Monday, September 23, 2024
HomeTop HeadlinesParis Olympics: Break dancing steers Games towards the youth

Paris Olympics: Break dancing steers Games towards the youth


A view of the venue where break dancing is being held at Paris Olympics.

A view of the venue where break dancing is being held at Paris Olympics.
| Photo Credit: Y.B. Sarangi

The art form of break dance took its biggest major sporting plunge in a spectacular manner on its Olympics debut, steering the Games’ towards a youth-centric future.

The makeshift venue for breaking at the La Concorde arena here was a vibrant platform amalgamating music, dance and excitement. The extraordinary show of agility, flexibility, rhythm and bravery – pepped up by one-on-one duels involving throwing of challenges and intimidating your opponent – on day one ended on a high. As it projected the first Olympic champion in breaking, Japan’s B-girl Ami, in front of International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach.

Watch: Breakdancers gear up for their first ever Olympics

After entering the history books, Ami took some time to sink in the feeling. “I am in the dream. Slowly, I’m gonna understand what has happened to me. I’m happy about it and I really like to thank you all for your support,” said Ami on Friday night.

“I didn’t really focus on medals. For the final I just wanted to show everything I had…Breaking is my expression, expression of art. We could show what breaking is to the world.”

Ami, who beat Lithuanian Nicka in the final, felt her gold medal would inspire more Japanese youngsters into the new sport. “I think Japan is really good, every weekend there’s a jam, you can have fun and there’s also a big jam and a small jam. Japanese breaking is so good, I love it.”

Indian origin Dutch B-girl India, who finished fourth after losing her bronze medal match to Chinese 671, loved the atmosphere. “The crowd was amazing. In the past years it has grown, from the first (Youth) Olympic event in 2018 till now, it’s such a long time. I think it will only grow from here, now a lot of people outside of the breaking scene saw breaking and it will only be more and more (popular) from now on.”

Los Angeles based Ukrainian B-girl Kate, who made it to the quarterfinals, dedicated her performance to her war-ravaged country where the art form is hugely popular. “Unfortunately, during the war, everything stopped. Not stopped, froze a bit, slowed down because people have different priorities. Before it was huge.

“I was born and raised there. I know a lot of people are watching me. I give them a little bit of hope. It’s the highest reward ever to motivate other people. If I can inspire or touch somebody from Ukraine with my dance, I’m happy,” said Kate, sending out a message to breakers from other conflict zones to spread hope and happiness through their dance form.

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