Spartan cheerleaders advance to ICCA State Championships in January


Mandie Gaines photo
St. Joseph-Ogden’s cheerleading team opened its season with a second-place finish. The performance earned the Spartans a berth at the ICCA State Championships.


by Clark Brooks
The Sentinel


PONTIAC - The music hit, the count started, and for 2.5 minutes in a Pontiac gym, everything the St. Joseph-Ogden cheerleaders had trained for came down to clean landings, steady grips and unbroken focus. When it was over, the Spartans did not need a scoreboard to know they had delivered. The judges confirmed it soon after, awarding SJO a second-place finish and a ticket to the ICCA State Championships.

The runner-up showing came Dec. 6 at the team’s first competition of the season in Pontiac and earned the Spartans a berth at state on Jan. 10 at the Bank of Springfield Center in Springfield. It is a familiar stage for much of the roster. Last January, SJO finished 20th out of 31 teams at the ICCA Small Varsity state competition, facing a field that included area programs such as Oakwood, which placed 10th, along with Salt Fork and St. Thomas More.


Mandie Gaines photo
Photo courtesy Mandie Gaines

SJO cheer team poses with their second place trophy from the Pontiac Invitational.

This year’s squad is young but seasoned. The roster features no seniors, with leadership coming organically from a group heavy on sophomores and juniors who already know what state-level pressure feels like. Rather than naming captains, the team relies on experience and inclusion.

Photo courtesy Mandie Gaines
“The team naturally looks to the older athletes during decision-making,” coach Ava Meyer said. “That said, the girls are incredibly inclusive and open to ideas from every member of the team.”

That collective approach matters in a sport where there is no margin for error. Competitive cheer offers one uninterrupted routine, no timeouts, no substitutions and no second chance. Every stunt, tumbling pass and eight-count must land cleanly, or points disappear quickly.

Meyer said preparation since Pontiac has been detailed and deliberate.

“We’re focusing on the judges’ feedback from our last competition in Pontiac and applying those notes to our routine,” she said. “We’re breaking things down piece by piece, leveling up our stunts, and continuing to clean and perfect every section of the routine.”

The demands of competitive cheer stretch well beyond what many casual observers realize. Athletes must blend tumbling skills that range from cartwheels to standing tucks, explosive power for jumps, upper-body strength for stunting, flexibility for clean lines and the endurance to maintain performance quality for the full routine. Precision, timing and facial expression are scored alongside difficulty and safety, leaving little room for lapses.

Photo courtesy Mandie Gaines

Meyer sees those demands shaping more than just routines.

“This team is unbelievably supportive of one another, and there is never a dull moment when they’re together,” she said. “Their enthusiasm for learning new skills is infectious, and they constantly push themselves, and each other, past what they thought they could achieve.”

Consistency, she added, is what separates strong teams from great ones.

“Being a competitive cheer team takes drive, effort, and an incredible amount of energy,” Meyer said. “When even one of those elements dips, it becomes visible in the routine, which is why I’m so proud of how consistently this team shows up with all three.”

In her first year coaching the Spartans, Meyer said the season-opening performance only reinforced her confidence in the group.

“I have never seen so much talent and determination in a single team,” she said. “These girls continue to grow and excel in everything they do. I couldn’t have asked for a better group.”

The roster includes juniors Iris Davis, Ava Smoot, Faith Jackson, Leah Gaines and Peighton Reim; sophomores Abby Reynolds, Addison Walsh, Samantha Ryan and Sorena Welsh; and freshmen Addison Wright and Presley Ideus.




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Commentary |
Waiting rooms of a nation: Inside Assam’s competitive exam culture


oursentinel.com viewpoint
Reforms in examination security, stronger digital safeguards, transparent score disclosures, and third-party audits are necessary.


by Dhritee S. Goswami, Guest Commentator




oursentinel.com viewpoint
In Guwahati, long after public libraries close for the night, the lights remain on inside private coaching centres along GS Road. Rows of young men and women, many holding postgraduate degrees, sit preparing for examinations that promise not ambition, but stability. In Assam, competitive recruitment exams have become less a ladder of opportunity and more a prolonged waiting room.

As of February 2025, over 21 lakh educated individuals were registered with Assam’s employment exchanges. The figure understates the reality, excluding thousands who never formally register. Against this backdrop, recent departmental recruitment notifications offering a few hundred posts illustrate the stark arithmetic candidates face. Competitive examinations, under such conditions, become exercises conducted under extreme scarcity.

It is within this landscape that the long-running Assam Public Service Commission (APSC) recruitment scandal must be understood. Investigations into the 2013 and 2014 Combined Competitive Examinations uncovered manipulated marks, duplicate answer scripts, and the selection of non-meritorious candidates. The Justice B.K. Sharma inquiry commission documented “widespread anomalies” and recommended scrapping selections from that period to restore institutional integrity.

Former APSC chairman Rakesh Paul, arrested in 2016, was convicted in July 2024 for fraudulent recruitment of Agricultural Development Officers and sentenced to fourteen years’ imprisonment. Other commission members were also convicted, while dozens of selected candidates, including ACS and APS officers, were arrested, suspended, or dismissed. Yet the case has not reached a clean conclusion.

In June 2025, the Gauhati High Court ordered the reinstatement of 52 dismissed officers, citing procedural violations under Article 311 of the Constitution. The Assam government has challenged the ruling in the Supreme Court, arguing that it undermines confidence in merit-based recruitment. The episode reflects an unresolved tension between procedural safeguards and institutional credibility, a tension experienced not only in courtrooms but by aspirants preparing for current examinations.

For candidates, these developments generate uncertainty beyond syllabus and strategy. When past selections remain legally contested years later, trust in the examination system becomes fragile.

This fragility exists alongside a constrained employment environment. Assam recorded 7.94 per cent GDP growth in 2024–25, among the fastest in the country. The state’s GSDP reached ₹6.43 lakh crore, with rising per capita income and increased infrastructure spending. Yet macroeconomic growth has not translated into proportionate formal employment for graduates.

Private-sector opportunities remain limited, largely concentrated in retail, banking, telecommunications, and services. Manufacturing capacity is modest, while traditional sectors such as tea, petroleum, and agriculture offer limited expansion in white-collar roles. For graduates in humanities, commerce, and increasingly even sciences, government employment emerges not as one option among many, but as the primary route to middle-class security.

The cost of waiting accumulates quietly. A typical aspirant may spend six or more years cycling through prelims, mains, interviews, and age limits, often underemployed or financially dependent. Families invest heavily in education with delayed returns. Multiplied across thousands, the social cost becomes evident: human capital remains locked in preparation rather than productive deployment.

According to official data, over 33 lakh people in Assam are registered as unemployed, including 7.29 lakh graduates and more than one lakh postgraduates. While labour surveys indicate declining unemployment rates, these figures largely reflect informal and self-employment. They do not resolve the structural mismatch between higher education output and formal sector absorption.

The persistence of this mismatch explains the continued expansion of the coaching industry, even as vacancies decline. Coaching centres thrive not on optimism, but on scarcity. Preparation itself becomes a parallel economy, sustained by families investing in increasingly uncertain outcomes. Reforms in examination security, stronger digital safeguards, transparent score disclosures, and third-party audits are necessary. The Public Examinations Act of 2024 proposes national standards that may reduce vulnerabilities. Yet safeguards alone address symptoms rather than the underlying pressure.

More durable solutions lie in diversifying pathways to stability: industry-linked apprenticeships, skill certification with market value, district-level startup ecosystems, and limited lateral entry into public service. Assam has made some progress, with over 1,400 DPIIT-recognised startups and the creation of a ₹200-crore venture capital fund. Scale and regional reach, however, remain limited.

The waiting rooms remain full because alternatives remain uncertain. Until government employment becomes one respectable option rather than the singular marker of success, the pressure that distorts institutions will persist. Competitive examinations will continue to carry not just aspiration, but the weight of an entire generation’s expectations.

Perhaps the question is not how to make the queue move faster, but whether the queue itself represents the right model.



About the author ~

Dhritee has tried other cities and cuisines, but nothing beats her mom's home cooking — a hill she's willing to die on. Armed with her parents' advice to never lose her financial footing and a belief that education is basically prescription lenses for reality, she spends her time connecting dots other people don't see. She's convinced that learning isn't just about getting ahead, it's about learning to actually look around.




TAGS: government employment is one option, fragility exists alongside a constrained employment environment, six-plus years are wasted satisfying government requirements, unresolved tension between procedural safeguards, exams are not a ladder of opportunity


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