Changing of the guard
Alex Coolman
Nancy Robertson jokes that her daughter’s feet are like flippers.
It’s not that 11-year-old Leah has particularly large feet -- only
size 8 1/2. It’s just that they do such an effective job of propelling
Leah through the water.
They’re so effective, in fact, that they recently kicked Leah into the
“Lifeguard of the Year” slot for her age group at the national Junior
Lifeguard competition in San Diego.
Leah posted better results than 500 other junior lifeguards in Newport
Beach alone, and more than 15,000 across the state.
Pretty good feet.
On a recent afternoon, sipping a cup of water in the kitchen of her
Newport Beach home, the fair-haired wunderkind speculated on the forces
-- other than those at the end of her legs -- that have driven her to
perform so well as a junior lifeguard.
“I’ve always like going in the water and going to the beach,” Leah
said. “I surf in Hawaii” on visits to grandparents in Oahu.
“She started in our Jacuzzi when she was 3 months old,” Nancy chimed
in. “By the time she was 2, she was swimming the length of the pool.”
Being naturally aquatic is one thing; becoming Lifeguard of the Year
is something else altogether.
To capture the title, junior guards have to score well in relay races
in swimming and running, distance races, and relay rescues.
Then, to top it off, the serious contenders have to do something that
doesn’t come naturally to all members of the lifeguard family: write an
essay.
Leah’s essay states her aspirations in terms that are as forceful as
her feet.
“I am convinced that I would be a good candidate for this honor,” she
says.
The lifeguards who coach her agree with that assessment.
“She’s probably one of the best athletes I had in my group,” said
James Newton, a Newport Beach lifeguard and instructor for the Junior
Lifeguards.
Newton said he thought Leah’s strength as an individual and as a guard
comes less from an overt posture of leadership than through the example
she sets.
“With her positive perspective and attitude she becomes a leader, and
a lot of the other kids aspire to be like her,” he said.
The division that Leah dominated is the “C” class, for kids ages 9 to
11. She admits that she was probably at an advantage over some of the
9-year-olds competing in San Diego.
Next year, however, she’ll move up to the “B” class, where she will be
challenged by 13-year-olds.
Leah sounds concerned about it, but not too concerned. If there’s
anything she’s learned from the heaps of medals and plaques she won in
her junior lifeguard career, it’s that she is, in her words, a “good
candidate” for success.
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