Poles apart? Dancers say performance is sporting
BEIJING: Erotic display or serious sport? At the World Pole Dancing Championships finals in Beijing on Sunday, competitors in skin-tight suits insisted that their challenging discipline deserves Olympic recognition.The limber and lithe contestants from more than ten countries on four continents hope they can shed the sport’s association with seedy
By our correspondents
April 13, 2015
BEIJING: Erotic display or serious sport? At the World Pole Dancing Championships finals in Beijing on Sunday, competitors in skin-tight suits insisted that their challenging discipline deserves Olympic recognition.
The limber and lithe contestants from more than ten countries on four continents hope they can shed the sport’s association with seedy strip clubs and win respect as skilled athletes.
“Pole dancing requires technical content as much as gymnastics and acrobatics, and the level of difficulty is higher,” Ke Hong, a member of the Chinese team — one of the strongest in the sport — told AFP ahead of the competition.
He is one of over 50 contenders including more than a dozen men at the championships. They force themselves onto the pole for as many as eight hours a day to perfect their gravity-defying spins and poses.
“It hurts every day,” He added. “The very first week, I thought about giving up.”
The scale of the competition reflects the growing appeal of pole dancing as a fitness aid over the last decade — with thousands of clubs estimated to have opened worldwide, including more than 500 in the United States alone.
Competitors making the journey to China this year include the British current World champions ‘Bendy’ Kate Czepulkowski and Sam Willis, the event’s organisers said.
Hotly tipped for this year’s championship are the aptly-named Russian female contestant Polina Volchek, who goes by the moniker “Pink Puma”, they added.
Chinese competitors said they had faced a tough environment of cultural conservatism while chasing their pole dance dreams — but that the long fight for recognition was finally paying off.
“My parents are farmers in the countryside, they do not know about this. I learned for four years, and the first three years they did not know, because I was working in a gym and I learned it secretly,” said 2013 Chinese Pole Dance Champion Fang Yi.
But now “many people see it as an sport. We are working hard at it, and hope one day it will be in the Olympics,” the 29 year-old added.
The limber and lithe contestants from more than ten countries on four continents hope they can shed the sport’s association with seedy strip clubs and win respect as skilled athletes.
“Pole dancing requires technical content as much as gymnastics and acrobatics, and the level of difficulty is higher,” Ke Hong, a member of the Chinese team — one of the strongest in the sport — told AFP ahead of the competition.
He is one of over 50 contenders including more than a dozen men at the championships. They force themselves onto the pole for as many as eight hours a day to perfect their gravity-defying spins and poses.
“It hurts every day,” He added. “The very first week, I thought about giving up.”
The scale of the competition reflects the growing appeal of pole dancing as a fitness aid over the last decade — with thousands of clubs estimated to have opened worldwide, including more than 500 in the United States alone.
Competitors making the journey to China this year include the British current World champions ‘Bendy’ Kate Czepulkowski and Sam Willis, the event’s organisers said.
Hotly tipped for this year’s championship are the aptly-named Russian female contestant Polina Volchek, who goes by the moniker “Pink Puma”, they added.
Chinese competitors said they had faced a tough environment of cultural conservatism while chasing their pole dance dreams — but that the long fight for recognition was finally paying off.
“My parents are farmers in the countryside, they do not know about this. I learned for four years, and the first three years they did not know, because I was working in a gym and I learned it secretly,” said 2013 Chinese Pole Dance Champion Fang Yi.
But now “many people see it as an sport. We are working hard at it, and hope one day it will be in the Olympics,” the 29 year-old added.
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