How to Be a Cheerleader

Glee club, pep rally coordination, drill team, song leading, yell leading, band, flag twirling, and body painting are all ways to publicly display your love of your school. Cheerleading has grown into a competitive sport and requires extensive training and practice. To have a good chance of making your cheerleading squad (at any level), your first order of business must be to get in good shape.

Instructions

  1. Know the History

    • Contrary to popular lore, cheerleading is not a product of the deep South. Even though the most famous cheerleading crew of all time belongs to the Dallas Cowboys, and the sport's perennial national high-school champions are from Kentucky, cheerleading has purebred New England roots. In the 1870s, Princeton organized the first pep club, we presume to celebrate their tremendous wealth. And in the 1880s, the first organized yell was recorded at Princeton:

      Ray, Ray, Ray!
      Tiger, Tiger, Tiger!
      Sis, Sis, Sis!
      Boom, Boom, Boom!
      Aaaaah! Princeton, Princeton, Princeton!

      In 1884, a Princeton graduate by the name of Thomas Peebles exported the yell and the sport of football to the University of Minnesota. In 1898, Johnny Campbell made cheerleading what it is today. As an undergrad at Minnesota, Campbell directed the crowd in the still-used cheer:

      Rah, Rah, Rah!
      Sku-u-mah, Hoo-rah, Hoo-rah!
      Varsity, Varsity!
      Minn-e-so-tah!

      From there, cheerleading took off.

      Minnesota again pioneered innovations in the sport in the 1920s, when women first became active cheerleaders. It was not until the middle of the twentieth century that pom-poms were developed as a vital prop. Cheerleaders incorporated tumbling and gymnastics into their routines around the same time. The sport reached the big time in 1978, when CBS first televised the National Collegiate Cheerleading Championships, and by that time, universities began offering scholarships, college credit, and four-year letter programs in the sport. Today, cheerleading pervades all American athletics, from friendly football to professional athletics.

Next: Get in Shape

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