Laurier cheerleading team wins ninth national championship
CREDIT: CONTRIBUTED IMAGE
Laurier cheerleading team has had quite the season, including winning their ninth national championship.
Waterloo (CUP) — On Dec. 5, the Wilfrid Laurier Golden Hawks cheerleading team won the ninth national championship in their program’s history. The Hawks’ last title came in 2016 and after a third place finish last year, the purple and gold were looking to stake their claim at the top once again.
“We knew that we were gunning for first again and we had to work harder than last year.
Last year was kind of a letdown. We added in more workouts, more training. We just knew we had to work harder than last year in order to win back our first place title,” Caitlyn Drexler, fourth-year cheerleader, said.
Drexler was also a part of the 2016 national title winning Laurier team and she discussed what the Hawks do year after to year to maintain the program’s consistent excellence.
“We start training in the summer which definitely helps. We end our season usually around February and March and then by May we start [training] again, so it’s a year-long process,” she said. “We have a lot of team bonding things we do and practicing twice a week definitely helps. So all the time together helps [us] strengthen and respond as a team.”
“They don’t actually see the skill and the stunting that we do. We train in an off-site facility from campus so people don’t get to see the work we put in, whereas [a sport like] football or basketball, they’ll train at the school so people see the work they put in.”
The 2018 title is perhaps the most impressive accomplishment for the Hawks in team history, as Laurier was a part of the biggest division: the all-girl division consisting of 10 teams.
There is a big emphasis on the cheerleading program at Laurier athletics and the nine national championships are a direct result of the hard work that the Golden Hawk cheerleaders put into perfecting their craft every year.
Although there is a perception amongst many sports fans that cheerleading only involves cheering on other sports teams, there is a lot more that goes on behind the scenes.
“I think people just don’t understand the intensity and the skill you need to be a cheerleader. People just think of cheerleading as cheering on another sports team on the sidelines and waving the pom-poms around,” Drexler said.
“They don’t actually see the skill and the stunting that we do. We train in an off-site facility from campus so people don’t get to see the work we put in, whereas [a sport like] football or basketball, they’ll train at the school so people see the work they put in.”
The work that Drexler and the rest of the cheerleaders put in has paid off big time and a ninth national title in the span of 11 years is a great achievement.
Laurier cheerleading team has had quite the season, including winning their ninth national championship.
Waterloo (CUP) — On Dec. 5, the Wilfrid Laurier Golden Hawks cheerleading team won the ninth national championship in their program’s history. The Hawks’ last title came in 2016 and after a third place finish last year, the purple and gold were looking to stake their claim at the top once again.
“We knew that we were gunning for first again and we had to work harder than last year.
Last year was kind of a letdown. We added in more workouts, more training. We just knew we had to work harder than last year in order to win back our first place title,” Caitlyn Drexler, fourth-year cheerleader, said.
Drexler was also a part of the 2016 national title winning Laurier team and she discussed what the Hawks do year after to year to maintain the program’s consistent excellence.
“We start training in the summer which definitely helps. We end our season usually around February and March and then by May we start [training] again, so it’s a year-long process,” she said. “We have a lot of team bonding things we do and practicing twice a week definitely helps. So all the time together helps [us] strengthen and respond as a team.”
“They don’t actually see the skill and the stunting that we do. We train in an off-site facility from campus so people don’t get to see the work we put in, whereas [a sport like] football or basketball, they’ll train at the school so people see the work they put in.”
The 2018 title is perhaps the most impressive accomplishment for the Hawks in team history, as Laurier was a part of the biggest division: the all-girl division consisting of 10 teams.
There is a big emphasis on the cheerleading program at Laurier athletics and the nine national championships are a direct result of the hard work that the Golden Hawk cheerleaders put into perfecting their craft every year.
Although there is a perception amongst many sports fans that cheerleading only involves cheering on other sports teams, there is a lot more that goes on behind the scenes.
“I think people just don’t understand the intensity and the skill you need to be a cheerleader. People just think of cheerleading as cheering on another sports team on the sidelines and waving the pom-poms around,” Drexler said.
“They don’t actually see the skill and the stunting that we do. We train in an off-site facility from campus so people don’t get to see the work we put in, whereas [a sport like] football or basketball, they’ll train at the school so people see the work they put in.”
The work that Drexler and the rest of the cheerleaders put in has paid off big time and a ninth national title in the span of 11 years is a great achievement.