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  • Fairfax Teen Competed on ‘American Ninja Warrior’
Grace Walk on American Ninja Warrior
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Fairfax Teen Competed on ‘American Ninja Warrior’

Woodson High School student Grace Walk took on a challenging obstacle course in Monday night’s episode.

By Maggie Roth June 15, 2026 at 5:14 pm

One local high schooler made an appearance on television this week, jumping and swinging her way through jaw-dropping obstacles. Grace Walk, a rising junior at Woodson High School and a Fairfax resident, competed Monday night on American Ninja Warrior.  

The show challenges athletes to “conquer the world’s most challenging obstacle courses,” with obstacles like a “supersized three lane racecourse called the Tripleheader.” The winner of the show takes home a $250,000 prize. 

On Monday night’s episode, “Western Regional Qualifying 2,” Walk made her way past obstacles like the Shrinking Steps and the Diamond Dash but fell into the water from the Kite Surfer. She did not progress to the next round of competition.

In the end, “I felt very happy with how my run went,” Walk says. “I don’t think I was disappointed with my experience, and I think it probably, if anything, made me even more excited to hopefully get to compete again, because it was just really fun.”  

Walk says she’ll continue to compete in the ninja sport year-round and plans to apply to reappear on the show in the future.

Grace Walk
Grace Walk on NBC’s “American Ninja Warrior” (Photo by Scott Everett White/courtesy NBC)

Ninja Training 

Walk’s journey to appear on the show has been years in the making. She began with the ninja sport when she was just 9 years old. “I saw the show, I thought it was the coolest thing ever,” she says.  

She joined a local ninja gym and started competing a few months later. Walk trains at Vertex Labs Academy in Lorton.  

She started out in the sport by learning all the basics of how to take on the obstacles with the help of the gym trainers, she says. And when she got more serious about competitions, she started adding home training with strength exercises, too.  

“The fun thing about ninja is it’s so different every single time, and it’s a young sport, too, so it’s constantly changing” as players improve and course designers come up with new challenges, she says. “Because it’s newer, it’s smaller, and so the community just feels closer together.” 

To balance training with her busy life as a high school student, Walk says she runs every morning before school and does exercises like pull-ups, then goes to ninja practice after school.  

“I think it’s very impressive to see any child do crazy things — and I think if you’ve seen the show, they do some crazy things,” Walk’s mother, Ruth, says of watching her daughter train. “You have to kind of trust them to know their bodies and know what they’re capable of.” 

And the coaches are an important element of training, too. “The coaches are all really, really wonderful. They love to see, especially the young kids, grow in their confidence, grow in their strength, grow in their body knowledge,” Ruth says. “I know that coaches get a lot of reward out of the sport, and I think it’s the same for parents, too.” 

Her First Appearance 

At age 11, Walk made her first on-screen ninja appearance on American Ninja Warriors Junior. “It was obviously one of the most exciting things that I had done up to that point, like everything about the experience was so new to me,” she says. It was her first time running a course above water, which she says was “a dream come true.” 

“I mean, it’s like total bucket list,” Ruth says. “When she applied for juniors, she asked if she could apply, and I was kind of like, ‘Yeah, sure,’ — you know, you never think it’s actually going to happen, right? … It’s a bit mind blowing.” 

Photo by Scott Everett White/courtesy NBC

Taking Skills to the Screen 

After a few more years of training and local competitions, Walk applied to appear on the adult show as soon as she was old enough. She got the call that she was accepted to go on the show in August, and she and her family flew to Las Vegas in September to film.  

The show is filmed at night, and she says she woke up that morning filled with anxiety. But once she got on set, she says, “my adrenaline took over and I was able to focus a bit more and … just see the course in front of me and like go through in my head, like, ‘OK here’s what I have to do for each obstacle.’” 

Walk’s parents were on set with her in Las Vegas to cheer her on, with her coach on the sidelines and her grandparents and siblings watching live from home.  

“Grace is very brave, and it takes a lot of courage to do it,” Ruth says. “We’re very proud of her, and happy that she got the opportunity to do the thing that you see on TV and you dream about.” 

The episode with Walk will be available to watch on Peacock.

Feature image by Scott Everett White/courtesy NBC

Maggie Roth

Maggie Roth

Associate Editor

Maggie Roth is the associate editor for Northern Virginia Magazine, where she covers news and culture in the NoVA area. Originally from New Jersey, she is a graduate of George Mason University and joined the magazine in 2021 as an editorial intern.

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