A family
photo is affixed to the front of a refrigerator inside the Roseville High
School gymnastics center. The family, three generations strong, is also the
coaching staff for the Raiders.
The head
coach is Maddie Pearson. Her assistant coaches are her mother, Emi Yokose and her
stepgrandfather, Mark Curley. They may be the only three-generation varsity coaching
staff in the state.
“It’s been a
very memorable season,” said Maddie, 24, who is in her fourth season on the
coaching staff and second as head coach. “It’s rewarding in so many ways. It’s
a season of family.”
It’s indeed
a gymnastics family. All three have extensive backgrounds in the sport, going
back to 1980, Curley’s first year as a coach with the boys gymnastics team at Alexander
Ramsey; that school closed when Roseville High School opened in 1987. He also
coached at Coon Rapids and Columbia Heights and is now in his 40th
year of coaching and 30th at Roseville. Five years ago he retired as
the ninth-grade dean
of students at Roseville, a position he held for 15 years. He stepped away from coaching four years ago before
returning this season.
Yokose
coached gymnastics for 15 years in the South Washington County school district
and is an MSHSL official in the sport. She and Pearson both competed in the
sport at Woodbury High School and have coached club gymnasts for years.
Roseville
has a strong gymnastics history, with 14 appearances at the state tournament,
including every year from 2006 through 2016. They won state titles in 2006, 2007,
2008, 2009, 2012, 2013, 2014 and 2015. In the team competition at state, the
Raiders hold scoring records in three of the four events (vault, uneven bars
and beam) and the 2008 team still holds the state tourney record with a score
of 153.525.
As this
season approached, Maddie was in need of assistant coaches. While dining at a
Davanni’s restaurant with Emi and Mark in September, she broached the subject.
“She said, ‘Hey, Papa, I need some
help,’ ” Curley recalled. “I asked, ‘What do you mean by help? A couple days
here and there?’ She said, ‘No, I need you full time.’ It's a family calling
and so here I am.”
Yokose said, “She knows that it's a
very big passion of mine and she knew how much I missed it.”
By the time dinner wrapped up,
Pearson had her coaching staff.
“They both
have always been my inspiration,” Maddie said. “The coach I am today is because
of them. It’s been fun for them to watch me grow as a coach. I see the same
corrections they gave to me when I competed.”
The team is
small, with nine athletes. There’s an upside in the coaching they receive at
practice.
“We get to spend a lot of time with
each individual athlete, which has really been a joy,” Curley said. “And these
kids are great students, too.”
Jasmin
Zenner, a senior who has been on the team since seventh grade, called Curley “a huge influence. I knew he
was a good coach right from when I first met him. And then two years later I met
Maddie. She stuck by us and fought for us, and last year she stepped up as head
coach. She's doing an amazing job.”
Asked to describe the coaches, junior
Naomi Kramer said, “They're awesome. Curley has so much experience and he
brings so much helpfulness to gymnastics. And coach Emi is great, she's super
supportive and cares so much about us and wants us to do our best. And Maddie
is just one of the best head coaches, she has so much positivity and she loves
us so much. It’s welcoming and fun.”
The team’s family aspect extends
from the coaches to the athletes, and that’s intentional.
“Your home life and your family life
need to be in order,” Curley said. “And then your school life needs to be in
order. And if those two things are in order, then you can do gymnastics. … I
would be a hypocrite if I didn't say yes to this because that's what I've been
preaching all these years.”
Yokose smiled and said, “It's been
amazing. I am enjoying every moment. And as a proud mom, it's extra time with
my adult daughter and that’s nothing to take for granted, that's for sure. It's
been absolutely wonderful. I get to kind of stand back and watch her lead this
team. And she just amazes me.”
“It’s kind
of this whole new chapter,” Maddie said. “The girls are just loving it. We’re
acting like a family. The parents are getting closer, too. It’s been so
rewarding.”
--MSHSL media specialist John Millea has been the leading voice of
Minnesota high school activities for decades. Follow him on Twitter @MSHSLjohn
and listen to "Preps Today with John Millea” wherever you get podcasts.
Contact John at jmillea@mshsl.org
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