Cara Heads-Lane, Millennium Hall of Fame
The race for gold at Sydney 2000 has started around the world, and
ushering in a new Olympic sport for women could be Newport Harbor High
product Cara Heads-Lane (Class of ‘95), currently the No. 2 weightlifter
on the American team in the 75-kilogram class.
Now living in Savannah, Ga., Heads-Lane returned last week from the
American Open Weightlifting Championships in Tacoma, Wash., where she won
her weight class and broke a national record in the clean and jerk (125
kilos).
Heads-Lane, whose personal record in the snatch is 102.5 kilos,
accomplished at the recent World Championships in Greece, is focused on
this summer’s Olympic Games in Australia.
“If we had to go (to the Olympics) tomorrow, I’d be on the team,” said
Heads-Lane, whose next big event, the U.S. Senior Nationals, is three
months away.
Following an outstanding track and field career at Newport Harbor,
Heads-Lane, greatly influenced in weightlifting and the throwing events
by former Sailor weights and conditioning coach Tony Ciarelli, competed
at Cal after high school, but left after three semesters to pursue dreams
in weightlifting.
An elite age-group lifter in high school, Heads-Lane moved to Savannah
in January 1997 to train with Team Savannah for that summer’s Junior
World Championships. Seven of the top 10 female lifters in the country
train with Team Savannah under Coach Michael Cohen, including 16-year-old
phenom Cheryl Hayworth, who has been featured on “The Tonight Show” with
Jay Leno, the USA Today and various television news magazine shows.
Once in Savannah, Heads-Lane met her husband, John, and has been based
there since.
“The doors kept opening, and opportunities kept arising,” said
Heads-Lane, who, upon hearing that women’s weightlifting would be
declared in competition at the Sydney Games, saw an enormous chance to
represent her country in the third millennium’s first Olympiad.
Heads-Lane, who was married May 2, 1999, hopes to increase her totals
in the snatch and clean and jerk by 2 1/2 kilos each at the U.S. Senior
Nationals in March, an Olympic qualifying event. She’s hoping to “pull
away from the pack to secure a position for myself on the Olympic team,”
she said.
Heads-Lane, 5-foot-3 and between 160 and 165 pounds, said she’ll
probably retire if she makes the 2000 Games and start a family. “Right
now, all’s going well, and I have faith that (making the Olympic team)
will come about, and that I’ll do well,” she said.
Heads-Lane, a former Newport Harbor homecoming queen, followed in the
footsteps of her sister, Gina, who’s older by one year and started
weightlifting in high school under Ciarelli to build strength for
basketball and the shot put and discus.
Gina, one of the school’s most decorated female athletes in history,
went to Stanford to throw the weights (hammer, discus and shot put) and
is now a school teacher in Northern California.
Cara, also a former basketball player but less heralded than her
sister because of knee injuries, was part of a stellar athletic class at
Newport Harbor that included Misty May, Melissa Schutz, Tina Bowman and
Mandy Clayton.
As a senior, Heads-Lane enjoyed a sensational year in the discus, her
best event, and shot put.
In a postseason that saw her capture the Sea View League discus title,
finish second at the CIF Southern Section Division II finals and third at
the prestigious Masters Meet, Heads-Lane threw a career-best 149 feet
five inches in a qualifying effort at the state preliminaries -- a school
record by more than three feet and the fifth-best heave in Orange County
history.
After breaking the Newport Harbor record previously set by her sister
in 1994, Heads-Lane went on to place fifth at the state meet, one of her
favorite prep highlights.
In 1993-94, Heads-Lane didn’t start, but played on Coach Shannon
Jakosky’s girls basketball team that reached the CIF III-AA and Southern
California Division III Regional finals at the Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim.
That squad also went 24-8 and set a school record for victories in a
season.
“I didn’t get to play that much, but it was exciting to get to a high
level and play (at the Pond),” Heads-Lane said. “It was just fun.”
With the 2000 Olympic Games in her sight, today’s honoree in the Daily
Pilot Sports Hall of Fame (celebrating the millennium) is hoping to reach
another level.
“I have to admit,” she said, “it’s very exciting and I’m enjoying
every bit of it.”
Cara Heads-Lane, whose parents are Larry and Cathy, has two
stepchildren through her recent marriage.
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