2017 LA84 Summit Recap – Inspiring and Delivering the Next Generation of Youth Sports
By Shirley Ito
Speaker: Kerri Walsh Jennings, Three-time Olympic beach volleyball gold medalist
Interviewer: Julie Foudy, Two-time Olympic gold medalist and World Cup Champion, ESPN Analyst and Reporter
Foudy kicked off the Summit’s final keynote by asking about Walsh Jennings’ introduction to youth sports and the coaches, teammates, and people who went with it. For Walsh Jennings, the emphasis was that she was introduced to the sport naturally, and played a variety of other sports recreationally, including badminton and basketball, before diving fully into volleyball. For her, the fun nature of sport that she enjoyed whilst growing up fueled her passion and love. “Sport in my family is the war cry,” she added.
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This family support, something echoed with equally successful Olympian and Summit speaker Allyson Felix, has kept Walsh Jennings going through adversity on the court. Walsh Jennings’ family has traveled with her to each of her five Olympic appearances. When she took bronze in Rio in 2016 after winning gold in the previous three Games’, this support combined with a certain attitude helped Walsh Jennings power through:
“Winning is beautiful, but the growth is the pain from the losses. The joy is in the process even if it’s ugly. I’m better for it.”
Walsh Jennings is a mother of four, and she believes her true love for sport has rubbed off during her parenting. “I look at my kids play, and it’s not about the end result,” she adds. “It’s not always about making the goal or being perfect. It’s about the joy of playing.”
For her, simply giving all kids access is a major step on the road to changing lives through sport. “It’s all about access,” she said. “If we plant these seeds to let these kids try these sports, as they grow up through life there is a good chance they will pick something up. They learn, appreciate it. The socialization that comes through sport and P.E… keep increasing access for the kids to play, and improve the maintain policy work to make sure P.E. is mandated in school.”
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But once kids are involved, how do we communicate the right message to keep them engaged and active? For Walsh Jennings, a bulk of the responsibility lies with the adults: coaches, administrators and parents. “It’s about play and the process, and not the end results,” she said. While she won gold in Beijing in 2008, Walsh Jennings described it as a negative sports experience due to the intensity and the pressure involved. “It’s not all about winning. It’s about playing and the joy of sport.”