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UMass Students Compete in Skydiving
Competition
Skydiving can be
seen as a brave endeavor, a task for bucket lists and a
mother’s worst nightmare involving her teenage
thrill-seeker.
However, skydiving is also a collegiate
sport, not only for the brave, but also for the skilled
athlete.
At the end of last semester, two University
of Massachusetts Skydiving Club members flew across the
country to compete in the
United States Parachute
Association [USPA]’s annual championship
competition for collegiate skydiving clubs.
The UMass students, Matt Leonard, a
sophomore chemical engineering major and treasurer of the
Skydiving Club, and Kevin Drivas, sophomore sociology major,
were the only club members of over 200 at UMass found
eligible, as licensed skydivers, to compete in Eloy, Az. The
drop zone they were competing in is known as “Skydive
Arizona.”
“This is both my first competition and my
teammate’s first competition,” said Leonard. “It was
thrilling. Almost no one thinks of the skydiving club’s
[existence]. It’s not like club hockey or other club sports.
Most people don’t even know how it works.”
Leonard and Drivas competed together in two
of the championship’s six events, which took place over the
course of four days. In what Leonard considered the team’s
first and main event, two-way formation skydiving, he and
Drivas took third place.
“I was just hoping we didn’t come in last
place, never mind come in the top three,” said Drivas.
Essentially, formation skydiving involves
performing as many USPA-approved formations in the air
within an allotted time frame. Skydives for each team are
filmed so that judges may accurately recall the quality and
quantity of formations.
“It definitely takes skill to skydive,” said
Drivas. “Anyone can just fall out of sky, but it takes
talent to skydive.”
The pair faced eighteen teams in their first
event, and many of the competitors were from the nation’s
top military collegiate academies. Leonard and Drivas were
the only civilian team in the two-way formation skydiving
event to place in the top six.
According to Leonard, many of the
non-civilian teams had practiced skydiving with over 40-50
jumps.
“Military teams are at an advantage in that
our taxes basically pay for [their students] to skydive,”
said Leonard. “Their facilities and funding from their
schools are definitely a huge advantage.
“At our first competition, for us to place
so well against military teams in a club sport that isn’t
well known was a huge feat for us,” continued Leonard. “I
can’t even begin to describe my excitement.”
Because of the expensive nature of the
sport, Leonard and Drivas, who each paid for their entire
way to competition out-of-pocket, a total of nearly $1,000
apiece for plane tickets and registration fees, could not
afford to practice with more than 10-15 jumps before
competing. The UMass Skydiving Club’s home drop zone, “Jumptown,”
is in Orange, Mass.
“It’s a very expensive sport,” said Leonard,
who has been skydiving for a little over a year and has
completed 95 jumps. “Every time you practice or compete, you
basically have to pay for a plane ticket.”
Leonard also explained that skydiving
equipment is highly regulated and needs to be replaced more
frequently than most other sports’ equipment pieces.
“The expense is why the sport isn’t as
popular,” said Leonard, “but I would definitely say it’s a
growing sport. I didn’t expect so many teams to be at the
competition, but there were a lot of teams.”
Nevertheless, Drivas iterated that the rush
of skydiving is well worth the cost.
“When you’re skydiving, it’s kind of a
surreal feeling,” said Drivas. “You don’t have to worry
about anything else in your life. Your only job is to
skydive.”
“I’m kind of over being scared,” added
Drivas, who has completed 124 jumps, some of which were from
a height of up to 13,500 ft.
Leonard’s and Drivas’ second event was the
six-way speed, which is a challenge to be the team who can
build three formations the fastest after exiting the plane.
Leonard and Drivas collaborated with skydivers from the
University of Connecticut, Rochester Institute of
Technology, the University of Buffalo and the University of
Minnesota for this event.
Their team placed sixth, behind the United
States Military Academy at Westpoint. They were the first
civilian team, of 13 teams, to place in the competition’s
event.
The team’s assigned formations are called
“snowflake,” “dogbone,” and “star.” Further information on
these formations may be found at USPA.org, by searching
under “SIM” or Skydiver’s Information Manual and clicking
the link to “Competition.”
Also according to Leonard, members of the
UMass Student Government Association were unsure how to fund
the club’s expensive practices, as the majority of club
members are unlicensed and therefore cannot compete. There
are only two other members of the club actively pursuing
licenses. For the last 15 years, since its inception, the
club has primarily been a tandem skydivers’ club.
Leonard and Drivas are looking to change
that.
“This is my first year on the [club’s]
board,” said Leonard. “And as sophomores, Drivas and I
haven’t been around the club long enough to take it in the
direction we want it to go in. We’re trying to make it a
club sport, and our first step is to try to market the club
for the rest of the semester so more people will join.”
“Our goal is to compete every year,”
continued Leonard. “It’s a hefty expense, but hopefully the
school will eventually help fund us. Though I do understand
why they didn’t pay for it since they would only be sending
out two members of the team [to compete].”
The pair also wants to encourage more
members to go through the processes of becoming licensed.
“A lot of people think it must feel like
you’re falling, but it doesn’t feel like that at all. When
you get out of the plane, you don’t have a falling
sensation, it just feels like you’re floating. It’s calming.
All your worries stay on the ground.”
Source:
http://dailycollegian.com/2011/01/17/umass-students-compete-in-skydiving-competition
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