Transcript
LILY
It is quite unique that I have self-motivation to wake up at 4:30 in the morning and go to the rink. I’ve always wanted to be a skater since I was about three. But my mum wouldn’t let me because she thought I was a bit too young.
MUM
For her seventh birthday, we bought her an ice skating lesson. It was only ever going to be a half hour lesson. At eight, she’d already decided this was what she was wanting to do. She wanted to be the best that she could be. She wanted to be a British champion, and then she wanted to do European’s and World’s, and ultimately, of course, it will be the Olympics.
She makes all the decisions. She dictates how much she wants to train. Everything is driven by her, and I don’t know where it comes from. Just something within her. It’s not genetic. It is just Lilly.
CATHERINE HUDSON
OK. That’s tine. One more time. I really like the fact that when you did the Mohawk, there was a really strong push there before you went into it, OK? As you step forward –
NARRATOR
The reason Lily and her mum decided to come to the ice rink in Blackburn is so she can be trained by former Olympic competitor Catherine Hudson.
CATHERINE HUDSON
She’s super talented. You ask her to jump, she wants to do it twice. Tell her it’s time to get off, she wants to stay on longer. She’s brilliant.
NARRATOR
Catherine has been training Lily now for two years.
CATHERINE HUDSON
Many of the girls she’s competing with have literally grown up on skates. They’ve started as toddlers and gone through, or even started at five or six. So she’s got a lot of years of just trying to catch up.
The more you train everything for speed, the more confidence you’re going to have in the competition to do it. Because it’s more normal, isn’t it? Yeah?
MADELINE
I want to see tight knees, heels coming off the floor first.
This is the painful bit.
NARRATOR:
Giving Genevieve another advantage is that she’s trained three times a week in this gym by a national gymnast champion from Bulgaria – her mum, Madeline.
MADELINE
Genevieve, shoulders back. If you’re going to be sitting, sit up. Higher, higher, higher.
GENEVIEVE
I’ve been coming to gym since I was three, because I remember being in one of them baby carriers on the bench. And I come three times a week.
MADELINE
It is difficult being a coach and a mum at the same time, because I know when we go to the ring, she wants me to praise a lot more. I tend to focus a lot more on her mistakes and what needs improving. And I know she wants a lot more of me to be a mum and a lot more to say, well done and you did well. Which I try to, but we’ve got an understanding that when there’s something that needs correcting, I’ve got to tell her as well.
Genevieve, faster! Knee in tighter – it’s too slow.