The 16-year-old’s head spins are magnificent. His footwork, raised by a DJ’s beats, light and tight. The status of Jeff Dunne, AKA J-Attack, as Australia’s finest male breaker relies on his swagger and the odd cold gaze. Regardless of that, J-Attack likewise has a not-so-secret weapon: his mom, Rhondda. “I’m extremely happy,” Dunne states. “It’s terrific to have somebody that supports me in my life, and will continue to support me up until they pass away.” Dunne, who will represent Australia at the Paris Olympics, was born in the Philippines. He moved here at the age of one when he was embraced by Rhondda and her other half, Tony. Rhondda now takes a trip practically all over with him, acting, as she explains, as his “individual baggage provider, bed hotel maker and organiser”. The set have actually been overseas 7 times in the previous year, consisting of to in 2015’s world champions in Belgium. “He does not feel comfy going on his own, and it’s not like there’s an entourage of Australians, so it’s simply us discussing so he can contend and prepare, to get the feel of the huge, huge fights,” Rhondda states. Breaking is quite an adult world. Viewing J-Attack on the Australian scene, it’s simple to forget he is still a year 11 high school trainee in New South Wales’ Northern Rivers area. He states he got “great marks” in term one this year, Dunne’s trajectory is towards a future in breaking. His school has actually enabled him to take a trip, and he keeps up to date with a laptop computer and the assistance of his instructors. Jeff Dunne, referred to as B-Boy J-Attack, with his mom Rhondda. Photo: Rhondda Dunne “They stated if you require any assistance, or if you require any additional time on a project or anything, simply call us up, since breaking is your top priority and we do not wish to take that far from you,” Dunne states. Dunne found breaking as a seven-year-old when he joined his older sibling’s hip-hop dance classes. By 12 he was currently an elite entertainer, winning the 2019 Australian Youth Championships, in the past rapidly developing himself outdoors classification. The Australian breaking neighborhood has actually accepted the prodigy. The president of AusBreaking, Lowe Napalan, states regional breakers have actually viewed him establish given that he was a kid, and feel a level of financial investment. “He’s like everybody’s little bro,” Napalan states. From what Dunne has actually heard, the scene hasn’t constantly been as inviting. “Breaking waned,” he states. “Specifically since breakers were too frightened that if they trained a kid they ‘d progress than them, and they let their ego get to them.” Nowadays there is authentic friendship. After the Breaking Oceania Championship final last October that protected Dunne’s Paris location, the beat finalist, 15-year-old Benji “BenMX” Cogdell-Baird, commemorated with Dunne as if he had actually won himself. The Dunnes hope breaking is included back into the Olympic program after Paris. Photo: Nadir Kinani/The Guardian “It’s no place near as warmed as it utilized to be,” Dunne states. “There’s no beef with anybody anymore. We’re all quite chill, we’re all encouraging, and we’re attempting to turn it into a helpful neighborhood.” Together with Australia’s female representative, Rachael “Raygun” Gunn, Dunne has actually turned into one of the faces of the Paris Olympics group. And as breaking is a brand-new sport in the 2024 Games, the set have actually been tapped for lots of interviews and promos. “It can get tiring,” Dunne states. “Sometimes I seem like, ‘well, I do not wish to do this interview or this shoot, however you understand, it’s gon na benefit my profile, get me out there more.'” avoid previous newsletter promo after newsletter promo Dunne gets some federal government and Australian Olympic Committee financing, however it just covers training expenditures and flights to Olympic lead-up competitors. The sport is far from an expert pursuit in Australia, and although some breakers overseas can eke out a presence through sponsors and recommendations, July’s Olympics uses incomparable direct exposure. Dunne has actually requested monetary help on social networks in current months in a quote to raise cash for travel expenditures for him and his mom. Dunne is intending to get to 2 more worldwide jams before Paris, to evaluate himself versus the world’s finest. “These previous 18 months, my mum and daddy need to have actually been utilizing their cash right out of their pockets to get me to all these other locations in order to get all set for fights,” he states. In April Dunne signed with management company TGI Sport in a quote to protect his very first recommendation offer. Dunne is still dealing with keeping his cool in the face of his challenger. Picture: Chris Hyde/Getty Images Rhondda still holds out hope for a modification of mind from Los Angeles 2028 authorities, who have actually ditched breaking from their program, and for the sport to go back to the Olympics in time for Brisbane 2032, when her child would be 25. “I’m hoping they’re going to put it back on the table once they see what occurs in Paris,” she states. The Olympics represents a minute of mainstream authenticity for a design of dance that emerged in the 1970s. Where as soon as improvisation and expression were vital in breaking, today professional athletes tune their regular to increase their ratings, and are evaluated throughout 5 classifications. In spite of the shift in focus, the format of competitors is mainly individually fights, and conflict stays the sport’s specifying function. A breaker may be a refined professional athlete with a well-choreographed regimen, however they still require to carry out at the feet of their challenger, typically under an avalanche of garbage talk. Dunne states breakers require to “handle it and leave all of it on the flooring” however yields he is still dealing with managing his feelings. “When individuals address me, in some cases it lights a fire in me and I like to return at them,” he states. “Mum constantly sees me as a modest kid, so whenever I do that, she’s like, ‘Oi, knock it off.'”