
Scotland's cheerleading team takes home gold at ICU World Championships
Scotland's national cheerleading team has had plenty to cheer about after clinching gold on the world stage.
The squad – made up of members from across the country – flew out to Orlando, Florida last month to compete in the annual International Cheer Union (ICU) World Championships.
Held at the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex, within the Walt Disney World Resort, they were joined by teams and individuals from 120 countries – all vying to be crowned victors.
This year, it was Team Scotland's turn to take home the crown, coming top in the Unified Adaptive Abilities Median Cheer category.
'It was such a great moment,' says team captain Joshua Craik.
'I was just unbelievably proud of everyone. Being able to watch them grow throughout the season and just develop, and being able to go and do what we planned to do – winning gold – completely topped it all off.
'It felt unreal. I don't know if there's going to be another feeling that's going to match it.'
The adaptive abilities unified cheer division brings disabled and non-disabled athletes together as one team. STV News Scotland's cheer team takes home gold from world championships in Florida
For the ICU World Championships, squads are required to be comprised of 25% or more athletes with a physical, sensory, or intellectual disability.
Team Scotland member Danielle Brown has been cheering for 22 years, but was told by doctors and physios that she would never be able to dance again.
'Clearly, I've proved them wrong,' she said.
'Being a part of Team Scotland and being a part of a unified team, especially in adaptive ability, it's just such an amazing feeling to be out there with a team that's from all across Scotland as well.'
Fellow team member Annie Headrick added: 'I never thought I could do it with my disability. I'm blind in one eye, so catching and tumbling aren't really my forte.
'But it worked out really well and they've been really supportive in helping me learn more with it as well.
'[The competition] was actually insane. Everyone was cheering everyone on. It was just really positive and we were all just sharing what we love, so it was really nice to be there.'
Cheerleading's popularity in the UK continues to grow, but often its status as a sport is overlooked.
It can be a dangerous activity due to the nature of routines, particularly those involving lifts and stunts; yet it still carries stereotypes that athletes have fought to dismiss over the years.
'It's so much harder than people realise,' says Team Scotland coach Victoria Orton-Bichener.
'Everyone comes to us and just says 'what sport are you cheering for?' or 'have you got your pom poms?' and all this sort of stuff, but we're here to show people that it's so much more than that.
'It's so difficult, the technical skills that these girls are performing, they're so hard and they take years to perfect. So we just want to show people what cheerleading can really be about.' STV News Cheerleaders 'unbelievably proud' after ICU victory
The International Olympic Committee finally recognised cheerleading as a sport in its own right back in 2021. It hasn't made it into the line-up of sports set to debut at the Los Angeles 2028 Olympics, but calls are now underway for it to be included in Brisbane 2032.
Here, sportscotland also granted cheerleading recognition as a sport in February 2025. Team Scotland hopes that this, along with their huge win in the US, will prompt more respect.
National team director Colette Cheape said: 'This is so important in recognising the tireless effort from athletes, coaches, officials, supporters. Over many years they've been working hard to gain the sport the respect that it deserves.
'It's shown the discipline and the athleticism and the commitment that's involved in the sport. Now that sportscotland have turned round and recognised us, that we are indeed a sport, it opens up so many more opportunities for us, and the growth and development of the sport.
'The future's looking really bright and we're really excited to see where it takes us.'
Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News
Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Herald Scotland
an hour ago
- The Herald Scotland
Host more events to inspire the next generation, says Neita
It will mark the first time that the UK has hosted a standalone major athletics championships since the 2017 World Championships in London, with Neita among more than 100 signatories of an open letter released this week calling for the showpiece event to return to the capital in 2029. Racing in front of a home crowd at Birmingham 2026 is an opportunity that Neita is relishing as she plays her part in trying to give athletics a spotlight in non-Olympic years. "I'm all for inspiring the next generation," she said. "I have an athletics community where I plan sports days and it's super important for me that young kids have the opportunity to be inspired by sport and see it live. "For people who watch us on television, to have the opportunity to come down and see us in person is brilliant. "That's what we need as a sporting country. We need this legacy of putting on top events more often." The past two London Athletics Meets have drawn in sell-out crowds and the 2025 event is no different, which Neita feels is part of a wider boom in interest. "This sport has been growing in the past few years and it's been great to be part of that evolution,' she added. "For so long there was this talk of athletics needing to be picked up and needing help to get more eyes on it, so it's great to see the amount of opportunities that are now coming through. "People are interested in it, we just need the exposure." The Birmingham 2026 ticketing information and timetable has now been unveiled, with 250,000 tickets to go on sale in September, and prices starting from just £10 for adults. Neita won 100m European bronze at Munich 2022 before adding 200m silver to her name two years later in Rome. But even with two relays golds from the continental championships in 2018 and 2024, the sprinter is still eager for her first-ever individual major title and feels confident she will finally bring it home in Birmingham. "It feels to be like it's meant to be," she said. "I've done the bronze in the 100m and silver in the 200m, so the only other option is for me to win double gold. "That's how I see it and there's no better place to do it than at home. "That British cheer is definitely what can get me onto the podium again. "I've made an adjustment in terms of my training set up and the plan is that by next summer I will be raring and ready to go. I'm feeling really confident."

South Wales Argus
an hour ago
- South Wales Argus
Host more events to inspire the next generation, says Neita
It will mark the first time that the UK has hosted a standalone major athletics championships since the 2017 World Championships in London, with Neita among more than 100 signatories of an open letter released this week calling for the showpiece event to return to the capital in 2029. Racing in front of a home crowd at Birmingham 2026 is an opportunity that Neita is relishing as she plays her part in trying to give athletics a spotlight in non-Olympic years. "I'm all for inspiring the next generation," she said. "I have an athletics community where I plan sports days and it's super important for me that young kids have the opportunity to be inspired by sport and see it live. "For people who watch us on television, to have the opportunity to come down and see us in person is brilliant. "That's what we need as a sporting country. We need this legacy of putting on top events more often." The past two London Athletics Meets have drawn in sell-out crowds and the 2025 event is no different, which Neita feels is part of a wider boom in interest. "This sport has been growing in the past few years and it's been great to be part of that evolution,' she added. "For so long there was this talk of athletics needing to be picked up and needing help to get more eyes on it, so it's great to see the amount of opportunities that are now coming through. "People are interested in it, we just need the exposure." The Birmingham 2026 ticketing information and timetable has now been unveiled, with 250,000 tickets to go on sale in September, and prices starting from just £10 for adults. Neita won 100m European bronze at Munich 2022 before adding 200m silver to her name two years later in Rome. But even with two relays golds from the continental championships in 2018 and 2024, the sprinter is still eager for her first-ever individual major title and feels confident she will finally bring it home in Birmingham. "It feels to be like it's meant to be," she said. "I've done the bronze in the 100m and silver in the 200m, so the only other option is for me to win double gold. "That's how I see it and there's no better place to do it than at home. "That British cheer is definitely what can get me onto the podium again. "I've made an adjustment in terms of my training set up and the plan is that by next summer I will be raring and ready to go. I'm feeling really confident."


BBC News
a day ago
- BBC News
'Crazy' - Derbyshire runs fifth-best British time
Great Britain's Seamus Derbyshire said becoming the fifth-fastest British man ever to run the 400m hurdles is "mind-boggling".The 25-year-old clocked 48.47 seconds at a meeting in Prague on Monday to not only smash his personal best but also make the qualification standard for the World Championships in Tokyo later this Akabusi set the British record of 47.82 set at the Barcelona Olympics in 1992."It was point eight of a second quicker than I've ever run before, which you don't get to be like that very often," Derbyshire said."So I knew it was good, but it was crazy and I was in shock. I couldn't comprehend it in the moment." 'I'd never believe it in a million years' Commonwealth Games 400m hurdles bronze medallist Alastair Chambers, Joshua Fauldes, a bronze medallist, along with Chambers, in the 4x400m mixed relay at the European Indoor Championships in February, and European U20 4x400m relay champion Jake Minshull have all run sub-49 seconds this year, with Derbyshire now top of the list. The City of Stoke Athletics Club member, and silver medallist at the European Under-20 Championships in 2019, also moved past Chambers in the all-time British list."The event is in such a strong place in the UK at the moment," Derbyshire told BBC Radio Stoke. "So that, as a stat, is mind-boggling."I started athletics 11 years ago and if you'd told me then this is how good I could potentially be I would never ever believe it in a million years. "It's like living the dream."Only Chris Rawlinson, David Hemery, David Greene and Akabusi have run faster than Derbyshire , externalwho is open-minded about how close he can get to the British record."I'm making my way up and I've jumped from 29th to 5th and it's a huge leap in one race," Derbyshire said."My training has been different to what I've done before and that has kept me quite fresh. "Everything I was doing was suggesting I was getting quicker and stronger. It's the first year with a new coach and training set-up, so who knows?" 'This is your line in the sand' Derbyshire's performance in the Czech Republic came after he effectively had a year out of the sport in 2024 to have a break from "all the pressure and stress of competing".He came fifth in the 400m at the UK Championships in February and was part of Team GB's 4x400m relay squad at the European Indoors in March."Our main aim was getting back into the European circle and enjoying what I was doing and I did that really well indoors," Derbyshire said."I just want that to translate into outdoors."I had a bit of a messy run the week before [Prague] but I think it really helped me lock in. I really was like, 'OK, this is your bench[mark], start like this is your line in the sand, like you know what you can improve on.'"It fuelled the performance for the week after because I was very determined to do something I felt was more representative of myself."Derbyshire said his run "felt incredible" and like a bit of a "blur"."Even though it was so much quicker than I've ever run before, it just felt effortless to some degree - so I knew I was running well," he added."But then when I saw the time, I was like, 'Wow.'" LA 2028 would be 'kind of crazy' Derbyshire's time makes him eligible for selection for the World Championships in Japan in can further enhance his claim for a place by finishing in the top two at the UK Championships in Birmingham in August."It would be great to get picked [but] nothing is guaranteed," Derbyshire said. "The event is in such a good place, I genuinely believe there's more boys that are capable of it. "We celebrated the high, but it doesn't mean the work is over. "It takes a lot of pressure off for the rest of the season, so it's now just making sure I continue performing well and try and pull out some of my best performances at the British Championships come August."Beyond that, Derbyshire said making the Olympic Games in Los Angeles in 2028 is his "long-term plan"."I would love to to go to the Olympics. I feel like that is sort of the ultimate for everyone," he added. "Once you're an Olympian, they can't take that away from you."I'll be 28-years-old, so in terms of handling it, that's like a really good age - you're starting to come towards like your peak."It's a really good thing to get me towards that goal. I'd love to be an Olympian. I just think that would be kind of crazy."