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An Equal Playing Field: Female Olympic Weightlifting Coaches
Shanyign Franklin
coach
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Mt ly had an opportunity to interview several female weightlifting coaches at various levels of their craft. AS
ac myself, | was interested in delving into their history both as a lifter and a coach, their mentors and/or
ication and if they felt that being female in a male-dominated sport had hindered them as coaches in any way.
eas to find out that all of these women have experienced little to no gender discrimination (with one
glaring exception) and all are thriving in the sport even though all of their mentors were men.
bout Us
Here are their stories.
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Aimee Everett
Pee ence
ee
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Aimee Everett started lifting in the summer of 1996 when her volleyball coach sent her to train under coach
Mike Burgener. Shortly after, she quit volleyball and became a full-time lifter under Coach B. She soon made her
way to the Amerlean Open and tralned end llved at the Olymple Tralning Center Junlor Tralning Camp for the next
four years.
After a five-year break from the sport to finish school, Aimee dove back into weightlifting full force in 2005 and
began training new lifters for Coach Burgener as well as assisting him with CrossFit Weightlifting Certifications
‘Amee dove head first Into learning all of the finer Intricacles of coaching from MIke Burgener and credits him in
paving her way to being the coach she is today.
“Everything | have right now- | really believe he paved the way. Who | am as an athlet ch, a
totally him. From my programming, to the way | love my athletes, to the way scare my athletes v
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‘and to my total devotion to my team and gym family.”
Bob Morris and Lynn Jones from the Olympic Training Center as well as her husband, Greg Everett, have also
been huge influences on her coaching style.
‘There just weren't women coaches around me when | was grawing up in this sport. Today, | am lucky to have
Ursula (Garze Papandres) to look up to as a female coach. She paved the wey.”
When asked if she felt she was held back in any way because of her gender
Honestly I've never even thought about it being harder to break into this sport as a “female” coach until you
asked me this question. | just knew there was one female international coach and | wanted to be the second.
Period.”
‘Aimee has now accomplished that goal and is the second female international USA Weightlifting coach ever. Her
lifter, Jessica Lucero, is on the National Team, wan the National Championship in 2015 in the 68 kg class, and is
@ national record holder in the snatch. Spending “a bazillion” hours working with Jess to get her to where she is
today is what she credits as her biggest coaching triumph. Aimee and Greg Everett awn Catalyst Athletics, ane
of the most respected weightlifting resources in the United States.
Jessica Lucero (58) - 92kg Snatch American Record (4k)
Emmy Vargas
Emmy Vargas started lifting as an 18-year-old in junior college, when her shotput coach took her to see now
Weightlifting Hall of Fame coach Bob Takano to make her stranger and more powerful. One of her first
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experiences was seeing Diana Fuhrman (six time world team member, four time national chempion) lift in Bob's
‘weightlifting gym. Emmy wound up getting a scholarship to Cal State Los Angeles as a thrower (ended up with @
48' throw), but quit her throwing scholarship as her love for the sport of weightlifting grew.
Bob referred to Emmy as “the doormat” because her personality and confidence at the time were so small. He
told her she needed to leam to grow fangs. His encouragement must have worked, as Emmy became a national
‘team member, represented the USA at the World championships, won a silver medal at the Pan American Games
in 2007 in the super heavyweight class, and made it to three Olympic trials (placing in 10 each time).
She is also the lightest woman in the history of American weightlifting to clean and jerk more than 300 Ibs (142
kg). Anyone who knows Emmy now knows she is no doormat.
Emmy started coaching weightlifting on a bigger scale when her friend Andy Garcy, who was the head coach for
Pinnacle Weightlifting in Colorado Springs, unexpectedly passed away in 2009. At the request of his team, she
agreed to help coach them through their upcoming meets. The Pinnacle team wound up with podium finishes in
‘the School-Age (now Youth), Senior (third place at Nationals), University Level (second place) as well as
Master's Nationals and the Master's World Championship that year, Her passion for coaching was ignited full
force.
As a long-time resident of the Olympic Training Center, Emmy also credits resident coach Bob Morris with
helping her develop her coaching style. Emmy is now the Head Coach of Barbarian Barbell where she coaches
both women and men in the old school way with no loud music playing. She believes being able to hear the
timing of the lifts is critical.
She doesn’t believe her greatest triumph as a coach has happened yet:
“| have high standards. As 'm stil coaching and learning, I can’t answer that question, but | do hope I'l be able to
say 've helped change some folks’ lives for the better.”
Her goals as a coach, howaver, are high, She'd like to get someone an an Olympic team or put someone on the
international stage. When asked about her "best coaching secret”, she said it is being @ coachable coach. Her
edvive to anyone looking to get into coaching the sport is apt:
‘Lift in 2 meet. It's one thing to tell people what it's like to lift, it's another to have experienced being called upon
ins moment whan you're spasming and you're dehydrated, and you're being called upon to make @ big lft, and you
nly have 2 minutes on the clock to hit that lift under high pressure.
You can be that feel good coach, but in my opinion, you're nat going to be a good coach. The coach has to be
willing to take the heat, to keep the athlete focused on the task at hand, Being able to handle the heat live in a
meet is critical, so get out there and coach. Coach at different levels. The game changes at each level. When you
get to higher levels, the pressure changes. When you've got lifters trying to make teams or set national records,
it's much different than just helping someone get 2 PR.”
Lindsay Yocum
Lindsay Yocum was introduced to the sport of weightlifting post college when she started her first job at
Velocity Sports Perfarmance (VSP) in Redonda Beach more than ten years ago. Since then she has partnered
‘hilpiibreakingmusd e. com/womens-finess/an-equal-playing-field-femalo-olympic-weightlifing-coaches: 315ararots ‘An Equal Playing Fld: Fernale Olympic W sightfing Coaches | Breaking Muscle
with Sean Waxman at Waxman’s Gym, where she coaches weightlifting and one of their competition teams. She
also continues to utilize weightlifting at the strength and conditioning level for her athletes at Marlborough
School, a college preparatory school in Hancock Park
Ken Vick and Sean Waxman have been her mentors. Lindsay believes her capability has not been measured by
her gender but rather her experience:
“Post college | was green to the spart of weightlifting, just having earned my CSCS and my USAW level 1
coaching certifications but not really having the "hands an" experience that it takes to develop the coaching eye
and learn the art of coaching weightlifting. Luckily | did have a sugportive mentor (Ken Vick) and professional
peers thet took the responsibilty of honing our craft seriously. | quickly went from having a handful of reps under
my belt to thousands and | am fortunate enough ta have a natural proclivity to understanding, identifying and
correcting the lifts as | coact.”
Unifke all of the other women in this story, she did have one flagrant example of being denied a role specifically
because of her gender. A‘ter paying her dues at VSP coaching youth (8-11 year olds) and middle school athletes,
it became apparent that her superior was holding her back from coaching high school teams:
"His reasoning was that he believed I couldn't demand respect from a group of high school aged boys. Let's just
say that | proved him wrong and that I do not credit him as a mentor, hence why he remains nameless.
Lindsay trains both women and men and like all of the women in this story, believes that people ere attracted to
coaches because of their knowledge and coaching style, not their gender:
| think people in general regardless of their gender gravitate towards a coaching style thet they deem
compatible with their learning style. | think the most important part of developing trust with an athlete is a)
knowing your stuff and b) telling them what they need to hear, instead of what they want to hear.”
She doesn’t believe that she’s had one moment of triumph as a coach, and her goals are simple:
For the most part... my satisfaction (in coaching) is derived from the fact that | am directly influencing an
athlete to achieve their personal best. Whether that is teaching the athlete how to properly lift, motivating the
athlete to train through challenging times, or creating confidence in an athlete to perform under pressure and at
their best, coaching is a means to teach people to strive to actualize their potential as a human being.
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or. And ha’ good thing [Photo courtesy of Rd Photgrapty]
Alison Parakh
Alison Parakh got her start in weightlifting while studying physical education at the University of Oregon, where
she majored in exercise physiology and also received her Masters. She competed a bit in graduate school, but
became so busy coaching that she didn't have time to train, She doesn’t credit anyone as being @ mentor in
weightlifting, per se, but does mention Jimmy Radcliffe, the Head Strength Coach at U of 0 as an overall
strength-coaching mentor.
There was one time that she felt singled out as ¢ woman. She found out she was being interviewed because of a
quota that required females to be interviewed. She also admits that back when she first started coaching
strength and conditioning in the 1990s, networking opportunities seemed far more difficult because of being
ane of only a handful of women in a male dominated industry, She hes noticed a change recently though, in thet
“there are 2 lot more women in the industry now, and it seems thet being female isn’t so much of an issue as it
might have seemed before.”
Alison co
jes both men and women and also believes that:
It comes down to what you know and how well you communicate, and if you can communicate well, and yo:
know your stuff and can help an athlete improve, | find it doesn’t matter (if you're a man or a woman).
Her greatest accomplishment as 2 weightlifting coach so far is having their club officially recognized as USAW
sanctioned this year and already having two lifters who qualified for University Nationals. Alison prides herself on
recognizing talent, wooing them to her weightlifting club, and seeing her lifters improve. Her goals as a coach in
the sport of weightlifting are simple: "to continue to learn, improve, and help athlete's succeed.”
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My Coaching Journey
| found weightlifting through Team CrossFit Academy in Monrovia in 2008. | joined their newly sanctioned USAW
team and began competing in local meets. Shortly thereafter, | opened my own gym, CrossFit Survival After
focusing mainly on coaching CrossFit for the first few years, | decided to form a USAW sanctioned team, and
switch my focus to studying and learning as much as | could about coaching weightlifting
| took Coach Mike Burgener's CrossFit Weightlifting seminar in 2010, followed by short seminars with Jacob
Tsypkin (accompanied by Ariel Stephens) as well as driving my lifters down to the San Diego area to study with
Edgar and Evelyn Hernandez of E2 Olyfit early on. From there, | studied under Greg Everett, taking his Level One
Seminar as well as passing the demanding Catalyst Athletics L1 Certification in 2014, In 2015, | jumped at the
opportunity to study with Hall of Fame legendary weightlifting coach, Bob Takano, completing his 100 hour
intemship and receiving one of the highest scores at that time on the most demanding test I've ever taken.
| credit Eric Le Clair and Bob Takano as my mentors, but wish to acknowledge Michael Keating as well. In terms
of coaching both men and women, | coach both, At first | had a hard time getting men to trust me, but once
again, | think that had to do more with my beliaf in myself. As I've racked up more hours and learned from greater
and more knowledgeable teachers, my confidence has risen to the point where | know | have something valuable
‘to offer bath men and women, so | know their trust factor has more to do with that.
My greatest triumph was coaching Laurie Espinosa to a first place win in the Masters National Championship in
2016 in the 63kg weight class for her age group followed by a first-place win at Youth Nationels for Mike
Melendez, my 69ke 13 and under youth lifter in the same year. Laurle went from someone who was overwelght,
stressed out, and had never even lifted a barbell to someone who worked her ass off and earned the right to be
called a national champion, Mike spent two years in CrossFit Survival's Kids program struggling with asthma and
learning proper movement. By the time we disbanded it, he had become a confident athlete, | asked if he'd like to
try weightlifting, and he adapted to it like he's been doing it his entire life.
My goals are to help my athletes achleve thelr goals—plain and simple, but | help them set higher and higher
goels for themsalves, so anything could happen. | co-coached a senior to Nationals in 2016 and am excited to be
taking alifter to Youth Nationals in June and two master's lifters to the American Masters in November.
Alook back at females in Olympic weightlifting:
Women's Weightlifting: A Journey of 25 Years
Topic: Women's Fitness
See more about: olympic weightlifitng, women's fitness
SHANNON FRANKLIN
Shannan Franklin is a fifty-yeer-old coach and masters athlete with a passion for prevention. Having suffered a severe back
injury herself, she understands the frustrations that aging and failing to listen to your body can have. Her life's mission is to
coach strength and conditioning in a comprehensive manner leaving no stone unturned regarding efficacy while focusing on
longevity in sport through injury prevention. Currently leading a weightlifting team with athletes ranging from... Read Mare
hiiporeakingmusde com/wonens-ftnestar-equa-playing-file-emale-olympic-weighltig-ccaches ans.