High kick
The high kick is a traditional Inuit athletic event in which competitors attempt to strike a small, suspended sealskin ball or target with their foot or feet at progressively increasing heights, landing balanced on the same foot or feet used to kick, demonstrating exceptional agility, strength, and coordination.[1][2][3] Originating from Arctic indigenous hunting practices, the high kick served as a signaling method for successful hunts, where hunters would perform the motion from afar to alert their community to gather for processing the catch.[4][5] This cultural significance underscores its role in preserving Inuit heritage, as the games enhance physical skills essential for survival in harsh Arctic environments, including flexibility, endurance, and joint strength; as of 2024, athletes from regions like Greenland continue to compete and set records, fostering community bonds and cultural pride.[2][6] High kicks feature variants such as the one-foot, two-foot, and Alaskan high kick, and are prominently featured in events like the Arctic Winter Games (established 1970) and the World Eskimo-Indian Olympics (dating to 1961).[1][7] World records include 2.64 meters (8 feet 8 inches) in the two-foot high kick, set in 1988.Introduction
Definition and purpose
The high kick is a traditional Inuit athletic event that tests participants' balancing and agility skills, requiring athletes to strike a suspended target—typically a sealskin ball—with their foot at progressively higher elevations while landing and maintaining balance without falling.[8][9] The core objective is to reach the maximum height possible, showcasing explosive power and precise control in a single motion that simulates the demands of Arctic environments. Rooted in Inuit cultural traditions, this event highlights the physical prowess required for daily survival.[10] The primary purpose of the high kick is to demonstrate essential survival competencies, including strength, flexibility, coordination, and endurance, which were vital for activities like hunting and navigation in harsh northern conditions.[11] By emphasizing these attributes, the sport not only promotes physical fitness but also preserves cultural values of resilience and community cooperation among Inuit peoples.[8] Basic equipment for the high kick includes a self-supporting stand with an adjustable horizontal arm, from which a small soft target is suspended by a string or rope; the target is traditionally a sealskin ball stuffed with moss, though modern versions often use foam or stuffed fur for safety and accessibility.[9][8] The stand allows height adjustments up to approximately 10 feet (3 meters), ensuring a clear jumping area for competitors.[10][5] In a standard competition format, athletes are allotted three attempts per target height, with each attempt limited to 90 seconds; successful kicks lead to incremental height increases—typically 4 inches (10 cm) initially—progressing until elimination, at which point the remaining competitor is declared the winner.[8] Ties are resolved by comparing the fewest misses or through a kick-off round of three attempts at a slightly lowered height.[8] This structure ensures a fair and escalating challenge that rewards consistent performance.[10]Historical origins
The high kick originated in pre-colonial Inuit communities across the Arctic regions of Alaska, Canada, and Greenland, where it served as an essential training exercise for hunters to develop agility, balance, and endurance required for survival in harsh environments.[10] These practices, passed down through oral traditions, date back centuries as part of subsistence hunting cultures that relied on physical prowess for tracking and harvesting game. In traditional Inuit society, the two-foot high kick functioned as a vital communication signal during whale hunts, with a successful hunter performing the kick upon returning to the village to alert community members from a distance about the catch, prompting them to assist in processing the whale.[10] This method allowed for efficient coordination in remote coastal villages, where verbal shouts might not carry over long distances or windy conditions.[12] Over time, the high kick evolved from a practical hunting tool into a communal activity integrated into post-hunt festivals in northern Alaska during the 19th and early 20th centuries, where it symbolized triumph and fostered social bonds through competitive displays.[13] Its formalization as a structured sport occurred in the 20th century, notably with the founding of the World Eskimo-Indian Olympics in 1961 in Fairbanks, Alaska, which aimed to preserve and showcase traditional Inuit games amid encroaching modernization.[14][15] Colonization significantly impacted the practice, leading to a decline in the mid-20th century due to the cultural suppression enforced by residential schools, which separated Inuit children from their communities and discouraged traditional activities.[16] Revival efforts gained momentum in the 1970s through cultural preservation initiatives, including the establishment of events like the Arctic Winter Games in 1970, which promoted Inuit sports as a means of reclaiming heritage and strengthening community identity.[16]Cultural significance
Traditional role in Inuit society
In traditional Inuit society, the high kick served as a vital training tool for hunters, enhancing leg strength, balance, and endurance necessary for navigating treacherous Arctic ice, pursuing seals, and maintaining stability during long vigils at breathing holes. These skills were essential for survival in harsh environments, where agility helped prevent injuries that could jeopardize a family's food supply, and the game's demands mirrored the physical rigors of chasing caribou or polar bears across uneven terrain.[2][17] Socially, the high kick was performed during communal festivals and ceremonies, such as celebrations marking the return of the sun, a youth's first successful hunt, births, deaths, or victories in whaling, fostering bonds among villagers and highlighting skilled hunters to strengthen community cohesion. Inter-village competitions using the kick promoted resilience and collective pride, while the one-foot variant specifically signaled a successful hunt upon a hunter's return to the village, alerting others to assist in processing the catch.[2][4] The practice was inclusive across genders and ages, with women, elders, children, and men participating to develop and transmit essential survival competencies, ensuring cultural continuity in pre-colonial Inuit communities. Elders often guided younger participants, passing down techniques that built not only physical prowess but also mental fortitude.[2][17] Symbolically, the high kick embodied harmony with the Arctic environment, representing the Inuit's adaptive resilience to nature's challenges and the successful integration of human effort with the rhythms of hunting cycles, where feats of elevation and precision celebrated triumphs over the land and sea.[2][4][17]Modern preservation and education
Efforts to revive and preserve the high kick have integrated it into educational programs across Inuit communities in Alaska and Nunavut, emphasizing its role in cultural continuity. Since the 1970s, initiatives like the Native Youth Olympics (NYO), founded in 1971 by students at the Boarding Home Program School in Anchorage, have incorporated high kick events into youth training, drawing from traditional Alaska Native practices to foster physical and cultural skills among school-aged participants.[18] These programs have expanded into school curricula through resources developed by organizations such as the Alaska Native Knowledge Network, which provide instructional materials for teaching high kick variants as part of cultural education in Alaskan schools.[4] In Nunavut, similar integration occurs through programs like Nunavut Sivuniksavut, where students learn and demonstrate high kick techniques as a means of connecting with Inuit heritage.[19][20] Cultural organizations play a pivotal role in promoting the high kick internationally among Indigenous peoples. The Arctic Winter Games (AWG), established in 1970, feature high kick disciplines such as the one-foot and two-foot variants, bringing together athletes from circumpolar regions including Alaska, Canada, Greenland, and Scandinavia to celebrate and transmit Inuit traditions.[21] The International Council of Traditional Sports and Games (ICTSG) further supports these efforts by highlighting the high kick in global forums, aligning it with UNESCO Sustainable Development Goals for quality education, gender equality, reduced inequalities, and sustainable communities.[22] The high kick offers significant educational benefits, serving as a tool to combat youth obesity while preserving language and culture. Through NYO and AWG, participation promotes healthy lifestyles by building strength, endurance, agility, and coordination—essential for countering sedentary trends and obesity in Indigenous youth—while instilling positive self-esteem and leadership.[18] These programs also preserve cultural knowledge, with coaches emphasizing Inuit languages and stories during training, as seen in AWG events where athletes like Kyle Ḵaayák'w Worl credit the games with aiding personal recovery and cultural reconnection.[23] Workshops and demonstrations often contrast traditional survival uses of the high kick with modern sport adaptations, reinforcing intergenerational transmission of Inuit values.[22] Despite these advances, preservation faces challenges from environmental and structural shifts. Climate change, accelerating Arctic warming at approximately three times the global average rate, disrupts training by thinning sea ice and altering traditional hunting grounds, which historically informed high kick practices, as reported in Alaskan communities hosting AWG events.[23][24] Additionally, adapting the high kick to standardized competitive formats in events like NYO and AWG requires balancing its original non-competitive, communal roots with performance metrics, ensuring authenticity amid evolving youth interests. Recent events, such as the 64th World Eskimo-Indian Olympics in July 2025, continue to showcase the high kick, underscoring its enduring cultural role.[25][18]Variants
One-foot high kick
The one-foot high kick is a traditional Inuit athletic event that requires participants to demonstrate exceptional strength, agility, and balance. In this variant, the athlete begins with a run-up or standing start, jumps off both feet simultaneously, and uses the sole or heel of one foot to strike a suspended target while airborne. Upon contact, the athlete must land securely on the same kicking foot, maintaining balance without hopping or additional support, all within a limited time frame such as three minutes per attempt.[12][9][10] Competitions typically begin at a starting height of around 5 feet for adult divisions, with the target raised in increments of 4 inches after each round until only a few competitors remain, at which point adjustments may narrow to 1-4 inches for precision. Each athlete receives three attempts per height level; failure to strike the target three times results in elimination, continuing until a single winner achieves the highest successful kick. The current men's world record stands at 117 inches (9 feet 9 inches), set by Tim Field of Noorvik, Alaska, at the World Eskimo-Indian Olympics.[10][26][27] This event uniquely emphasizes single-leg stability and proprioception, skills historically vital for hunters navigating uneven Arctic terrain. Traditional performances employ a sealskin ball to honor cultural roots, while modern sport adaptations permit synthetic materials for durability and consistency in competitive settings.[17] Common faults leading to disqualification include falling or losing balance upon landing, using hands or the opposite foot for support, or striking the target with any part other than the sole or heel of the designated foot. These strict criteria ensure the event tests pure athletic control without external aids.[28][10]Two-foot high kick
The two-foot high kick is a traditional Inuit athletic event in which competitors approach a suspended sealskin ball—typically 10-12.5 cm long and 5-7.5 cm wide—with a run-up or walk-up, then jump off both feet simultaneously, touch the ball with both feet kept parallel while airborne, and land balanced on both feet without falling backwards.[29][10][12] This mechanic emphasizes coordinated explosive power from the legs and core to generate height and maintain control throughout the airborne phase and landing.[30] The event originates from coastal whaling practices, where such jumps signaled the success of a hunt to distant villagers.[10] In competition, the ball starts at a height of 4 feet (1.2 meters) and is progressively raised in 4-inch (10 cm) increments after each round, with athletes receiving up to three attempts per height and three minutes per attempt.[29][10] The height continues to increase until only a few competitors remain, at which point finalists may vote on smaller increments (1-4 inches) to determine the winner based on the highest successful touch.[10] The women's record in the Arctic Winter Games stands at 6 feet 5 inches (1.96 meters), achieved by Nicole Johnston of Alaska in 1994 at the Slave Lake, Alberta games; this mark remains unbroken as of official records.[31][32] Judging focuses on precise execution: the touch must be clean, the feet must remain parallel during contact, and the landing requires full balance on both feet with no loss of control, rolling, or supplementary jumps allowed.[10][12][29] Failure to meet these criteria results in a null attempt, underscoring the event's demand for not only vertical power but also stability and precision. The playing area is typically roped off to a minimum 10-foot (3 m) approach length for safety and focus.[29]Alaskan high kick
The Alaskan high kick, a traditional Indigenous game prominent in Alaska Native youth competitions, begins with the athlete seated on the floor with legs extended forward, grasping one foot with the opposite hand while balancing on the supporting hand. The athlete then leans back, using core and upper body strength to lift the body into a near-vertical position, and kicks a suspended ball with the sole of the free foot, ensuring the held foot remains gripped throughout. Upon contact, the athlete must return to the seated position without losing balance or allowing the buttocks to touch the floor prematurely, landing on the same side of the body from which the kick originated. This grounded execution tests flexibility, coordination, and body control rather than explosive jumping power.[33][34][26] In competitions, the ball is typically a sealskin or rubber sphere hung from a cord, starting at heights adjusted by age and gender—such as 24 inches for junior girls and 30 inches for junior boys in Native Youth Olympics events—then raised incrementally by 2 to 4 inches after each round based on successful kicks. Scoring rewards precise touches where the ball is clearly struck and the athlete maintains balance upon landing; three attempts are allowed per height, with elimination after three misses, and the competitor reaching the highest height declared the winner. Ties are resolved by fewer total misses or the earliest failure at a height. The event emphasizes reach and stability over aerial height, distinguishing it from jumping variants in Inuit agility traditions.[26][34][33] This variant highlights flexibility and upper body endurance, originating in confined subterranean dwellings where it developed coordination for survival tasks like sealing lamp wicks or marking ceilings with soot. It is a staple in Alaska Native games such as the Native Youth Olympics and World Eskimo-Indian Olympics, often accompanied by cultural narratives that connect the movements to ancestral stories of resilience and community. While the standard form uses the foot alone, rare adaptations may incorporate a stick for reach in non-competitive settings, though official rules mandate foot-only execution. The men's record at the World Eskimo-Indian Olympics is 96 inches, set by Brian Randazzo in 1984; recent winning heights include 94 inches by Parker Kenick in 2024 and 92 inches by Colton Paul in 2025, as of the 2025 World Eskimo-Indian Olympics.[33][26][35][25]Rules and techniques
General competition rules
In high kick competitions, such as those held at the Native Youth Olympics (NYO), World Eskimo-Indian Olympics (WEIO), and Arctic Winter Games (AWG), the event typically progresses through preliminary rounds where athletes attempt to kick a suspended target—often a small ball or seal skin—at incrementally increasing heights. Each participant receives three attempts per height, with the target raised by 4 inches after a successful round until fewer than five athletes remain, at which point increments may reduce to 2 inches; time limits per attempt are generally 1 minute in preliminaries and up to 3 minutes in finals.[26][10][36] The winner is determined by the highest successfully kicked height, with ties resolved by the fewest misses overall, the lowest height at which a miss occurred, or a sudden-death kick-off at 1 inch above the tied height.[26][10] Safety protocols emphasize injury prevention, with officials monitoring for unsafe behavior. Attire is minimal to ensure freedom of movement, permitting barefoot participation, mukluks, or soft-soled shoes.[37][26] Judging adheres to strict standards for fairness and authenticity, requiring athletes to maintain balance after landing without falling, touching the ground with additional body parts, or receiving assistance from spotters or coaches; violations such as improper landing result in immediate disqualification for that attempt. Officials enforce sportsmanlike conduct, with penalties for unsportsmanlike behavior or equipment tampering.[26][10][4] Competitions are divided by age and gender to accommodate participants, with youth categories typically under 18 (e.g., junior divisions for ages 6-12 and senior for 13-18 in NYO), adult/open classes for those 19 and older, and occasional senior divisions for athletes over 50 in events like WEIO; gender-specific categories exist for males and females, though mixed or adaptive modifications may apply for participants with disabilities under event-specific guidelines.[26][1][10]Techniques and training methods
Core techniques in high kick events emphasize coordinated body mechanics to generate power, reach, and stability, varying by variant. In the one-foot and two-foot high kicks, athletes jump off both feet (simultaneously for two-foot), strike the target with one or both feet, and land balanced on the kicking foot or feet, relying on explosive leg power, hip drive, and core stability for height and control. In the Alaskan high kick, performed from a seated position supported by one arm, hip rotation and oblique engagement propel the body upward to tap the target while grasping the non-kicking foot for leverage.[33][4] Ankle flexibility is particularly important in the Alaskan variant to facilitate controlled extension. Practitioners progress from basic drills, such as jumping and landing on one foot without a target, to incorporating low-height kicks before advancing to full competition levels.[38] Training regimens for high kick typically involve consistent flexibility and strength work to build the necessary athleticism. Daily stretching routines target hips and ankles, such as seated leg pulls.[39] Strength exercises focus on lower-body power and stability, such as deadlifts for leg and core development and balance work to simulate landing demands; for the Alaskan variant, handstands enhance upper-body control. Preparation for competitions often spans several years, with athletes dedicating regular sessions to refine technique and endurance.[33] Injury prevention centers on conditioning the knees and ankles through targeted balance and stability exercises. Single-foot landings strengthen supporting muscles, reducing strain during high-impact jumps and kicks.[38] Balance-focused drills, like maintaining poise on the kicking foot post-contact, help mitigate risks to lower extremities by improving proprioception.[33] Mental preparation incorporates focus-building strategies rooted in cultural context, such as visualizing the traditional role of the high kick as a signal of successful hunts to foster determination.[4] Coaches often integrate storytelling about Inuit hunting traditions during drills to enhance motivation and cultural connection, emphasizing trust in one's technique to avoid overthinking.[33]Competitions and achievements
Major events and organizations
The World Eskimo-Indian Olympics (WEIO), established in 1961 in Fairbanks, Alaska, serves as one of the premier annual competitions for traditional Native games, including all major variants of the high kick such as the one-foot, two-foot, and Alaskan high kick.[15] Organized by the World Eskimo-Indian Olympics nonprofit, the event attracts thousands of participants and spectators from Alaska and beyond each July, fostering cultural exchange and athletic excellence among Indigenous athletes.[40] High kick competitions at WEIO emphasize balance, strength, and precision, with athletes kicking suspended sealskin balls to progressively higher marks.[10] The Arctic Winter Games (AWG), a biennial circumpolar event launched in 1970, brings together athletes from northern regions including Alaska, Canada, Greenland, and Scandinavia to compete in Arctic sports, prominently featuring high kick variants alongside cultural demonstrations.[21] Governed by the Arctic Winter Games International Committee, the AWG rotates host locations across Arctic territories and integrates traditional games like the one-foot high kick, two-foot high kick, and Alaskan high kick to promote Indigenous heritage and physical activity.[1] These competitions highlight the sport's role in community building, with events drawing hundreds of Indigenous participants focused on cultural preservation.[21] In Alaska, the Native Youth Olympics (NYO), founded in 1983 by the Cook Inlet Tribal Council (CITC), provides a youth-oriented platform for high kick training and competition, emphasizing education, healthy lifestyles, and cultural pride among Alaska Native participants aged 7 to 18.[41] The annual NYO Games, held in Anchorage, feature high kick events including the one-foot, two-foot, and Alaskan variants, with regional qualifiers engaging over 2,000 youth statewide.[42] Organized under CITC's wellness programs, NYO integrates coaching and mentorship to build skills and self-esteem.[43] Regional Inuit games and festivals, such as the Cama-i Dance Festival in Bethel, Alaska, organized annually by the SouthWest Alaska Arts Group since 1984, incorporate high kick demonstrations alongside dance and cultural activities to celebrate Yup'ik traditions.[44] These events, along with others in Inuit communities, contribute to the sport's grassroots promotion. Internationally, high kick competitions have expanded through circumpolar gatherings like the AWG to include non-Arctic Indigenous athletes, broadening participation while maintaining cultural focus.[1]Records and notable athletes
High kick records are maintained separately by organizations like WEIO and AWG, with variations in styles (e.g., traditional one-foot involves hopping on the kicking foot, while technical uses a two-footed approach). As of 2024, notable records include: In the one-foot high kick, the WEIO men's technical style record is 117 inches (9 feet 9 inches), set by Tim Field.[27] In the traditional style, Colton Paul tied the record at 106 inches (8 feet 10 inches) at the 2024 WEIO.[45] For women, Emily King established a new WEIO traditional style record of 85 inches (7 feet 1 inch) in 2024, surpassing previous marks held by athletes like Carol Pickett (84 inches, 1989).[46][47] The two-foot high kick AWG men's open record stands at 8 feet 8 inches (2.64 meters), set by Brian Randazzo in 1988 in Fairbanks, Alaska. In the women's open category, Nicole Johnston set the AWG record at 6 feet 5 inches (1.96 meters) during the 1994 AWG in Slave Lake, Alberta; her 1989 WEIO mark of 6 feet 6 inches held as a WEIO record until 2015.[31][48] For the Alaskan high kick, the men's WEIO record is 96 inches (8 feet), set by Brian Randazzo in 1984.[49] Recent performances show progression, as Colton Paul tied the two-foot high kick state record at 101 inches (8 feet 5 inches) while also winning the Alaskan high kick and kneel jump at the 2023 NYO.[50]| Variant | Category | Record Height | Athlete | Year | Event/Style |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| One-Foot High Kick | Men Open | 117" (9' 9") | Tim Field | ~2013 | WEIO/Technical |
| One-Foot High Kick | Men Open | 106" (8' 10") | Colton Paul (tie) | 2024 | WEIO/Traditional |
| One-Foot High Kick | Women Open | 85" (7' 1") | Emily King | 2024 | WEIO/Traditional |
| Two-Foot High Kick | Men Open | 8' 8" (104") | Brian Randazzo | 1988 | AWG |
| Two-Foot High Kick | Women Open | 6' 5" (77") | Nicole Johnston | 1994 | AWG |
| Alaskan High Kick | Men Open | 96" (8') | Brian Randazzo | 1984 | WEIO |