Ready all-around
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It would be understandable if Willie Ito just about missed his 17th
birthday.
In a few weeks, Ito will travel to Colorado Springs, Colo., to
participate in a gymnastics camp at the U.S. Olympic Training Center.
He’s earned his way onto the Junior National Team for the second time in
his career (the first was in 1999), meaning he’s among the top seven
gymnasts nationally in his Class 2 age group.
The Huntington Beach High School junior, who turned 17 on Tuesday,
also won the Junior Elite Class 2 all-around title at the U.S.
Championships held in Philadelphia in August. And he is a national
champion on the parallel bars, pommel horse and took the bronze on the
high bar.
Not bad for a young athlete whose parents placed him in gymnastics 11
years ago in an attempt to harness his energetic ways.
“My mom and dad put me in a gymnastics class to prevent me from
getting hurt, basically,” Ito said, laughing. “I had a lot of energy and
was always doing flips on my own. . . . Basically, I was bouncing off the
walls.
“What gymnastics did was give me coordination and a way to release my
energy. My parents put me in the class for one year, then gave me the
option after that of staying with it or I could quit. I was having such a
good time, I stayed. I’ve been in gymnastics ever since.”
Ito has been competing since he was 10 and became a Class 5 Western
Regional champion when he was 11. Since he began competing, the 5-foot-5,
125-pound dynamo has trained with former pommel horse world champion and
Chinese Olympic team member Li Xiaoping, the owner of South Coast
Gymnastics in Santa Ana.
His other training coach is former elite gymnast Tim Picquelle.
Ito trains at the center five days a week, three or four hours a day.
And he does it with passion, Xiaoping said.
“Willie’s a very dedicated gymnast,” he said. “He’s really thinking on
the floor and is quite smart with his training. He has done an excellent
job this year.”
Ito trains with South Coast teammate Bryan Del Castillo, a Class 3
junior national champion, which puts two of the three class junior
national champions under Xiaoping’s guidance.
Gymnasts compete in a class according to age, with Class 1 retaining
the eldest gymnasts.
Ito won the Class 2 all-around title -- events include floor, pommel
horse, rings, vault, parallel bars and horizontal (high) bars in
Philadelphia, where he also earned the national crown on the parallel
bars and pommel horse.
With the season now behind him, he continues to train without fail,
readying himself for the upcoming season. It will begin at the end of
January, with the first competition being the Stanford Invitational in
Palo Alto.
Ito won his class competition’s all-around title at Stanford two years
ago.
It will be one of roughly seven competitions he’ll enter throughout
the upcoming season.
For all the time he has invested in gymnastics, Ito says he doesn’t
feel he’s missed out on much.
“I still manage to find time to go to the movies, the beach, hang out
with my friends,” he said. “Gymnastics has been a very worthwhile
experience. I really don’t look at it as sacrificing one thing for
another. The main thing is that I’m having fun with this. I still make
the time to hang out with my friends.”
While at the U.S. Olympic Training Center, Ito will train for up to
seven hours per day and receive instruction from Olympic athletes and
coaches. He will depart for Colorado Springs on Oct. 7 and will spend a
week there. In addition, he’ll get to train with the Chinese national
team, which will also be housed at the training center during that time.
Ito is familiar with the Chinese team members, as he went to China
this summer and had the chance to train with them.
“It was a great experience,” he said. “I learned a lot from those
guys, and now it is my turn to play host to them.”
It will be the first of three camps Ito will attend at the center as a
junior national team member.
He lists the pommel horse and high bar as his favorite events and
cites the rings as his weakness.
“Yeah, I need to work on my strength with that,” he confessed. “I’ll
hit the weight room to take care of that.”
Ito seems always to find a way to work on bettering himself. It began
with finding a way to limit his “bouncing off the walls,” to present day,
which finds him working toward earning a scholarship to attend college in
2003. His ultimate goal is to make an Olympic team.
Xiaoping sees a long road ahead for one of his prized pupils.
“Willie has a very bright future in gymnastics,” he said. “He’s a
great gymnast, and I’m very excited where this can take him. He has the
tools and dedication to go very far.”
Still, Ito says there’s one important factor that keeps him in the
sport: “The bottom line is to just have fun, and that’s exactly what I’m
doing.”
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