Show Ski at age 8, Barefooting at age 10
During a competitive barefooting career that lasted more than 15 years,
Jennifer Calleri gained national and international recognition, and
eventually became the most decorated U.S. Women’s barefoot water ski
athlete of all time.
Jennifer learned to water ski when she was 4 years old on Lake Camelot
in Nekoosa, Wis. Her parents, Joseph and Susan, towed her behind a
Thompson ski boat with a pair of Sears & Roebuck water skis tied
together. The family enjoyed skiing together so much that it eventually
joined the Shermalot Show Ski Club, and Jennifer and her brother, Pete,
began to become more and more involved in water skiing.
In 1977 at the age of 8, Jennifer joined the Shermalot Ski Show Team and
learned slalom, flags and ballet. A year later – having learned to climb
a pyramid and perform doubles - she skied in her first Show Ski National
Championships.
In 1979 at age 10, Jennifer learned to barefoot from Shermalot club
member Tom Cavanaugh on Lake Arrowhead in Nekoosa. Tom would place
Jennifer between his two skis until she got the hang of it. It took less
than a handful of falls before Jennifer was barefooting on her own. In
August of that year she barefooted in the Show Nationals – stepping off
a slalom ski long line – and subsequently made her first appearance in
The Water Skier magazine.
Jennifer’s barefooting aspirations took a significant step forward the
following year when Mike Seipel introduced himself to her parents at the
Show Ski Nationals. Mike, a Water Ski Hall of Fame inductee in 2000,
suggested his ski school would be the perfect place for Jennifer to
expand on her potential. Within a year she was training with Seipel and
by the end of the following summer she already had notched her first
Regional and National titles. Despite her tiny frame, Jennifer’s
intensity was unmatched. A familiar order to her towboat drivers became,
“Nail it to 28 and don’t baby me!”
Over the next three years Jennifer continued show skiing – adding swivel
to her versatile repertoire – with Shermalot, but started to concentrate
more and more on polishing her barefoot skills. She learned wake
crossings, tumble turns, toe holds, one foots and back to fronts.
Needless to say, she also started racking up the national titles.
In 1984 she moved into the Open Women’s division at Nationals and
finished third. She also was named an alternate to the U.S. Elite
Barefoot Water Ski Team that was scheduled to compete the following
January at the Barefoot Water Ski World Championships in Canberra,
Australia. When team member Punky Forgiana was injured, Jennifer was
called on to ski for the U.S. Team. She didn’t disappoint. Despite
suffering from the flu, Jennifer earned an individual silver medal in
starts, finished fourth overall and helped the U.S. Team win the silver
medal.
Jennifer was again named an alternate to the U.S. Team for the 1986
Worlds, but this time she didn’t compete. That didn’t sit too well with
the rising star. “I didn’t like being an alternate,” Jennifer said years
later. “I learned I didn’t want to sit on the bank again and watch.” So
she decided to learn more skills – such as jumping, backward wake slalom
and back toe holds. She also received the coveted Willa Cook Award at
the Show Ski National Championships in Janesville, Wis., which is
annually given to the most outstanding female performer at Nationals.
After graduating from high school in 1987, she moved to Florida to begin
college and fulfill a lifelong dream of skiing at Cypress Gardens. In
the fall of that year she began training with Ron Scarpa and experienced
near-instant success.
In 1988 she won her first Open Women’s national overall title and first
world gold medal in slalom. She also started traveling throughout the
world with the Cypress Gardens road show, and was filmed for television
commercials in the United States and abroad.
Jennifer’s success and dominance on the water culminated over the next
eight years. Between 1988 and 1996 she set 50 pending Women’s world
barefoot records and went undefeated as an overall competitor. She won
her first two world overall titles in 1990 and 1992, but her most clutch
performance arguably came at the 1994 Worlds in Sydney, Australia.
Needing to score personal bests in the finals in slalom and jumping to
win the overall title, Jennifer delivered a personal best 47 feet in
jumping and a pending world record of 17.1 wake crossings in slalom. She
left Australia with individual gold medals in slalom, tricks and
overall, a silver medal in jumping, and a second consecutive world team
gold medal.
By 1996 Jennifer’s dominance as a barefooter was unprecedented.
Virtually every time she would hit the water, she would set a personal
best, and those personal bests would be world records. She first set
Open Women’s national barefoot records in 1988. At the time of her
induction, she still held Open Women’s national records in slalom and
tricks.
Only a select few athletes across all sports have had the fortune of
retiring while they were still at the very top of their game. Jennifer
was in that company. Jennifer announced her retirement from competitive
barefooting following the 1996 Barefoot Water Ski World Championships in
Fergus Falls, Minn., where she helped lead the U.S. Elite Barefoot Water
Ski Team to its fifth consecutive world team gold medal after setting
two pending world records in slalom and two in tricks. By the end of the
tournament, Jennifer had set personal records in all three events,
including a jumping score that was good enough to set a new Open Women’s
national jumping record.
During her illustrious career, Jennifer earned four consecutive (1990,
1992, 1994 and 1996) overall gold medals at the Barefoot Water Ski World
Championships, and served as a member of five U.S. Elite Barefoot Water
Ski Teams. Jennifer won seven Open Women national overall titles,
including six-consecutive titles from 1990 to 1995.
Jennifer earned her degree in Finance from Florida Southern College in
1992, but in the past few years she has turned her focus to a future
career as an airline pilot. In December 2000 she received her Private
Pilot’s License. In July 2001 she earned her Instrument Rating and last
August she began Commercial Flight School, in which at the time of her
induction she was near completion of the program.
Jennifer continues to ski part time at the Gardens, and continues to
reap the rewards of her skiing career. She was named Cypress Gardens’
Skier of the Year in 1990, and in November 2001 she was inducted into
the Polk County Sports Hall of Fame in Lakeland. It was while skiing at
Cypress Gardens in 1993 that Jennifer met fellow skier Zane Schwenk. The
couple was married in 2000 and resides in Winter Haven.
