BodyShop Business
  News
Colorado Collision Student Represents U.S. Well at WorldSkills Championships
10/21/2011 1:25:48 PM

The 2011 WorldSkills Championships took place Oct. 4-9 in London and the USA was well represented. 

Representing the U.S. in collision repair was Cameron McCreery of Sterling, Colo., a student at Morgan Community College. As a student member of SkillsUSA, McCreery earned the right to be a member of the WorldTeam by competing and winning local, district, state and national contests in the annual SkillsUSA Championships. The WorldSkills event takes place over a four-day period, consists of 53 contests and involves nearly 1,000 students.

"I wanted to compete in the WorldSkills Competition because it's a great opportunity and a once-in-a lifetime experience," said McCreery. "I love working on cars. I've been doing it as long as I can remember. Helping my dad work in the garage was my favorite pastime, not to mention, I used to love playing in the grease. My dad taught me everything he knows, and I fell in love with it and had to learn more."

Day 1

Day one of the competition was set-up and diagnosis of vehicle damage. After those steps, McCreery removed welded-on damaged parts.

"Cameron got off to a good start," said USA Technical Expert Terry Angel from Warren Tech in Lakewood, Colo. "He had such a calm, positive demeanor and a great mental attitude. That served him well over the four days of the competition."

Mark Claypool, midwest regional sales manager for Metro Paint Supply and CEO of Optima Automotive, served again as the volunteer team leader. Claypool has been the SkillsUSA World Team leader since 1997. Joining Claypool this year was 17 of the best young skilled workers in America representing trades such as collision repair, automotive service, culinary arts, hairdressing, precision machining and web design. During the opening ceremonies, Claypool led his team across the stage in the Olympic-style parade of nations.

"Having sufficient numbers of qualified skilled workers is crucial to our national economy," said Claypool, who has a strong, lifelong dedication to workforce development. "This is why I give two weeks of my time each year to this cause.  These young people are our future and we need so many more of them, especially in collision repair where I work."

Day 2

On Day 2 of the WorldSkills event, McCreery spent the better part of the day grinding and doing weld preparation/clean-up from drilling out spot welds. After that, he started to work on cutting a quarter panel off. Once it was off, he put weld-through primer on the vehicle. He hammered and dollied flanges, got the new quarter panel ready to install, then started fitting up parts.

Approximately 70,000 spectators showed up to observe the competition, including the United Kingdom's Prime Minister David Cameron.

McCreery credits U.S. Technical Expert Terry Angel with getting him as prepared as possible for this competition. 

"Terry got me ready for this," he said. "I'm surprised with how comfortable I felt because of this preparation. It allowed me to focus on the work I did."

McCreery said he was amazed at the high quality of work his competitors did, from countries like Japan and Korea where they've been training for this contest for the past 10 years.

"The speed that these competitors have, after all this training, is impressive, too," observed Claypool. "But in America, we can celebrate the freedom we have to choose our profession and then pursue it, rather than the other way around."

Even so, McCreery held his own. He had a step-by-step game plan in his head for getting the project done on time by Saturday. It was a tall order, but his organizational skills gave him the best possible chance of finishing on time.

"Cameron was methodical in his approach to this contest," said Claypool. "He truly had a 'can do' spirit, and our technical expert, Terry Angel, indicated that he did quite well against this group of the best-of-the-best from around the world."

McCreery's wife and parents arrived later in the week to cheer him on for the final day and attended the awards ceremonies on Sunday.

mark claypool leads the u.s. team across the stage in the olympic-style parade of nations at the worldskills championships.
Mark Claypool leads the U.S. team across the stage in the Olympic-style parade of nations at the WorldSkills Championships.
cameron mccreery
Cameron McCreery
McCreery makes the U.S. proud with his work.
McCreery makes the U.S. proud with his work.
 


More information:

SkillsUSA WorldTeam 2011

WorldSkills London




More articles in News
Latest acquisition increases number of San Diego locations to 13; 126 locations nationwide.
article image
I-CAR representatives deliver presentations about industry's technical future.

Most Commented