Before he became one of the most respected tumbling coaches in the sport, Javonté Patterson was a kid in North Carolina flipping on concrete, learning the hard way. Tumbling wasn’t a path for him. It was survival, expression, and the first place he felt in control of his own trajectory.
The odds weren’t built in his favor. He grew up in a single-parent home with three older brothers, surrounded by the statistics that predicted a future he refused to accept. But gis community carried him. His church connected him to a local gym, coaches stepped in, and scholarships opened a door that changed everything. Cheer wasn’t just a sport; it was a path forward.
That throughline defines his work today. Vonté’s coaching isn’t built on chasing the trends or shortcuts that have become common in pockets of the industry. It’s built on accountability, strength, safe progression, and a belief that athletes can build something bigger than the skills they perform. In his words: “Don’t chase others’ success. Create your own.”
It’s the philosophy behind Precision Tumbling, the business he runs with his wife, Arianna Patterson—a program that has quickly become known for its clarity, discipline, and athlete-first leadership.
The Making of a Technician
Ask anyone who trained with Vonté as a teenager: he lived in the gym. Courtland Porter, one of his closest friends and longtime teammates, remembers that clearly.
“He was always the first one in and the last one out,” Porter said. “When he commits to something, it’s everything. He’s never been halfway on anything.”

That commitment came before any formal technique did. Vonté learned tumbling the way many athletes do before they find structured training—on grass, concrete, and wherever there was space. It built fearlessness and athleticism, but the real transformation came when a coach stopped simply drilling skills and started teaching him why movement works.
That moment happened at a summer camp with coach Kali Seitzer.
“For the first time, someone broke down the purpose behind every drill and every shape,” Patterson said. “She spoke with clarity, with respect, and she walked the walk. It changed everything.”
That shift—understanding mechanics, purpose, and progression—became the backbone of his career. From athlete to coach to consultant, Vonté built his methodology around consistency, repetition, strength training, and removing fear through proper development, not shortcuts.
“Anyone can become a strong tumbler when you build the foundation right. Strength and mindset are the first steps. The rest comes from daily, intentional work.”

Precision Over Perception
Precision Tumbling’s reputation has grown quickly, and not because of viral videos or marketing. The program is known for its structure: high expectations, detailed drilling, and the kind of discipline that produces longevity, not burnout. It’s also known for its environment—serious, positive, and clear.
Arianna describes his leadership style simply: “Militant in process, laid back in spirit.”
“You never have to guess with him,” she said. “But he also cracks jokes, lightens the room, and makes the work feel like something athletes want to step into, not something they have to survive.”
Behind the scenes, though, she credits two drivers that shape everything he does: constant study and consistent faith.
“There’s not a day he isn’t learning,” Arianna said. “He studies technique constantly. And he prays constantly. He believes this is his calling, and he treats it like one.”
That dual foundation—technical mastery and grounded faith—has shaped how athletes respond to him. They trust him. They return season after season. And they grow.









