Go to the WSSA home page How to find information on this web site Go to the WSSA home page Contact WSSA
Reach WSSA by email
About the WSSA WSSA Tournaments and Events WSSA Rules and Regulations WSSA Results & Records
Home > Results & Records > Hall of Champions : Champions Up Close  
 
  CHAMPIONS UP CLOSE
  Nate Florea
  Emily Fox
   
  Hall of Champions
World Record Holders
  2003 Champions
  2004 Champions
  2005 Champions
   
   
 
 
How I learned to stack...

I learned how to sport stack in first grade at The Classical Academy in Colorado Springs. At first I wasn’t very good at it. But in third grade, my parents bought me a set of Speed Stacks, and I started practicing at home.

That year at the Rocky Mountain Regional Championships at the United States Air Force Academy, I took first place in the Cycle Stack for third graders with a time of 11.77 seconds. When I told my teacher that I’d won my grade division, she was totally surprised! I was kind of quiet in class, and she didn’t know how fast I’d gotten.

The following school year, my teacher went to work for Speed Stacks and invited me to be on the Speed Stacks International Demonstration Team that traveled around the country showing people how to stack. It’s hard for me to remember all the places I’ve gone. I know I’ve been to:

  • San Francisco, California;
  • Boise, Idaho;
  • Albuquerque, New Mexico;
  • Battle Creek, Michigan
  • Washington D. C.
  • Nova Scotia

and being on the Speed Stacks Demo Team and stacking for intense hours at different conferences, definitely helped make me a lot faster. You get a ton of practice, because you’re stacking for hours straight!

 
Becoming a champion...

This past year at the 2005 World Sport Stacking Championships in Denver, Colorado, I practiced a lot so I could try and win an overall trophy in either the 3-3-3, 3-6-3 or Cycle. I didn’t care if I won first; I just wanted an overall trophy for finishing in the top 10. My best place before was 15th overall in the Cycle in 2004.

When I was warming up in the morning at the Denver Coliseum, my times were pretty fast for being so early in the morning. Then when I felt good enough to go get my times to qualify for the Finals, the judge said it was the fastest time in the Cycle he’d seen all day at 8.86 seconds. I ended up being ranked first in the 12-year-old division in the Cycle and 3-3-3 heading into the Finals. 

In the 3-3-3 finals, I did really bad. I scratched on my first two runs, and then fumbled a lot on my final attempt to get a 7.16. I’d gotten times in the low 2-seconds in warm-ups. That placed me 10th out of 10 in my age group.The Finals for the Cycle were a few minutes away, so I found an open StackMat and started practicing. Again, I had to wait for nine other stackers to go in my age division. Right before I went up to the judges’ table in the Finals, I was warming up at the practice table and got 8 seconds flat—my new personal record!


When I tapped the StackMat timer and looked at the clock I was really excited — it read 7.96! At that point, I didn’t know that I had just won the World Championship in the Cycle.

I wasn’t that nervous when I was finally called, because I knew I could do well. My first two runs went okay. I knew the time to beat in my age division was 8.26 seconds. Once I started my final run, I knew it was going to be pretty good. It didn’t feel like I was that fast, but when I tapped the StackMat timer and looked at the clock I was really excited—it read 7.96!

At that point, I didn’t know that I had just won the World Championship in the Cycle. But my friends and I started jumping around. Everybody was very excited for me, especially when we found out that I had the fastest time out of 1,000 stackers from six countries at the World Championships.

Getting my overall Cycle trophy that night was really cool. My teacher from The Classical Academy who had taught me how to sport stack gave it to me in front of a lot of people cheering. Plus, my team, the Falcons, won first place in the Cycle relay and third in the 3-6-3 relays for our age group. I also placed fifth overall in doubles stacking with my teammate Joe Sales.

Since winning the World Championship trophy, I’ve been interviewed on national TV and in some magazines.

 
 
 

 

 
  Nate writes an on-going column for e-STACKS!, the e-newsletter for Speed Stacks and you can read all his entries in the "Nate Files" on SpeedStacks.com.  
     
 

 
   

World Sport Stacking Association
All Content Copyright © 2002-2008 World Sport Stacking Association. Content may only be used with the written permission of the World Sport Stacking Association.

Web site: WorldSportStackingAssociation.org

Contact:
Telephone 1-303-962-5672
Fax 1-303-962-5650
Reach by email

Address:
P.O. Box 630526; Highlands Ranch, CO 80163-0526