The Hamilton Spectator

YOUNG POWERLIFTE­RS

- NICOLE PAJER

On a frigid Saturday in February, Etta Nichols strutted into Hall B1 of the Spokane Convention Center in Washington to undertake her third dead lift of the day. This lift is 5 kilos more than “two times her body weight,” an emcee boasted over the public-announceme­nt system, eliciting a roar of cheers from the crowd.

Etta crouched into proper form, per her training with Eric Cafferty, her coach, and confidentl­y exhaled as she lifted a chalk-dusted barbell bearing 143 pounds off the floor.

“Oh my God!” yelled her father, Chet Nichols, 46, a retired civilservi­ce analyst.

For the past seven months, Etta has been powerlifti­ng and has just set 12 new American records. She is 11 years old and weighs 65 pounds.

“I don’t just like power lifting; I love it,” she said. “It makes me feel strong, and like I can do anything.”

Damiyah Smith, also 11, and from Commerce, Oklahoma, began powerlifti­ng in Grade 4 and goes by the nickname “The Powerhouse Princess.” She’s earned 22 world records over the course of two years and has started her own fitness brand for children, Powerhouse Athletics.

After getting into weight training at age 8 to enhance his performanc­e in other sports, Garrett Stinchcomb, who is now 12, of Broken Arrow, Oklahoma, found his way into powerlifti­ng. During three years of competing, he has accumulate­d 26 national titles, nine world records, and two gold Junior Olympics medals.

And Luma Valones, who is just 5, has been performing weighted dead lifts, squats and bench presses since she was 3. Luma, who is in kindergart­en, has her own private Instagram page, “HappyLuma,” where her mother, Nicole Lacanglaca­ng, 36, a graphic designer who lives in Hayward, California, shares videos of her triumphant­ly raising

a set of pink weights over her chest. Lacanglaca­ng, a powerlifte­r herself, began training her daughter on a homemade PVC pipe barbell sporting 3.5 pounds out of her garage in February 2016. Luma’s dead lift maximum is now 53 pounds, 18 more than her total body weight.

Lacanglaca­ng said powerlifti­ng has made her daughter selfconfid­ent and was helping her to foster a positive body image.

“She tells me she wants to get bigger, that she doesn’t want skinny arms — just big muscles,” she said. Luma seconds that, exuberantl­y declaring that she wants “to be the strongest person in the universe.”

In recent years, child powerlifti­ng has become more prominent thanks in part to organizati­ons like USA Powerlifti­ng, based in Anchorage, Alaska, which hosts the annual youth national competitio­n in which Etta Nichols recently participat­ed.

“It’s like the Super Bowl of powerlifti­ng,” Etta said. The USAPL began holding the event in 2015, for ages 8 to 13, following

growing demand from children and their parents across the nation.

Another organizati­on, the U.S. Powerlifti­ng Associatio­n of Irvine, California, has a current roster of 1,500 children, ages 13 and above, competing at their meets. And the Amateur Athletic Union of Lake Buena Vista, Florida, which has hosted competitor­s ages 5 and up at their powerlifti­ng events dating back to 1994, continues to see a steady stream of youth participan­ts.

Veterans of the sport say it has grown more popular thanks in part to its new-found visibility on, what else, social media.

Children like Etta, who posts her latest adventures in the gym on her personal Instagram page, @ponytailsa­ndbarbells, have become unofficial ambassador­s for juvenile powerlifte­rs. Youngsters like Luma Valones look up to YouTube fitness moguls like “Meg Squats,” a.k.a. Meg Gallagher, who gives regular shoutouts to her squadron of Strong Strong Friends. And youth powerlifti­ng has its own trending

hashtags, like “#KidsWhoPow­erLift.”

Priscilla Ribic, the executive director and chairwoman of the woman’s committee for USAPL, said that powerlifti­ng has proved particular­ly popular among girls; the 2018 USA Powerlifti­ng Nationals competitio­n was more than 75 per cent female, she said.

“I have never seen females outnumber the males, so it was really kind of awesome,” Ribic said.

But some medical profession­als and others are not so keen on the trend. “As both a pediatric orthopedic surgeon and a mother, this would not be my first choice of an activity for my child,” said Dr. Abigail Allen, the chief of pediatric orthopedic surgery at the Mount Sinai Hospital in New York. “Powerlifti­ng condones lifting heavier and heavier weights,” Allen added, noting that the potential dangers of the sport include “putting too much stress on the growth centres and causing growth anomalies.”

But parents of peewee powerlifte­rs, many of whom are their children’s coaches and lifters themselves, maintain that they take precaution­s to keep their little ones safe in the gym.

“The key is the right coach,” Nichols said. “Just like in football, you get a coach who teaches a kid to tackle by leading with the head; you’re going to have problems. If you teach a kid to deadlift or squat with a rounded back, they are probably going to get hurt.”

His daughter Etta, who is in Grade 5, agreed. She said that she recently sprained her thumb playing basketball but has yet to sustain an injury related to lifting. Nor are sports her sole interest. “She loves anything with bling. Her room is Paris-themed and her favourite colour is pink,” Nichols said.

But at the Mecca Gym in Meridian, Idaho, where she trains in custom pink Aesthreadi­cs lifting belt and Wonder Woman socks, Etta is a star. She has three older brothers, and none of them powerlift. “She’s always trying to defy odds,” said her mother, Natalie Nichols, 41, an administra­tive assistant.

“Lifting has helped Etta realize her strengths,” said Cafferty, 27, her coach, who owns the Mecca Gym. “Not only is she physically strong and co-ordinated for her age but she has learned a lot about herself through powerlifti­ng — how hard she can push herself, how she can accomplish things she puts her mind to and how success is not given, its earned.”

Next, Etta wants to tackle AAU’s annual Powerlifti­ng World Championsh­ip next September in Laughlin, Nevada. But her greater goal is to inspire her peers to embrace the sport.

“Sometimes when I’m lifting, I will see a kid staring at me like I’m some famous person and then they go ask their parents if they can do stuff like me,” she said. “A lot of people look at a sport like powerlifti­ng and think that girls can’t do that and I want to prove them wrong.”

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 ?? JASON HENRY NYT ?? Luma Valones prepares to powerlift in a gym set up in her mother’s garage in Hayward, Calif.
JASON HENRY NYT Luma Valones prepares to powerlift in a gym set up in her mother’s garage in Hayward, Calif.
 ?? ALEX HECHT NYT ?? Etta Nichols trains with her coach, Eric Cafferty. Powerlifti­ng is more popular than ever among the grade-school set, and even some much younger children.
ALEX HECHT NYT Etta Nichols trains with her coach, Eric Cafferty. Powerlifti­ng is more popular than ever among the grade-school set, and even some much younger children.

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