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Wrestling with gender bias
2 WNC girls grapple their way to national recognition
by Andrew Pearson, APEARSON@CITIZEN-TIMES.COM
published April 30, 2006 12:15 am
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ASHEVILLE Conventional standards were no match for Christian Bell and Tasheba Jackson when the two girls chose to wrestle for their high schools.
Bell initially dealt with the stereotype that a cheerleader couldnt try the sport for the first time as a senior at East Henderson. Jackson also endured her share of gender bias at Reynolds until she cracked the schools starting lineup as a sophomore.
Over time, Bell and Jackson gained acceptance as female wrestlers, but they havent stopped there. On April 2, both earned All-America recognition by placing 10th in their respective weight classes at the U.S. Girls Wrestling Associations national tournament in Detroit.
I was shocked; I didnt think I would do that well, Jackson said. Im really proud of Christian for placing, too. After our last matches at the tournament, we both hugged each other. I think weve both helped each other improve as wrestlers and it was a proud moment.
As dedicated as boys
Bell (130-pound weight class) and Jackson (138-pound weight class) train together under Norman Osteen, whose Strong and Courageous club has become best known for producing some of Western North Carolinas top male wrestlers the past 17 years.
Both Bell and Jackson have made an impression on Osteen, who transports grapplers across the country to different tournaments.
These two girls are as dedicated to wrestling as any boy, Osteen said. And Christian and Tasheba are only going to continue to get better. Especially with Tasheba being so young, I think its possible that she could win a national championship one day, I really do.
Championships were a remote goal for Jackson when she began competing at Reynolds two years ago. Rockets wrestling coach Jeff Foster invited her to join his team, but the feeling wasnt mutual among some upperclassmen.
My freshman year, they tried to get me kicked off the team, said Jackson, who won eight high school matches against boys last winter. But I think everyone saw that I was dedicated and started to treat me the same as anyone else. It takes a lot of heart and dedication to wrestle and thats why I love it. Its awesome.
Before her first match at East Henderson, Bell served as a manager for the Eagles wrestling team. She has earned a spot on Gardner-Webbs cheerleading team for next year but wants to continue training as a wrestler in some capacity.
Like Jackson, Bell remembers the reaction from classmates when she started wrestling.
Pretty much everyone laughed in my face because I was the only girl, Bell said. It made me want to prove everyone wrong who said a cheerleader couldnt wrestle. After the first week, people could tell I was doing pretty good, and they tried to help me. But at first, no one wanted to work with me.
Hoping it catches on
Osteen trained Olympic silver medalist and former McDowell High student Sara McMann in the late 1990s and believed at the time that her success might create a boom for female wrestling in the area.
It never happened, but Bell and Jackson have renewed Osteens hopes for the future.
Its rare to see a girl want to start wrestling in high school, but Christian and Tasheba are exceptions, Osteen said. I think before its all said and done that other girls are going to see the success these two have had and it will be inspiring. The sky is the limit for them, and I hope other girls take notice.
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Youth Sports Report: Goldmine wrestlers crowned champs
4/29/06
Girls middle school
Last year, Magnolia Middle School's Breanne Mitchell, Haley Woods and Denise Julian returned home without any wins from the inaugural California Girls Middle School State Wrestling Championships.
Saturday, the Magnolia Rattlers' trio combined to win eight matches and all three earned medals for placing in their weight classes at the state tournament in Vallejo.
"The girls wrestled hard and represented themselves very well," said Magnolia coach Gregg Mitchell.
Julian posted a 3-1 record en route to a second-place finish in her 97-pound weight class during competition at Springstowne Middle School. She dropped a 5-2 decision in the finals.
Breanne Mitchell compiled a 3-2 record to place fifth at 79 pounds and Woods went 2-2, capped off when she won by a pin in 31 seconds, to place fifth at 130 pounds.
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