Kapiti News

Tom, 17, gains another black belt

Second dan for Taekwon Do enthusiast

- David Haxton

Ka¯piti Coast Taekwon Do Club member Tom Meyer was awarded his second dan black belt recently. It’s an impressive achievemen­t for Meyer, 17, who started at the club when he was 8.

His first dan black belt grading was in late 2018, with his second black belt grading, in which he achieved an A pass, late last year.

Meyer, a student at Ka¯ piti College, has also been successful at regional and national tournament­s and has competed at the internatio­nal level at a world cup in Sydney.

“I was over the moon,” he said about his latest achievemen­t.

“Achieving a second dan black belt wasn’t in my main goal for last year.

“I was preparing to train for the world championsh­ips team but that got cancelled because of Covid.

“That was supposed to have been in Finland.

“So I switched focus to grading along with a few others from my club.

“I was very happy to get an A pass and to be the most senior person who trains at the club now.

“I have been with the club for 10 years now.”

Meyer said the grading included some prerequisi­te stuff such as attending an umpire’s course, gaining five contributi­on credits, and then the grading itself which was over a weekend [at Wellington East Girls College] and involved two seven-hour days with Taekwon Do masters.”

He is looking forward to upcoming tournament­s as well as coaching at the club before probably leaving Ka¯piti to attend university next year.

Meyer enjoyed Taekwon Do for a variety of reasons.

“Obviously the skills you learn from the discipline, self-control, perseveran­ce, courtesy, and integrity to the physical side of it.

“I love sparring in tournament­s. “And the camaraderi­e of the club and those I have been training with for several years. The club has become a second home really.”

He got into the sport after his father suggested it.

“At the time I was playing rugby, swimming and other sports.

“My dad had done martial arts before and had a general idea what it was about. So I gave it a go and stuck with it.”

The club, led by head instructor Chris Woodhill, a third dan, and coinstruct­or Sue Woodhill, a second dan, now has nine black belts.

It is a family-orientated club, which has been operating for over 20 years, with students of all ages.

The club, based in the Raumati South Memorial Hall, which meets twice a week on Tuesday and Thursday, has a junior class for new students from age 6 and a senior class for more experience­d students/ teenagers and adults.

 ?? ?? Tom Meyer, front, with fellow gradees Kate Taylor and Kevin Naylor.
Tom Meyer, front, with fellow gradees Kate Taylor and Kevin Naylor.

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