What are the cheerleaders?
Cheerleading singing is practiced and performed by cheerleaders at all levels, from youth recreational sports to professional football and basketball. They often follow rhythmic patterns and are used to inspire players and fans. They can be accompanied by dances or movements performed in the pyramids or dancing and often containing spelling or rhyming. Simple scandaling of cheerleaders can follow this formula: "Give me t! Give me e! Give me and give me a m! Go Team!" This kind of singing can be called one cheerleader, accompanied by inscriptions with an inscription, or separately in front of the crowd, a way of calling and answers. Unlike the simple "go, team, win!" Sing, more complicated cheers may sound like: "Pride and the Ghost / Go team, we hear it! / Better than before / because we want it more!" These cheerleaders are usually not carried out with pieces and can contain cheerleaders in line, waving pom-poms, clapping hands or moving into formations.
other cheerleading singing may not have anything to do with a team or game and serve as a source of extra adrenaline for fans, players and cheerleaders. These singings can be stupid or fun and are usually done with noisy dances or playful to health. One example is: "You're good and I'm not facing/ I didn't have you on bacon/ I'll give me p-i-g/ what is the magic? Piggy!"
Cheerleading chanting can take the form of a school song or cheering, such as "fight on, ole" East High School/ Fight on With Steam! "They may include school points or Pride team, or may playfully offend or joke a despised opponent. They may be a simple urge to get on noisy and some cheerleaders don't even have real words like simple" rah, rah rah! "
Cheerleading Scants, such as these, are usually reserved for half times, breaks and time outs during the competition. Can be forLeaded on the side line of a football match or outside the border on a basketball pitch during an event or on a pitch to encourage fans during boring time outputs. They are used by young girls or boys in eight or ten -year recreational teams who have learned and practiced cheerleaders in high school and were competitively performed by university cheerleaders. Even the most famous team of cheerleaders in the world, the cheerleaders of Dallas Cowboys, employ cheerleaders in games and performances.