What A Day - The HBCU Vaulting Into Gymnastics History
Episode Date: February 21, 2023Fisk University made history in January when it became the first historically Black college to launch a women's gymnastics program. Head coach Corrinne Tarver tells us about her journey from being the... first Black gymnast to win an all-around NCAA title, to training the next generation of trailblazers.Fisk University made history in January when it became the first historically Black college to launch a women's gymnastics program. Head coach Corrinne Tarver tells us about her journey from being the first Black gymnast to win an all-around NCAA title, to training the next generation of trailblazers.Show Notes:Fisk University Gymnastics (Instagram) – https://www.instagram.com/fiskugymnastics/Fisk University Gymnastics | Donate – https://www.fisk.edu/fisk-athletics/support-gymnastics/What A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcastCrooked Coffee is officially here. Our first blend, What A Morning, is available in medium and dark roasts. Wake up with your own bag at crooked.com/coffeeFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/whataday/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Tuesday, February 21st. I'm Juanita Tolliver and this is What A Day.
This Black History Month, the What A Day team is excited to bring you stories about black history
that are happening in real time. And we're excited to follow up our recent conversation
about the Netflix documentary Descendant with an exciting story about the Fisk University
gymnastics team. Wait, you didn't know that Fisk had a gymnastics team?
Well, let me clue you in.
And this was a personal story for me, y'all,
as a Tennessee girl who loves gymnastics.
For our listeners who may not know,
Fisk University is a 157-year-old
historically black liberal arts college
in Nashville, Tennessee,
that enrolls about 1,000
students per year. And this athletic season, the Fisk University Bulldogs became the very first
HBCU gymnastics team to ever compete in the NCAA, which is huge. But with their incredible coach,
Corinne Tarver, it shouldn't be a surprise. Coach Tarver is not just any coach, y'all.
She was a powerhouse gymnast at the University of Georgia,
leading them to multiple team titles.
And she was the 1989 NCAA All-Around National Champion,
the first Black woman to ever win the title.
So she knows a thing or two about making Black history.
And on top of all of that legacy, she also serves as the Fisk University athletic director.
Honestly, I couldn't think of a better leader for Fisk Gymnastics in their inaugural season.
I had an opportunity to catch up with Coach Tarver between her gymnastics meets to dig into her historic gymnastics team and their season, as well as how now is a great
time for black girls in gymnastics when we have Olympians like Jordan Childs and Simone Biles,
and when black women filled the entire podium for the first time ever at the 2022 U.S. Gymnastics
Championship Tournament. I started by asking Coach Tarver what it feels like to be part of
that momentum and making black history in real time.
Take a listen to our conversation.
It's surreal.
You know, I tell people I knew that this was going to be a big deal.
I just didn't know it would be like this big.
It's necessary.
It was needed.
It's overdue.
But it was still more than I think any of us really expected to have like this much interest in a small college in Nashville with a thousand students.
You know, we're just kind of taking it one day at a time.
It's funny because we get recognized all over.
I don't remember the last time that we've flown that we haven't been recognized in the airport.
At first, the girls are like, that's so weird.
And that's so creepy that they just come up to us and said, no, you're a celebrity now.
This is what happens when you're a celebrity. And we love it. And we want that support. And we want
to bring awareness to HBCUs, to college gymnastics, to women of color in college gymnastics. We have
girls on other teams that have come up to either myself or other members of the team and thanked
us. Even though they love where they're going to school and they
love their gymnastics team and their future alma mater, they are so happy and so proud to have
Fisk Gymnastics be a part of the NCAA now. They're members of their team that said, hey, you know,
thank you for doing this. Thank you for paving the way for, you know, these future young black
gymnasts or minority gymnasts that want to do both an HBCU
and gymnastics. I appreciate that because it's a sign of respect. And so I hope your team and you
feel that because y'all are respected everywhere you go. And I'm glad that the other teams are
making it known. And I also want to recognize that you're no stranger to making history yourself
as the first black gymnast to win the all around NCAA title in 1989.
I got the chills watching clips of you from 1986 doing full layouts. Like you were doing
Simone Biles before Simone Biles, like the power, the structure, everything was there. And so
take me back to the beginning because I believe you started gymnastics at your local Y. Is that
right? Actually, I started a little bit before that.
It was like a Turner's.
But as far as like really starting, it was at a YWCA.
And we had to bring the equipment in and we had to put the equipment away every single practice because they also use it for basketball.
And they refused to dedicate the space just for gymnastics. eventually I kind of outgrew that and went to a gym that was just like a dedicated private club
that had the training and the knowledge to be able to bring athletes to the top level. I went from
six hours a week to 20 hours a week of training. I got out of school every day at one o'clock and
took the train from where I grew up in Mount Vernon, New York up to Stanford, Connecticut.
So I was crossing state lines every day. And then I walked and hopped on a bus that took me to
the gym. Wow. So knowing your journey, knowing your experience, knowing how much work you did
to get where you are, how does that inform how you mentor and train and coach your team at Fisk?
Well, for one thing, I don't accept anything less than your best because I know how hard I had to
work in order to do what I did.
And I also remind them that, you know, you put in all these years of club gymnastics,
all those hours to do this, to come and do college gymnastics. So do it well,
do it the best of your ability. Every single time you step out there and you should feel like you
did the best you could. And if you can walk away from the competition saying that, then, you know,
you've achieved your goal.
You know, we always want to do better than what we think we're capable of.
And there's a lot of girls on our team that are learning that, that they're capable of doing more than they think they are.
But that comes with experience.
That comes with learning.
We have a team of mostly freshmen.
So they had to learn what college gymnastics is about.
They had to learn how to pace themselves.
They have to learn how to compete on less training.
And they're not used to that.
So at first they kind of thought,
there's no way I can be successful
because we only trained two days this week.
That's okay.
We trained ourselves in the preseason
so that we don't have to do as much
because we never get out of shape.
We never stop.
And now they're learning,
oh, I can go up one day of practice
or two days of practice and be just fine. And you mentioned they're all freshmen. So as they're learning, oh, I can go up one day of practice or two days of practice and be just fine.
And you mentioned they're all freshmen. So as you're recruiting for 2023, they're going to be great mentors next year for the next class coming in.
So how is recruiting going and what are you most excited about when you have those two different years of athletes you'll be working with?
Well, we do have a couple of transfers. So a couple of upperclassmen. But it's funny because
I've had several of our freshmen come up to me and go, OK, coach. So for next year, when we come
in in the fall, we're going to make sure we do this and do this so that we can make sure that
we're ready. And I'm like, oh, you're starting to understand. I love that energy. You're starting
to figure it out. They're already looking at what they want to do differently next year or how they
want to approach things next year to make sure that they're ready.
Because they're like, we're not going to be getting these scores next year.
We're going to have more people.
We'll have more depth.
I'm like, I bet.
Right.
Like challenge accepted.
I said, so.
So now you understand what you need to do to make sure you are ready for competition.
Like, yeah, we got this.
And those freshmen coming in, they're going to help us and we're going to be ready and we'll be able to help them along.
And I'm like, all right.
We have a lot more to cover in this conversation, and we'll be right back after these ads.
This is What A Day and I'm Juanita Tolliver.
Let's jump back into my conversation with Fisk University gymnastics coach Corrine Tarver as we talk about other historically black colleges
and universities that might also be interested in starting
their own gymnastics teams.
The other people learning in this are not only me and the general public,
but other HBCUs who are watching y'all and potentially inspired to start their own program.
So what's your message to fellow HBCUs who are inspired but might not know exactly where to start?
You know, there have been quite a bit of inquiries just wanting to get information, just wanting to see.
I think a lot are doing a wait and see because, you know, when we announced last year and so a lot of people are like, oh, okay, let's see how this goes. And it blew up. And
they're seeing this and they're like, oh, wow, a small gymnastics program can get this kind of
hype. Obviously, it's not gonna happen for everybody. We're the first. But if you go out
there and do exciting gymnastics, people want to see. So when we do our floor routines, it's so hyped up and so good that
people are excited to see us. And it's kind of like that whole concept that people will go to
an HBCU football game to see the band, to see the majorettes. And that's kind of how we're starting
to become known is that our floor routines and our dance and our elevation of that choreography.
We're almost getting our own little niche when it comes to the sport of gymnastics. And you have been a showman from the beginning,
like every time you landed and stuck a move, like I'm just literally the way you just had pride in
your movements came through. And I'm sure everyone saw it. I mean, you won a national title. So of
course it did. And I'm sure that's translating into your team now. I was a ham. I loved having all the eyes on me. I mean, I just remember the
NCAAs that year that we won, I saluted and stepped on the floor and then the crowd roared because
somebody else from another team, like they were clapping and I stepped out of my starting pose
and I waited till it quieted down. I was like, OK, everybody eyes on me now.
And the funny thing is, is that as an adult, I was complete opposite.
If you talk to people who know me, they will be like, she's never in pictures or we have to force her to take a picture.
We have to force her to get in front of the camera because I was like, I'll be behind the camera.
I'll take your picture.
And I remember I used to always think I had my moment to shine.
You know, I mean, that was college.
That was my gymnastics career.
That was where I wanted to be front and center. I was like, I've done that. I've done that part of my career.
Now I'm okay stepping into the background and helping others to shine, helping other people
to get their moment, helping other people to be that ham that everybody wants to see.
So it's kind of interesting because now I've been thrust back into the front of the cameras,
interviews and stuff like that. And, you know, I don't mind it. It's not that I hate it, but it's just,
it's kind of ironic. I'm more about trying to help other people to have the fun I did. I mean,
I loved it every second of it. Like you said, you could see when I stepped out on the floor,
I absolutely loved what I was doing. And I want my athletes to have that same experience,
to love what they're doing, to know that because of how dynamic their tumbling is and how amazing their choreography is and their personalities, that everybody in that arena wants to see what they're doing.
In addition to loving what they're doing, I want to make sure that you and your team have what you need to do it well.
So how can the public support Fisk Gymnastics in the future?
We have fundraising
that's always going. Like I said, we are a small school. So that was one of the attractions is that
you could do it without having to break the bank. And we have to pay for things like, you know,
we don't want to go in vans. I want them to go on a bus. I want them to be able to have a bus
when we're at a meet. At the beginning of the season, we started out with vans and it was so
hard because with the luggage and everything else and people sitting with luggage on their laps. And I said, you know what? They don't deserve this. We need to treat them the season, we started out with vans and it was so hard because with the luggage and everything else and people sitting in with luggage on their laps.
And I said, you know what?
They don't deserve this.
We need to treat them the same as we would if we had a PWI.
So now it's like, you know what?
We're going to do buses.
Well, that's not cheap.
Right.
The difference between getting vans and a bus is probably about two to three thousand dollars every single weekend.
But also we are looking to build a gym on campus because right now we work out at a private club that we basically rent space.
But we are limited on when we can be in there.
And it's difficult with classes.
During the fall, we never had our team all together except on a Saturday or Sunday because the way classes where we could never get the entire team at the same time for more than a half an hour. And that's just really hard when you're trying to build a program
and you have so many new faces to try to build that, you know, sense of family and that camaraderie.
We want to give them the gym, the locker rooms, the training room, the offices and stuff like that.
We want to be able to give to these girls something similar to what they would have at a PWI.
But we're always trying to raise money for operating budgets. So
for travel, for, like I said, to get buses instead of vans, you know, even just getting
like some of the equipment that most people don't think about, like heat pads that I get
from one of my girls that has like her hip gets really tight. And so I got this hip thing that
she can put on that just keeps her warm without restricting her while she's, you know, waiting
for her turn to go. The massage guns, our girls use them constantly. We were having like five or
six that needed them. So having only one wasn't working. A lot of times people don't even realize
that those little things, how important they are. That was my conversation with Coach Corrine
Tarver, Athletic Director and Head Coach of the Fisk gymnastics team and the 1989 NCAA all
around champion.
And I'm so grateful to coach Tarver for being open and honest about what it
takes to build a team from the ground up at an HBCU.
Y'all she kept it 100 to learn more about the Fisk university gymnastics team.
Check them out on Instagram at Fisk U gymnastics,
where they also live stream some of their meets and check out our show notes for how you can support this growing team.
That's all for today's show.
If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review,
and tell your friends to listen.
What A Day is also a nightly newsletter,
so check it out and subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Juanita Tolliver, and let's go Fisk Bulldogs!
They're having a great season,
y'all. I hope y'all get to see them.
What a Day is a production of Crooked Media. It's recorded and mixed by Bill Lance.
Jazzy Marine and Raven Yamamoto are our associate producers. Our head writer is Jossie
Kaufman and our executive producer is Lita Martinez. Our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kashaka.