Around the world on a string
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Mike Sciacca, Independent
Some call him, “The Yo-Yo Man.”
In other circles, he’s simply referred to as a “yo-yoer.”
In either case, J-M McNulty doesn’t mind the moniker. In fact, both
are taken as a compliment.
He can “Walk the Dog” without effort, and going “Around the World” is
a piece of cake. Heck, you should see him do the “On the Back Loop.”
McNulty, a senior at Ocean View High, has become a renowned yo-yo
performer, so talented is the 17-year-old that he currently is the
third-ranked yo-yoer in the world.
That’s right, the world.
“The competitions are a great experience, especially when the whole
world gets together,” said McNulty, the J-M standing for “John-Michael.”
McNulty has played sports on the local scene since he was a youngster,
from Fountain Valley Little League and AYSO soccer, to three years as the
No. 1 singles player on Ocean View’s boys’ tennis team. Currently, he
plays inline roller hockey in Huntington Beach.
But it was way back in the third grade, when he was a student at
Westmont Elementary School, when McNulty was introduced to the yo-yo.
“I was immediately hooked,” he said. “Everyone at my school was into
it at the time. I gave it up after a while. Actually, for a long while
after that initial interest.”
It was the summer before his sophomore year at Ocean View that McNulty
said he became interested in the yo-yo again.
“It was in that summer of ’99 and it seemed like everyone I saw was
into the yo-yo craze,” he said. I just picked it up again and have been
doing it since.”
Back in the summer of ‘99, McNulty said that he had gotten about “50
tricks” down pat with one yo-yo, when he discovered two-handed yo-yo
performers at a competition at The Block in Orange. He took up working
with two yo-yos a week after that contest and took a yo-yo class at the
Kite Connection on the Huntington Beach Pier and also at The Block. He
went on to win a majority of the first six local competitions he had
entered, then went with a small group from the Kite Connection and
entered his first world championship competition in Honolulu that summer.
He managed to reach the finals, but finished 26th out of 26.
To reach a final, a competitor first must score enough points after
performing a list of tricks in preliminary competition. In a freestyle
final accompanied by music, each competitor has a three minute time limit
to perform their best tricks.
“I had a blast, and reaching the finals in my first time out was
great,” he said. “I mean, there were competitors from Singapore, Japan .
. . you name it.”
That summer of ’99 tournament was his first taste of world
competition. Currently, McNulty competes in roughly eight events during
the course of a year. Last Sunday, he finished in second place in the
Double A Division (two-handed) at a tournament held in Los Angeles. Next
up is a May 4 competition at the Bay Area Classic in San Mateo.
He has won nearly 20 competitions overall.
But it was last summer in Orlando where McNulty reached his highest
ranking to date. He made it through the preliminaries and reached the
freestyle final and ended up with a third-place finish in the Double A
Division.
Yo-yoers are ranked each year according by how they finish in world
championship competition. They then carry that ranking until the next
world championships.
McNulty has a vast collection of yo-yos, more than 200 and in “every
color,” he said, receiving most as prizes from the competitions he has
entered. He currently uses a Yomega Raider when he competes. He practices
at home every day, for an hour or so, he says, adding that hand-eye
coordination is very important.
Casualties have been few, too. He says that his forearm can begin to
tire after yo-yoing nonstop for a period of time, and the one item to be
broken -- on more than one occasion -- has been the ceiling fan light in
his bedroom.
The glass bulbs have since been replaced with plastic bulbs.
“You know, my family and friends didn’t think my interest in the yo-yo
would last beyond the initial stages,” McNulty added. “But it has. I’m
having a great time with it and as long as the competitions are fun and
I’m meeting great people, then I’ll continue with it.”
* MIKE SCIACCA is the education and sports reporter. He can be reached
at (714) 965-7171 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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