What began as a means to learn self defense has become much more to Pierce Leonardi.
The 9-year-old from Selkirk has turned into a national karate champion. Over the course of the last three years, Leonardi has earned six gold medals, two silver medals and two bronze medals at the AAU championships.
“It’s rare that you find a student like Pierce,” said Leonardi’s teacher, Shihan Tony Butler of Albany’s American Institute of Japanese Karate. “You don’t find too many kids who have the maturity or the focus to do what he’s done.”
“He trained for two months with Shihan’s help, and two months later he went to nationals for the first time and he won,” said Tony Leonardi, Pierce’s father.
Pierce said he didn’t know what to think when his parents, Tony and Judy, started him in karate after he was bullied at his school.
“There was this one kid who kept hitting me. My parents said, ‘That’s it,’ and they put me in karate,” said Pierce. “I wasn’t really sure about it, but once I got used to it, it became natural for me.”
It didn’t take long for Pierce to make an impression on the staff at AIJK. Judy said the beginner’s group teacher came up to her and Tony after Pierce’s first class and asked if he had taken karate before. Soon after, Pierce was taking classes with the more experienced students.
Butler said he realized he had a special student in Pierce, and he quickly trained him in the three facets of karate – forms, weapons and sparring – for his first trip to nationals in 2012.
“I knew the type of kids that were there, and I knew (Pierce) had a chance,” said Butler.
Pierce said the size of the AAU Nationals’ venue in Chicago was very large, but he brushed aside any feelings of intimidation and won gold medals in forms and weapons, as well as a bronze in sparring, in his 7-year-old age group.
Tony said Pierce’s first gold medal was a surprise to him and Judy.
“As his parents, watching him, we didn’t even know he won. We had to ask Shihan Butler, ‘Did he win? Did he win?’” said Tony.
Pierce had a bigger medal haul last year in Cincinnati, as he grabbed gold medals in forms, weapons and team forms with two of his AIJK classmates. He was also part of a silver medal-winning weapons team.
This year’s competition in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., turned out to be Pierce’s toughest competition to date. He picked up a gold medal in forms for the third consecutive year, but he finished second in weapons and third in sparring in the 9-year-old age group.
“There were definitely a lot of people, but it didn’t feel harder,” said Pierce. “It was just harder because there were a lot more people.”
“As the years go on, (the level of) the belts gets higher, and as a result the competition gets tougher,” said Tony.
Pierce’s belt level may soon be going higher. A second-degree brown belt, Pierce is scheduled to test for black belt in the next three months, said Butler. And if Pierce earns a gold or silver medal in forms at the AAU Nationals next year, he will automatically qualify for the United States team that competes at the world karate championships.
“The sky’s the limit for this kid,” said Butler. “And believe me, I’ve taught thousands of students, and I wish they were all like Pierce. He has that gift.”