The Mixed Team Event Competition at Buenos 2018
Summer Youth Olympics
2018

The Mixed Team
Event Competition at Buenos
2018
BUENOS
AIRES - Son’s
breaking medals ‘meaning of life’ for revolutionary father
B-Boy Bumblebee became the first
Youth Olympic champion in history in breaking at Buenos Aires 2018. On Thursday
he also won a bronze in the mixed team event with Austria’s B-Girl Ella. For
his father, who breakdanced against odds in 1990s Russia, the medals were worth
more than gold.
Sergei Chernyshev sparked a peaceful
revolution in Voronezh, a provincial town 500 kilometres from Moscow, when he
started teaching breakdance to local kids at the end of the 1990s. Back then,
with no opportunity to travel, Chernyshev pored over video cassettes of foreign
dancers to study their moves, and later tested them out on the dance floor.
At Buenos Aires 2018, the name of
the man from a little-known Russian province was written in the history books
of his beloved sport as his son B-Boy Bumblebee - whose real name is also
Sergei Chernyshev - became the first breakdance gold medallist at an Olympic
event.
“To say what this means to me in two
words - it’s the meaning of my life,” said the medallist’s father and coach. “I
have been waiting for this Olympic debut for a long time.”
Chernyshev had to give up breakdancing
in 2000 when his son, future B-Boy Bumblebee, was born. Until that point he was
teaching close to 200 children, as breakdance gained popularity in the city,
which has slightly more than 1 million inhabitants.
Bumblebee was enrolled in artistic
gymnastics from the age of four, but despite showing promise in the sport, he
quit unexpectedly when he was eight.
It was then that breaking came into
his life.
“I was waiting for this,” said his
father of the switch. “I was waiting for the moment when he would realise that
breaking appeals more to him.”
Chernyshev taught his son all the
moves he knew and even helped him to pick out his B-Boy name. Bumblebee
initially wanted to call himself ‘Optimus Prime’ after a character in the
Transformers, but his father deemed the name too mature and suggested
‘Bumblebee’ - the name of a friendly robot from the same franchise - instead.
Nine years later at Buenos Aires
2018, Chernyshev watched his son make history as he won the gold medal in the
first ever breaking competition held at an Olympic event.
“It is an honour for me,” B-Boy
Bumblebee said of his milestone victory. “I had the opportunity to win this
gold medal and naturally, I couldn’t not use it. After all, this is the first
gold medal in breakdance.
“For me it was always very important
to leave a mark in history and I think that now, whatever happens, I will be a
part of history.”
On Thursday, Bumblebee also won a
bronze medal in the mixed team event where he competed alongside Austria's
B-Girl Ella.
For his father, just being at the
groundbreaking competition in Buenos Aires was a dizzying experience. Here
Chernyshev met some of the breakdance founders that he spent hours studying on
video, including now-judges and jury members Crazy Legs, Storm and Renegade.
The sport has come a long way in
Russia since Chernyshev first tried it in what the Russians colloquially refer
to as the “wild 90s,” a time of political and economic turmoil. Curiously, it
was precisely these challenging times that helped the sport to grow.
“It was fashionable on every street
then because a B-Boy was, first of all, seen not as a dancer, but as an
athlete,” Chernyshev said. “That was very relevant, especially in the 90s in
Russia. You could make a name for yourself not only with your fists, but with
your talents as well.”
Now having witnessed the debut of
his favourite sport at a Youth Olympic Games, Chernyshev hopes it will make it
into the senior programme at Paris 2024. For his part, B-Boy Bumblebee was
thankful to be able to give his father that first taste of Olympic glory.
“My parents opened their own dance
studio when I was nine years old. I went there and I fell headfirst into it,”
Bumblebee said. “And nine years later, I won the Youth Olympics. This is, first
of all, my gift to my father because he used to do this as well so he can fully
feel what this means.
“The most important thing in a
victory is to have someone to share it with.”
Post a Comment