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    Home Sports National Canada native promotes full-contact jousting in US
    Canada native promotes full-contact jousting in US
    Sports National
    LAUREN BISHOP The Cincinnati Enquirer  
    October 5, 2010

    Canada native promotes full-contact jousting in US

     

    HARVEYSBURG, Ohio (AP) — On a sunny, early fall Saturday in
    Harveysburg, about 45 miles northeast of Cincinnati, a crowd of
    some 2,000 people has gathered around a fenced-in dirt area of the
    30-acre Ohio Renaissance Festival grounds.

    Gnawing on 1-pound roasted turkey legs or drinking from plastic
    cups, they gaze up at two large men sitting on even larger draft
    horses, facing each other from opposite ends of a 180-foot-long
    stretch. Each is wearing full armor and wielding an 11-foot lance
    made of solid Douglas fir.

    “Do you want to see two grown men hit each other with big
    sticks?” shouts Jason Armstrong, the armored knight serving as
    emcee for the show, from atop his horse.

    The crowd roars approval.

    Thus begins the full-armored, full-contact, unstaged sport of
    jousting, whose top players are betting that many more people are
    interested in watching grown men (and some women) hit each other
    with big sticks.

    They believe that jousting is poised to become the next big
    extreme sport, capable of attracting sponsors and television
    coverage not unlike mixed martial arts, thanks in part to a wave of
    interest created by a July New York Times Magazine article.

    Harveysburg could be the center of it all, thanks to Shane
    Adams. The 40-year-old Canadian is the reigning international
    jousting champion and a driving force behind the movement to launch
    jousting to national prominence. He now makes his home in
    Harveysburg.

    The road to Harveysburg began in Acton, Ontario, a small town
    about an hour west of Toronto. Adams grew up on a horse farm there,
    dreaming of becoming a knight ever since he first watched a Robin
    Hood movie with his grandmother.

    He realized his dream could become a reality when, at 16, he
    visited the Medieval Times dinner theater in Orlando. At 23, he
    left his full-time construction job when he was hired as a knight
    at Medieval Times in Toronto, in part because he looked the part:
    He stands 6-feet-4, has a long beard and a mane of wavy red hair
    almost as long as his horse’s. But the novelty of being a knight
    wore off.

    “After three years, I finally came to the realization that I
    wasn’t really living my childhood dream,” he says. “Instead of
    being a knight in shining armor, I was a knight in shining
    polyester and tinsel.”

    So Adams left Medieval Times to create his own Medieval-themed
    traveling road show, acquiring some light draft horses and a
    150-pound suit of armor to stage choreographed jousts.

    In 1997, a promoter contacted him to represent Canada in the
    first international jousting championships at the Longs Peak
    Scottish-Irish Highlands Festival in Estes Park, Colo., which this
    year offered a $50,000 purse. Adams has been the grand champion
    there four years running.

    He had never competed in an un-choreographed joust, but Adams
    left Estes Park with four broken ribs, a broken hand, a broken
    wrist and the world championship belt. He says the English team
    told him they believed he had been “reincarnated” from a previous
    life as a medieval jouster.

    “They realized that it wasn’t just a fluke, that I had some
    innate natural ability to be able to hit somebody with a stick,” he
    says. “Hello, I’m Canadian! That’s all we got to hit people
    with.”

    Of course, there’s much more to full-contact jousting than
    hitting somebody with a stick. Jousters must be skilled equestrians
    with a keen sense of aim and timing and unafraid to hit and be hit
    at 20 to 25 miles per hour.

    Assessed by a panel of judges as they make four passes, jousters
    receive one point for a strike to a metal chest plate called a
    grand guard; five points for a broken lance, and 10 points for the
    ultimate goal: Unhorsing an opponent.

    “This is jousting. You’re going to get hurt. It’s just a matter
    of when and how bad,” says Adams, whose has jousted at various
    times with a fractured scapula, hand and thumb bone.

    As for medical treatment and insurance: “I’m Canadian. I go
    across the border every six months,” Adams says.

    Adams left Canada in 2005 to promote full-contact jousting in
    the U.S., settling in Harveysburg after falling in love with the
    Ohio Renaissance Festival, one of the five largest in the country.
    He and his wife, Ashli, whom he met when she was managing the
    famous Stanley Hotel in Colorado, married there three years ago and
    now have a 2-year-old daughter, Paige.

    He says he likes that his new Ohio home is just four hours from
    the border and centrally located to other Renaissance festivals. He
    and his 20-member troupe, the Knights of Valour, travel to about 20
    other fairs every year with their horses; Adams says he has rescued
    most of his from slaughterhouses or farms.

    The Knights of Valour is one of about four troupes of about 100
    worldwide that do full-contact jousting, Adams says. Most others
    use lances tipped with balsa wood to lessen the impact of the
    hits.

    People flock to their jousts for the same reason they go to
    NASCAR events in the hopes of seeing crashes, or hockey games in
    the hopes of seeing fights, Adams says. Knights in shining armor
    atop beautiful steeds provide another element of attraction, he
    says.

    “It doesn’t matter if you’re a 5-year-old boy or an 80-year-old
    man, you’ve thought about being a knight someday, or being that
    prince,” he says.

    “It’s the same for girls. What damsel out there doesn’t want to
    get rescued by a knight in shining armor? Charlie rescues one every
    weekend,” he continues, as fellow jouster Charlie Andrews walks
    into the knight’s encampment, essentially a shed where the knights
    store their gear and relax between shows.

    “Every show, what are you talking about?” cracks Andrews, a
    42-year-old former Navy SEAL and veteran of Operation Desert Storm
    and Operation Restore Hope in Somalia who wears his hair in a
    short, red-tipped Mohawk.

    A Utah native who jousts with a full-contact troupe called the
    Knights of Mayhem, Andrews is also one of the top competitive
    jousters today. He was the reserve grand champion in Estes Park
    this year.

    “Right now, the dominating force in the sport are guys like
    Charlie and I, who are basically 40-year-old men trapped in
    25-year-old Adonis bodies,” Adams says matter-of-factly.

    Andrews invites a visitor to feel his biceps as proof.

    “Superman wears Charlie pajamas,” he whispers.

    But the sport of the Middle Ages might not always be dominated
    by middle-aged men. This summer, Adams was contacted by equestrian
    college officials who wanted to know if he could train instructors
    so they could create intercollegiate competitive jousting
    teams.

    “You’ve got high school rodeos,” Adams says. “Why can’t you have
    high school jousting?”

    Evidence of jousting’s growing appeal is at the Renaissance
    festival last weekend. She’s 24-year-old Jessica Post of Radnor, a
    town of about 200 people 35 miles north of Columbus, and she’s been
    taking lessons from Adams for the past year, ever since she saw a
    demonstration at the 2009 Ohio Equine Affaire in Columbus. It was
    her third weekend jousting in front of a crowd.

    “I love the partnership you have with the horse. I love going up
    against someone at 5,000 psi (pounds per square inch), the
    adrenaline that goes through you,” says the tall, soft-spoken Post,
    who’s been horseback riding since she was 5 and also has experience
    in full-contact sparring. “It’s just fun.”

    Jousting lessons aren’t cheap. Adams charges around $100 an
    hour, but he also pays jousters $500 for a weekend that typically
    includes just a few hours performing in front of a crowd.

    Post says she’s able to afford lessons because she still lives
    at home and works full time, fortuitously, at an insurance company.
    With no serious injuries yet, she wants to devote as much time as
    possible to her hobby.

    “This has become my passion, so I hope there’s a future in it,”
    she says.

    Adams is certain that full-contact jousting has a future. After
    the New York Times Magazine article appeared online, he began
    fielding phone calls from production companies and television
    network presidents.

    Adams’ ultimate goal: To bring jousting back to its 13th and
    14th century glory, so that it’s widely recognized as a
    professional, elite, extreme equestrian sport.

    “It may not be able to beat out football, but jousting’s pretty
    damn exciting,” he says. “All you have to do is come out and see
    it.”

    ___

    Information from: The Cincinnati Enquirer,
    http://www.enquirer.com

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