Music blaring from giant, wall-mounted speakers can鈥檛 drown out the clang of iron, or the enthusiastic cries of senior Alexus Jackson, a member of the Ragin鈥 Cajuns Women鈥檚 Powerlifting team.
Jackson, who is 5鈥4鈥 tall and competes in the 158-lb. weight class, is working out in Bourgeois Hall on campus. 鈥淭o me, it鈥檚 just about competing to the best of your ability. I come in, I work hard, I compete and I win,鈥 she said.
A senior dental hygiene major, Jackson has been pumped up about powerlifting since freshman orientation, when she saw a poster that posed a question: Do you want to be a national champion? 鈥淚鈥檝e always wanted to be the best of the best and I鈥檝e always loved lifting weights. I love being in a competitive environment,鈥 she said.
Jackson said getting her best friend since sixth grade, Dana Wallace, to try out for the team was a tougher sell. 鈥淚 had to convince her to do it,鈥 Jackson said of Wallace.
So began the careers of two of the best powerlifters to ever hoist a barbell for the team, which placed second at the Collegiate National Championships in April in Orlando, Fla.
Jackson can bench press 286 pounds, an American weight class record for the lift. Wallace, all 4鈥8鈥 and 94 pounds of her, is also an American weight class record holder, for her ability to squat 286 pounds. To put this in perspective, it鈥檚 the equivalent of a 200-pound woman loading 600 pounds onto a barbell, resting it across her shoulders, squatting until her thighs are parallel to the floor, and standing back up. In other words, Wallace, despite her diminutive size, is strong. Really strong.
鈥淧eople have a misconception about powerlifting,鈥 Wallace said. 鈥淭hey think you鈥檙e supposed to be big and bulky. I鈥檓 not. I鈥檓 toned, and people can tell I do some kind of work out, but when I tell them I powerlift, it鈥檚 like, 鈥極h. OK. What鈥檚 that?鈥 鈥
Powerlifting is composed of three lifts: the squat, the bench press and the deadlift. In competition, athletes get three attempts at each of the lifts. The highest weights recorded for each one are totaled, and the lifter with the most points wins.
A blend of athletic ability, work ethic and genetic predisposition determines the best powerlifters. Brawn, for example, isn鈥檛 typically as important as stature. Unlike many other sports, short lifters are often the best lifters.
Consider the bench press, for example. The lift involves lying on a customized bench and bringing a set amount of weight to the chest, then back up again. The entire motion is sort of like a reverse push up. Shorter arms equal a shorter distance the weight must be moved.
鈥淛ust as a basketball coach might be thrilled at the prospect of a 7-foot tall athlete, the opposite鈥檚 true in powerlifting. If you鈥檙e short, it really makes you a good squatter and bencher, but it hurts your dead lift,鈥 said Travis Werner, head coach of the Ragin鈥 Cajuns men鈥檚 and women鈥檚 powerlifting teams.
鈥淢ost people have at least one lift that they are weaker in. A good dead lifter typically struggles on the bench. Those two really counteract each other. Long arms make a good dead lifter.鈥
In the dead lift, a barbell with a set amount of weight is hoisted from the ground to hip level, then back down.
Technique is extremely important for any type of lift, he added. A squatter should adopt a wide stance, for instance, if she has extremely strong hips, or a narrower stance if her thigh muscles are stronger.
Werner said former high school athletes, such as Jackson and Wallace, who both played basketball and softball at University High in Baton Rouge, often can progress quickly in powerlifting, even if they have little experience.
鈥淎lmost all of our lifters were athletes of some sort. They can鈥檛 continue their careers, for whatever reason, and a lot of them fall back on powerlifting,鈥 he said.
Wallace, who also ran track in high school, thought her athletic career was over by the time she arrived at the University in 2010. 鈥淢y skill level wasn鈥檛 up to par,鈥 she said, 鈥渂ut it did feel kind of weird to not be involved in any kind of sports when I got to college.鈥
Now Wallace, who earned a bachelor鈥檚 degree in psychology in the spring and will attend graduate school at Loyola University in New Orleans, works as a judge for competitions sponsored by USA Powerlifting. The organization sanctions the club sport, and also coordinates the Collegiate National Championships. The Ragin鈥 Cajuns women鈥檚 team has developed a strong presence there in a short time.
The 星空无限传媒 Lafayette team was formed in 2000, according to Werner. 鈥淲e鈥檝e had some extremely talented women lifters in the past, but we never fielded a full team until 2007,鈥 he said. By 2012, it had won a national championship. The following year, the squad finished fourth in the nation.
The team鈥檚 achievements are all the more impressive since universities and colleges of all sizes compete against each other at the championships.
鈥淚f you have a school that has 1,000 students,鈥 Werner explained, 鈥測ou鈥檙e head-to-head with schools that have 40,000 students.鈥
He credits assistant coach Abby Goss as the driving force behind the success of the women鈥檚 team. Goss, while competing as an undergraduate in 2007, was the only member of the women鈥檚 team, and began actively recruiting fellow students to join.
鈥淪he came in and she said she was going to make things happen and she did,鈥 Werner said. 鈥淏y the time she was a senior, there was a whole team that had grown around her.鈥
Goss, who earned a degree in exercise science and is now a fitness trainer, said her teammates referred to her as 鈥渢he team mom, because that鈥檚 just the way I am.鈥
Her passion for the team, and the sport of powerlifting, remains strong. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really exciting to see girls who aren鈥檛 afraid to lift weights,鈥 she said.