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Valley Cheer Team Never Loses Focus of School Spirit and Valley Pride

Published: Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Updated: Thursday, October 22, 2009 16:10

Cheerleaders

Scott Mitchell, Photo Editor | Valley Star

Cheerleaders root for the Valley football team.

Even though the Monarchs lost their Homecoming football game against East Los Angeles College, Valley pride was still present as the Cheer squad kept the crowd involved with their booming cheers and valiant spirit.

The team is a mixture of two individual squads: the Spirit squad and Cheerleaders. "If you pump up a crowd and have school spirit you're a cheerleader," said cheerleader Samantha Jenkins. The Spirit squad is a dance crew that focuses on choreographed dance routines as opposed to the Cheerleading squad whom concentrates on stunts and acrobatics.

Being on the Cheer squad is not easy. According to Head Coach Rachel Paul, "It takes coordination, stamina, and personality." Paul should know; she has coached four national championship teams, three with Notre Dame High School and one with UCLA.

"She's awesome and has a great attitude," Athletic Director Deidre Stark said.

"Flying" is the term cheerleaders use to describe being tossed in the air. It's also part of one of their finest and most risky stunts, the basket toss. The basket toss consists of three girls lifting up another cheerleader and launching her up to 10 feet in the air, catching her on her way down. "It takes a lot of trust in your teammates to be a flyer," said Paul. Though dangerous, Desi Sanchez – one of the cheerleaders who is called a flyer because she gets tossed up – said she "Loves to fly."

The squad not only cheers it also raises funds for the team. At halftime of each home game, the squad goes into the bleachers to sell raffle tickets to the crowd. The fundraising allows the team to attend all road games and finance new team uniforms unlike the East Los Angeles College Pep Squad that can only attend one away game a semester due to financial issues, according to their Head Coach Eva Zepeda.

With yearlong training and hours of practice there are three things which facilitate the squad to stay positive according to cheerleader Jamell Anderson, "Keeping in physical shape, performing in front of a crowd and dancing."

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