Catching Up With: Cara Heads
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Bryce Alderton
Where one Olympics ended, the road to a second is just beginning
for former Newport Harbor High track and field standout Cara Heads.
The 24-year-old Costa Mesa resident finished seventh in the
75-kilogram (165-pound) class in the 2000 Summer Olympic Games in Sydney,
Australia. She lifted 225 pounds in the snatch, matching a personal best,
while hoisting 275 pounds in the clean and jerk.
Her lift in the snatch tied the American record. Heads describes the
snatch as “a much faster movement” where the weightlifter quickly pulls
the bar from the floor above his or her head.
The clean and jerk is a three-movement exercise in which, gripping the
bar with hands closer together than the snatch, one pulls the bar from
the floor to the chest in a squatting position. After rising to a
standing position, the lifter than presses the bar overhead, where it
must be stabilized, before a successful lift is recognized.
Typically Heads has more difficulty with the clean and jerk because
one usually lifts more weight.
“It depends on what day you catch me on,” Heads said with a chuckle,
as to what is more difficult, the clean and jerk or the snatch. “(The
clean and jerk) has more weight, but the snatch is a faster movement.”
Sydney may have been her first Olympics, but not her last.
Heads currently trains with coaches Stephanie and Tony Ciarelli for a
shot at the 2004 Summer Games in Athens, Greece, where she hopes to apply
what she learned from Sydney.
“It was definitely a learning experience for me,” Heads said. “I
enjoyed the opening ceremonies. It was a celebration of what I had
achieved in just making the Olympic team.”
Heads met gold medalist Marion Jones, among other athletes, on the
field during the opening ceremonies, which she said gave her inspiration.
But the road to Athens includes the World Championships, Nov. 17-24 in
Warsaw, Poland.
To get ready for the World Championships, Heads said she spends two
hours a day five to six days a week lifting in addition to some form of
cross-training.
She has grown accustomed to training with the Ciarellis, whom she
trained with in high school, before graduating in 1995.
Tony Ciarelli is, once again, the Sailors’ defensive coordinator after
a five-year term as head football coach at his alma mater, Huntington
Beach.
Stephanie Ciarelli is one of the highly regarded female coaches in the
country, and one of the few with Olympic-style credentials, Heads said.
Returning to Costa Mesa to train with the Ciarellis in October, 2000
was “a no-brainer,” Heads said.
“I sought (Tony) out definitely,” Heads said. “Tony has got my work
cut out for me with sprints, speed work and agility. The weight and
repetitions are increasing each week.”
Heads began weightlifting in 1991 when she was a freshman at Newport
Harbor, when she met Tony Ciarelli, who also coached Heads’ 25-year-old
sister, former Newport Harbor track and field and basketball standout and
national age-group weightlifting champion, Gina Heads. “(Gina) was an
amazing athlete and an inspiration to me,” Cara Heads said. “She was one
of the shortest people on our teams, but rebounded like crazy. I learned
how to do everything from her.”
Tony Ciarelli recognized Cara Heads’ weightlifting ability and, before
she knew it, she was competing in weightlifting competitions in Venice
and Long Beach.
“It just took off from there,” Heads recalled.
Heads, who also played two seasons of basketball for Newport Harbor,
enjoyed success as a prep discus thrower.
As a senior, Heads posted the fifth-best discus throw in Orange County
history to that point, 149-feet, 5-inches in the CIF state preliminaries
to qualify second. She finished fifth in the finals with a best of 140-7,
the same distance she threw to win the Sea View League title by nearly 22
feet.
Heads competed in high school while enduring two knee surgeries (one
on each knee) in 1992 and 1994, with one surgery to repair a torn
meniscus.
“Now my knees are great,” Heads said. “Thank goodness I’ve had no
problems throughout training.”
During her days as a Sailor, Heads learned to balance her athletics
with academics and her social life.
“At 6 or 6:30 in the morning, I would have basketball practice and
weightlifting,” Heads recalled. “I was really committed to doing well and
being successful. I learned a lot from all the experiences with two or
three different sports, maintaining good grades and having a positive and
productive social life. I learned how to handle multiple things at one
time and do them well.”
In January, Heads will return to UC Berkeley for her junior year. She
began at Berkeley in the fall of 1995, but left in January 1997 for
Savannah, Ga., to train with female weightlifters.
She hasn’t declared a major yet, but said her interests are in
communications, television production and management.
Heads lives with her parents, Cathy and Larry Heads, in Costa Mesa and
looks forward to possibly taking some dance classes, catching up with
friends, reading and cooking when she has free time, something somewhat
new to Heads.
“With weightlifting, you don’t have the opportunity to do as many
things as you would like,” Heads said.
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