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by Amy Preston
Kit Fox eyes the 12 specially designed plastic cups in
front of him. He’s practiced for countless hours for this
moment. With thousands of people in the stands and
hundreds of competitors next to him, he knows what he
has to do.
Kit swiftly stacks the cups into what’s called a 3-6-3:
where he creates a pyramid of three cups, followed by
six cups and then three again. Next, he takes down
each stack and builds two six-cup pyramids.
Then with lightning-quick hands, he tears down the
sixes, places a cup on either side of the mat and stacks
a tower of 10 cups. Without hesitation, he downstacks
the big pyramid to end up just how he started — with
stacks of three, six and three cups.
After his hands slap the mat, Kit looks at the clock: 8.6
seconds. (That’s about half the time you spent reading
the above description.) Not his best but it earns him first
place in the Cycle in the sixth-grade division and
second overall out of 542 competitors at the 2004
World Cup Stacking Championships in Denver,
Colorado.
“When I got my time at Worlds, I probably jumped 3 feet
in the air,” Kit recalls.
First-time cycle learners complete the pattern in about
60 to 90 seconds, so Kit’s hard work has paid off.
Stacked Against Him
Looking back, Kit’s family believes it’s a miracle he can
even compete in the sport of cup stacking, let alone be
among the world’s best.
Kit was born with nystagmus, a condition where the
eyes move rapidly back and forth without focusing.
“When he was 3 or 4 months old, we thought he was
blind,” Kit’s dad, Bob, says. “His eyes would not follow
or track anything.”
Before Kit turned 2, he had two eye operations. His
parents were concerned about their son's ability to read
or play sports. Sports are especially important to the
Foxes because Kit’s older siblings excel on the playing
field and his dad used to teach physical education.
While Bob was still a teacher, he introduced all of his
children to cup stacking. Kit had just turned 3.
“We believe this sport has helped him,” Bob says.
“Research suggests that using both sides of the body
activates both sides of the brain. Kit will always have
the eye condition, yet he’s the best reader in our
family.”
Six years ago, Bob left the classroom and founded
Speed Stacks — a company that manufactures cup
stacking equipment and introduces the sport to schools
and other organizations. Kit is a member of his father’s
Speed Stacks demonstration team and travels around
the world.
Quick as a Fox
Kit enjoys showing kids and adults how to cup stack,
but he loves competing against other stackers.
This year’s world championships will be hosted in
Denver in April.
During competition, intense pressure combines with
thousands of people watching every move.
“Having faith in myself and God takes away some of
my nervousness,” Kit says. “I say a prayer or two before
competitions.”
Once he steps out to compete, Kit drowns out the
audience and focuses on what he has to do.
Kit adds that his relationship with Christ has helped him
persevere and accomplish unimaginable things in his
life, including cup stacking.
“He’s encouraged me to keep doing stuff — like
reading and basketball,” Kit says.
For more information on Speed Stacks go to
www.speedstacks.com. To find out about the World
Cup Stacking Championships visit
www.worldcupstackingassociation.org
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