymnast’s level) and flexibilit­y movements.

Each movement demands a degree of athletic skill that entails attributes of strength, power, flexibilit­y, agility, dexterity, endurance and hand-eye co-ordination.

In October last year Horsley was third overall in level 6 competitio­n at the nationals in Auckland. She had won the ball discipline and claimed third in the clubs.

She’s graduated to level 7 at the nationals next month in a sport that offers competitio­n to level 10.

While the ball is a user-friendly apparatus, a chuckling Horsley impresses it pays to religiousl­y keep an eye on the leather and plastic club because when it is tossed quite high it succumbs to the pull of gravity with some determinat­ion.

“I’ve had lots of bruises [from the club].”

Horsley dislocated her knee this year and, while she has recovered from it, that has put her back by a few weeks.

No doubt gymnastics becomes an ideal escape clause and an ideal distractio­n from the daily demands of swotting for the teenager.

She choreograp­hs her own routines, which are a minute and 30 seconds in duration on a liberal choice of music.

“It’s like running for a minute and juggling the apparatus for the rest of the time.”

What appeals to her about rhythmic gymnastics isn’t just the dancing component but the flexibilit­y and mental fortitude required to multitask on the floor.

“We always have to be in time with the music but we also have to catch everything and have strength,” she explains.

“Hand-eye co-ordination is very important and a lot of practice goes into making sure it’s good.”

Her training embraces endurance work with some road running, as well as frequentin­g gyms for strengthen­ing. That means also investing extra hours at home.

“I’ve learned a lot about time management through rhythmics so it can be difficult to balance it with school work but somehow I have to manage it,” she says.

Achieving on the national and, ultimately, internatio­nal stage but I try to do it to the best ability I can.”

Horsley says in some respects the Bay is isolated from the mainstream of gymnastics in the country and top level tutelage.

Consequent­ly, like many fellow athletes, she’s had to hit the highways to other venues around the country to up the tempo to gauge her worth or simply surf the internet to find videotaped footage in the hope of emulating routines.

While she’s mulling over a career path — something in business or human rights takes her fancy now — Horsley harbours a desire to take rhythmic gymnastics to the higher echelons when she attends university.

 ?? Photo / Paul Taylor ?? Omni Gymnastic Centre member Lia Horsley, 16, with other Hawke’s Bay representa­tives competing at the October 3-6 national championsh­ip in Tauranga.
Photo / Paul Taylor Omni Gymnastic Centre member Lia Horsley, 16, with other Hawke’s Bay representa­tives competing at the October 3-6 national championsh­ip in Tauranga.
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