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In the
summer of 1976 St. Louis County Gymnastics Club opened in
St. Johns Church gymnasium. Rod Rogers initial
investment bought a vault, two sets of bars, two beams and
a floor exercise mat that could be folded up if necessary.
The coaches and gymnasts had to set the equipment up and take
it down daily. Classes ran in the afternoon for four hours,
while Rod continued to teach physical education at Bernard
Elementary School.
By the
fall of 1976, Rod moved the gym moved to 872 Horan in the
Fenton industrial area across from the Chrysler/Daimler plant
and very close to what is now Riverchase Recreational Complex.
This gym was 6,000 square feet, lacked air-conditioning and
had very low ceilings. When the gymnasts started learning
giants on bars, Rod had to cut out of the ceiling one of the
support beams so the kids wouldnt hit their feet on
the ceiling! He taught his first giants in this building on
one of his two sets of Nissen bars (almost all of the equipment
was made by Nissen back then). The set of Nissen bars that
the instructional gymnasts use today is one of the two original
sets.
By 1979,
St. Louis County Gymnastics Club became St. Louis Spirits
Gymnastics Club and adopted the logo still in use today. Also
in 1979, Rod moved the gym moved onto Larkin Williams Road
in Fenton, just a couple of blocks from the Horan location.
Although this location did not have air-conditioning, it was
a much larger facility at 9,000 square feet. Despite having
more room, the gymnasts still had to practice under less than
ideal conditions-they had to vault by running diagonally across
the floor exercise mat. And the gym did not have a foam block
floor, which was becoming a standard for the industry, so
Rod made his own tumbling strip. The bounce came from the
flex of 2X4 pieces of wood. It was about this time that the
Class II team won its first state championship team trophy.
Rod also developed a couple of individual Class II Regional
Champions.
In the
early 1980s Spirits moved to Truman Junior High. The
club hosted numerous competitions, camps and clinics in this
awesome facility. Two of Rods most memorable clinicians
were Bela Karoyli and Kelly Garrison. It was in this facility
that Rod was able to purchase a 40-foot by 40-foot foam block
floor. He still recalls how tedious it was to glue all of
the foam blocks to the plywood panels. For this gym, Rod also
purchased two new high beams, which are the high beams still
used at the gym today. He purchased these from a Regional
Competition he attended in Omaha, Nebraska, and he drove back
to St. Louis with the beams in the back of his pick-up truck.
It was
during this time that Rod developed his elite athletes. Kris
Merlo and Gretchen Schmidt made it to the Elite National Level.
They attended Elite Nationals in Atlanta, Philadelphia and
Tucson. They were competing against future Olympians Kathy
Johnson and Mary Lou Retton. Rod trained his elite gymnasts
trained more than 30 hours a week. Alison Barber, who had
won vault at Class I Nationals, was training elite with Krista
Kapps and Heidi Markle.
In 1985,
Spirits hosted the AAU National Championships at Washington
University just after the university's field house had been
completed. Alison won the All-around competition at that meet.
Rod became the Elite Development Director for Region IV and
hosted an Elite Zone meet at University of Missouri-St. Louis.
This was their last zone meet as Heidi had competed in three
zone meets and missed qualifying for Elite Nationals by .10.
Overall, Rod had two Elite National gymnasts and three Elite
Regional gymnasts.
Truman
Junior High School was reopened as an elementary school in
1992, so Spirits was on the move to a new home again. The
gym relocated to the Biltmore Industrial Complex, another
Fenton location, off of Highway 30 near Chuck's Boots in Jefferson
County. (This location still lacked air-conditioning.)
In 1996,
Rod committed to a new gym location, its current home on Maurer
Industrial Drive in Sunset Hills. Rod rented the space before
the building was constructed, and he was able to have a say
in the gym's design. Spirits' current 10,000-square-foot facility
has an owners office with a full private bathroom, a
front office with restroom facilities and parent viewing windows,
a pre-school room, and a balcony with bleachers for parent
observation and with a large two-stall bathroom and changing
area. All of the equipment is state-of-the-art and includes
two vaults, one of which lands in an in-ground loose foam
pit; wide-spread bars and a single bar over the loose foam
pit; high and low beams; an Elite-size spring floor and spring
tumbling strip that allows the gymnast to land in the pit;
and two in-ground trampolines. Best of all, the gym is air-conditioned!
In 1999,
Kris Cline (Kris Rogers as of November 2000), moved to St.
Louis to become the business manager and pre-school program
director. Rod and Kris attended Gym Club Owners Boot
Camp with the goal of creating a stronger and more diverse
program maintaining the mom and pop relationships
they had developed with their gymnasts and the gymnasts' parents.
Together they have put systems into place, reworked programming
and hired outstanding staff, all of which have enabled the
business to grow.
In the
summer of 2001, Spirits celebrated its 25th Anniversary. This
is an amazing milestone for any small business. Considering
the fact that Spirits has been owned by one person, Rod, for
its entire history, it is the oldest gymnastics club under
the same management in the St. Louis area. Spirits has always
been and will continue to be dedicated to nurturing
Health Esteem
in each and every child.
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