News Page
By Katherine Ritz
News Writer 10/27/06
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Twin Valley student Cassie Leach competed successfully on the boys Twin Valley Midgets football team. |
When Cassie Leach moved from England to the U.S. in 2003, she wanted to play American football.
As a fifth-grade student at Robeson Elementary Center, she signed up for the Twin Valley Midgets.
"When I came here, I just wanted to play every sport," Leach said. "I didn't know of any other girls who played football, so I decided to play."
Leach was the only girl to play on the team. At first the boys didn't know what to think.
Their coach told them to treat her just like one of the guys.
So they tackled her, and when she got up and kept playing, they started to see her as any other player on the team.
Leach played on the offensive, defensive and receiving teams in a number of positions.
Besides football, Leach has played soccer and is in her third year of playing basketball. She said her father even encouraged her to join wrestling because he thought she could compete with the boys.
Leach's story and others like hers could soon become things of the past in the Twin Valley School District.
Until now, district policy has only prohibited boys from joining sports teams traditionally taken up by girls, but the school board is considering excluding girls from playing all boys contact sports, including football and wrestling.
Girls would still be allowed to play boys non-contact sports if there is no team for girls.
"What we're concerned about is the welfare and safety of the students in a contact sport," said Kelly McBride, communications director for the school district.
McBride is quick to point out that the policy change has not been suggested because female athletes have been seriously injured while playing on male sports teams. The measure came about during a routine review of district policies earlier this year.
School officials aren't the only ones with concerns.
Other girls Leach goes to school with wanted to play football too, but their parents wouldn't let them because they feared their daughters would get hurt, she said.
That didn't stop Leach, and her parents were behind her decision.
"I didn't really think about getting hurt. I just went in and played my hardest," she said. "[Girls] could get hurt, but they know that, and girls can be just as good as guys. My coach said I was the best tackle on the team, and I'm a girl."
When she passed the age limit for playing midget football, she signed up for the middle school football team. But since she also wanted to play field hockey, she turned in her helmet and pads after practice and borrowed goalie plads to play hockey.
"I would like to play football again, but I'm trying to get a scholarship for hockey. They're both in the same season, so I'm staying in the sport," Leach said.
If the policy is changed, female students like Leach will not be allowed to sign up for the middle school or high school football or wrestling teams.
According to school district solicitor Jon Malsnee, Title IX of the Code of Federal Regulations allows the district to restrict girls from playing on boys' contact sports teams.
Other school districts in the Berks County Interscholastic Athletic Association (BCIAA) have the authority to impose the same restriction, but some have opted against the measure.
The Wyomissing and Governor Mifflin school districts both restrict male participation on female sports teams, but girls are free to play on boys' sports teams.
On the Exeter Township School District Web site, Policy No. 123 on interscholastic athletics equally extends opportunities for competitive sports participation to male and female athletes, in accordance to regulations of the state Board of Education.
The Wilson School District, however, restricts coeducational participation on any teams that aren't designated co-ed.
Betsy Adams, president of the BCIAA and principal at Conrad Weiser High School, said the issue was a major topic of discussion among member districts in the BCIAA a few years ago.
The association encouraged schools to adopt policies restricting boys from playing on girls sports teams because of the concerns among member schools.
Of major concern were the safety risks posed when girls compete with boys on the playing field or wrestling mat.
Others were concerned that bigger, taller or stronger boys would have an unfair advantage over girls in some sports (ie. dunking a basketball or throwing a shot put).
"The thinking is that if girls choose to participate in boys sports, they know they are going to be competing against males who are most likely stronger, bigger, faster, etc.," Adams said. "They can choose to do that, but girls participating in a girls sport should not have to play with, or against, males if that is not their choice. They should have the right to play just against their sex."
In districts where female participation on male sports teams is permitted, the girls must still go through the same try-outs that the male players do if they want to make the team.
Malsnee said he is not aware of any girls who are actively participating in boys contact sports in the Twin Valley School District at this time. If there are, and if the school district approves the policy revision, the district will have to exclude them from playing in accordance with the updated policy, he said.
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National Wrestling Camp for Asiad starts
New Delhi, Oct 27:
The National Wrestling Camps to prepare for the Doha Asian Games begun in Sonepat and Delhi today.
The camp for the men's team is being held at the Haryana town while the women's camp is being organised in the national capital, wrestling federation of India office secretary Vinod Tomar told today.
The camps will continue till the departure of the team for Doha, he added.
An 18-member team, including four women wrestlers, was picked for the Asian Games after the selection trials here yesterday.
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Univ. of the Cumberlands seeks to retain top spot in 2006-07 womens college wrestling season
Gary Abbott USA Wrestling
10/28/2006
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The womens college wrestling season is getting underway, with tournaments being hosted in the United States and Canada and athletes beginning their training in wrestling rooms across North America.
The U.S. colleges that have committed to varsity wrestling teams continue to build and strengthen their programs, and the level of competition continues to improve.
Looking to continue its strong position within U.S. womens college wrestling is the Univ. of the Cumberlands, which returns four college national champions and a very deep lineup. Missouri Valley College, a traditional power, also has an experienced and talented lineup.
The other varsity programs at Pacific University and Menlo College are featuring their best teams in years, and both seek to move up in the rankings on both the team and individual levels.
The U.S. Olympic Education Center at Northern Michigan Univ. has a womens freestyle program, featuring many of the nations top Olympic hopefuls. The USOEC team competes in numerous events with the college programs in the USA and Canada and are included in the North American womens college individual rankings.
Club teams at the San Jose State Univ. and the W.O.W. club in Pennsylvania will also be active on the womens college scene this year.
There will be a key competition to end the formal womens college season this year, the College Nationals held at Pacific University , March 9-10. This will feature both a team dual meet event and the national championships for individuals.
The final test comes at the Body Bar Womens Nationals in Colorado Springs, Colo., April 20-22, with the FILA Junior and University National Championships. There will be a number of college wrestlers who will also make an impact on the Senior level this year.
University of the Cumberlands
Coach Kip Flaniks Patriots have been a dominant team in womens college wrestling in recent seasons, with success nationally and in North America. A number of athletes from the program have earned national honors on the Senior level within USA Wrestling, and the team has had dominant performances on the college level.
Four athletes who earned No. 1 college national rankings last year return to lead this experienced and talented lineup. Leading this group is senior Alaina Berube at 138 pounds, a past U.S. Nationals champion and U.S. Olympic Trials runner-up. Berube has competed for the U.S. on age-group World teams and has a goal of winning World and Olympic medals for the United States. She is clearly the leader of this team.
The other No. 1 wrestlers from last year include junior Jessica Medina at 105 or 112 pounds, senior Othella Lucas at 130 pounds, junior Heather Martin at 147 pounds. Medina won a Junior World bronze medal this summer in Guatemala, and should be in the Senior national mix at whatever weight class she chooses. Lucas was a member of the 2006 University World team, and has consistently beaten her college competition. Martin is a former U.S. Nationals runner-up and also has made the last two Junior World Teams.
All four of these wrestlers won the gold medal at the Womens College Nationals, which was held on their home mats last March. You can expect to see Medina, Lucas, Berube and Martin sitting at No. 1 when the preseason rankings come out for this season.
Also returning from last years team is a talented 158-pounder, junior Tabetha Golt, who made the 2006 University World Team and has held national rankings on the Senior level. Also returning is junior Theresa Fennell at 176 pounds, who was learning her craft behind Olympian Toccara Montgomery in recent seasons.
The team should be very strong in the lighter weights, regardless of what division Medina chooses to wrestle. At 105 pounds, Melissa Gerard is ready for action, a 2005 Junior World Team member. At 112 pounds is Debbi Sakai, who placed second at the U.S. Senior Nationals, and has college experience at both Missouri Valley and the USOEC program at Northern Michigan.
The 121-pound weight class is also loaded. Among those who are looking to claim the top spot are Sandy Do, who has experience at Missouri Valley and Northern Michigan, along with talented freshman LeAnn Barney, a Junior National runner-up from Texas. Two other wrestlers who earned college national rankings last year may also challenge for the starting spot at this division, Jessica Jauck and Warry Woodard.
Team depth is a strength for the Univ. of Cumberlands, and there has been a restocking of new athletes. A pair of talented freshmen from California, Bethany Harris at 138 pounds and Sheila McCabe at 147 pounds, both have numerous age-group national achievements and should make strong varsity athletes if they are called to duty. Throughout the season, a number of other freshmen could emerge as they work their way through a very strong wrestling room and into action on the college level.
There is also considerable depth among the returning athletes not expected in the starting lineup. Wrestlers such as Sherryln Eppinger and Megan Nevil at 138 pounds and Sheri Hilliard at 158 pounds are capable of earning national rankings, even if they are not the starter.
Flaniks team will have a competitive athlete at every weight class. However, the strength of this team comes from four athletes who are expected to be the best on the U.S. college ranks and have very high expectations on the Senior level. When you mix experience, talent and depth, you have a team worthy of a No. 1 ranking, and the Univ. of Cumberlands has all of these areas covered very well.
University of the Cumberlands projected started lineup
(with state, year and final 06 U.S. college ranking)
105 Jessica Medina (CA, jr., No. 1 at 112) or Melissa Gerard (MI, jr.)
112 Medina or Debbi Sakai (HI, jr.)
121 Sandy Do (CA, jr.) or LeAnn Barney (TX, fr.)
130 - Othella Lucas (CA, sr., No. 1)
138 - Alaina Berube (MI, sr., No. 1)
147 - Heather Martin (OH, jr., No. 1)
158 - Tabetha Golt (VA, jr., No. 2)
176 - Theresa Fennell (TX, jr., No. 6)
University of the Cumberlands depth chart
105 Medina, Girard, Billie Jean Dill (NY, fr.), Claudia Pena (TX, fr.), Aquila Hills (NC, sr.), Priscilla Brownfield (KY, fr.), Kristin McKenna (FL, fr.), Rene Mortenson (CA, sr.), Ana Ramey (TX, jr.)
112 Medina, Sakai, Casey Beatty (OH, fr.), Antonesia Giles (CA, soph.), Deseree Cazeras (TX, jr., No. 6 at 105), Linda Debakey (MD, fr.), Brittany Owens (TX, soph.), Rachel Iduarte (TX, fr.), Rachel Woodruff (TX, fr.), Christine Selover (CA, soph.)
121 Do, Barney, Jackie Stiles (TX, fr.), Jessica Jauck (CA, soph., No. 3 at 130), Warry Woodard (VA, soph., No. 4), Sheryl Manglaylay (HI, fr.), Rachel Hubbard (WA, fr.), Talina Martinez (TX, soph.), Karla Rosales (CA, fr.)
130 Lucas, Shannon Reeves (OH, soph.), Ashley Dehnz (FL, soph.), Krystal Kiyuna (HI, soph.), Nena Garcia (OH, fr.), Megan Corden (CT, fr.)
138 Berube, Bethany Harris (CA, fr.), Sherolynn Eppinger (OH, soph., No. 4 at 147), Megan Nevill (MI, sr., No. 6), Kristy Bishop (CA, soph.)
147 Martin, Sheila McCabe (CA, fr.), Lauren Knight (CA, fr.), Sara English (OH, fr.), Annie DeCresente (CA, soph., No. 8)
158 Golt, Daphne Moriel (TX, soph), Sherri Hilliard (ND, sr., No. 5)
176 - Fennell
Missouri Valley College
Every year, Missouri Valley College enters the womens college season with a large roster of talented wrestlers with considerable experience. Coach Carl Murphree has put together a team similar to others that have been successful in the past. There will be a few star athletes, who reach the top levels on the U.S. college scene, and become nationally ranked on the Senior level. In addition, there will be other athletes who excel in the college-level competitions. One thing you can count on with the Vikings the squad has a wealth of talent and the wrestlers will come ready to compete.
The top star on the team is senior Stephany Lee at 158 pounds. Lee has won a World University gold medal, and has been a finalist in the U.S. Nationals and World Team Trials on the Senior level in previous seasons. She won the U.S. College Nationals title last year, and stands well ahead of the field in every respect.
The other returning U.S. College National champion in Tabithia Ramsey at 105 pounds, who will be a senior and expected to be a leader. Missing at the College Nationals with injury last season was Menlo Colleges Sara Fulp-Allen, who also returns and may be rated higher than Ramsey among collegians. However, Ramsey will give the Vikings a strong start in every competition and will be motivated to end her college career on the top.
A star for Missouri Valley who missed last years College Nationals is 138-pound junior Rachel Billerbeck, who has held high rankings on the college level for the last two years. If she stays in this weight, she will have to contend again with Cumberlands top star Alaina Berube for the college national title. Billerbeck should win matches all season long, and give the team strength in the middle weights.
This team should have a strong athlete or two at every weight class. At 112 pounds, two of last years top college performers, sophomore Samantha Shuman and senior Maika Watanabe both return, and will battle each other for prominence. Watanabe was second and Schuman was third at the U.S. College Nationals last year. The 121-pound division should be well covered by junior Courtney Martell, who was a runner-up at the College Nationals.
At 130 pounds, one of the top college veterans around will return, senior Brooke Bogren, but experienced Clarissa Calibuso is also in the mix there. The 147-pound division is also well stocked, with sophomore Sara Hilliard and senior Emily Rinehart. Hilliard was fifth in last years College Nationals.
A battle at 176 pounds could emerge with junior Elizabeth Hernandez and freshman Desiree Memea, a Junior National champion from Hawaii. In either case, the team should have a strong finish in each event.
Memea is among the many talented freshmen who will have to earn their spot in a tough practice room. Junior National champion Amy Havens of California will be at 158 pounds, and talented Samantha Fee of New Jersey at 130 pounds and Amberlee Ebert of Wisconsin at 147 pounds are included in a large incoming class. Every year, Missouri Valley seems to develop a few freshmen who make an impact, and it is not always the ones you might expect.
With a mix of veterans and young talents, and depth throughout the lineup, Missouri Valley should once again battle for prominence in womens college wrestling, giving the top teams in North America something to worry about.
Missouri Valley College projected started lineup
(with state, year and final 06 U.S. college ranking)
105 Tabithia Ramsey (TX, sr., No. 3),
112 Samantha Schuman (NE, soph., No. 3) or Maika Watanabe (CA, sr., No. 2)
121 Courtney Martell (VT, jr., No. 2)
130 Brooke Bogren (KS, sr., No. 2) or Clarissa Calibuso (HI, sr.)
138 Rachel Billerbeck (TX, jr., No. 2)
147 Sara Hilliard (KS, soph., No. 5) or Emily Rinehart (CA, sr., No. 6)
158 Stephany Lee (HI, sr., No. 1)
176 Elizabeth Hernandez (FL, jr.) or Desiree Memea (HI, fr.)
Missouri Valley College depth chart
105 Ramsey, Rashona Colbert (GA, fr.), Norine Cruz (CA, jr.), Angelee Homma (HI, sr.), Vanessa Nordstrom (PA, fr.), Mary Shamblin (fr. HI), Krista Camarillo (fr., OK)
112 Shuman, Watanabe, Christina Varland (WY, soph., No. 7 at 105), Tanya Miyasaki (HI, sr., No. 5 at 105), Yalimar Vidal (RI, fr.)
121 Martell, Brittney Sevy (AK, jr., No. 5), Kayla Chambers (CA, soph.)
130 Bogren, Calibuso, Erica Chew (TX, jr), Samantha Fee (NJ, fr.), Karen Howe (TX, soph.), Shamaine Danner (MO, fr.), Bethany Pine (TX, fr.), Brittany Fair (TX, aoph.), Carmen Ramos (TX, jr.)
138 Billerbeck, Michele Querin (CA, fr.)
147 Hilliard, Rinehart, Amberlee Ebert (WI, fr.), Samantha Richardson (TX, fr.), Brittany Jones (TX, jr.), Chaneal Meletia (HI, jr., No. 7 at 138), Eva Garlinghou (CA, fr.), Sara Williams (WA, fr.), Jennifer Germany (CA, soph.)
158 Lee, Lacy Novinska (WI, soph.), Amy Havens (CA, fr.), Selina Perez (HI, jr.), Ana Hernandez (NJ, fr.)
176 Hernandez, Memea, Gillian Hampton (MO, soph.), Leah Page (TX, fr.), Kathryn Newton (MO, fr.)
Pacific University
The Boxers could have one of its best teams this year, right in time for Pacific to serve as the host for the U.S. Womens College Nationals. Scott Millers team will have the homefield advantage when the rest of the womens college teams and athletes come to Forest Grove, Ore. on March 11-12.
There should be a talented and competitive wrestler in every weight class for the Boxers this year, but the team will need to stay clear of injuries if it wants to seriously push the Univ. of the Cumberlands and Missouri Valley College for the top team honors. Depth has always been a challenge for Pacific, but the team has shown consistency in its performances.
The team is led by senior Kapua Torres at 112 pounds, one of womens college wrestlings top star. Torres was injured last year, so she was unable to show her stuff at the national meet. However, Torres won the U.S. College Nationals and a FILA Junior Nationals title in 2005, so if she is back in top form for this year, she should be dominant again.
There is experience in seven of the eight weight classes when Pacific sends out its starting team. Junior Titi Lawani looks to be a national title hopeful at 138 pounds, after taking third last season and making other good showings during the season. Ashley Truchan will wrestle at 147 pounds, down a division from 158 pounds last year where she was fourth at the U.S. College Nationals.
The team starts off with Valerie Prise, a junior who was fifth at the U.S. College Nationals last year. After Torres competes at 112 pounds, the team will send out transfer Summer Scott at 121 pounds, a sophomore who showed some promise last year competing for Lassen CC. She was also fifth at the U.S. College Nationals a year ago, and will look to improve this season.
After Lawani and Truchan comes the biggest question mark at 158 pounds. Freshman Kisha Milfort will be in the picture here, if she is moved up from 147 pounds when Truchan wrestles down. Actually, Pacific could move some people around in the lineup in the upper three weight classes. Also in the mix is sophomore Megan Richardson, who is projected to wrestle at 176 pounds Sophomore Kelly Nardiello and freshman Ashley Schalow may also see action in the upper weights. How Pacific handles these divisions, and the progress that the wrestlers there make, could be a key to the entire season for the Boxers.
The Pacific program has been getting stronger each season, and always has high goals for its athletes and team. Going in the season, there is optimism up in Oregon that the Boxers could take the program to a new level.
Pacific University projected started lineup
(with state, year and final 06 U.S. college ranking)
105 Valerie Prise (CA, jr., No. 8)
112 Kapua Torres (HI, sr.)
121 Summer Scott (CA, soph., No. 7 at 130)
130 Michelle Ludwig (CA, jr., No. 5)
138 Titi Lawani (CA, jr., No. 3)
147 - Ashley Truchan (HI, jr., No. 4 at 158)
158 Kisha Milfort (FL, fr.)
176 - Megan Richardson (CA, soph., No 5)
Pacific University depth chart
105 Prise, Candace Sakamoto (HI, fr.)
112 Torres, Teresa Ayala (CA, jr., No. 6)
121 Scott, Alenna Nilsen (AK, soph., No. 8)
130 Ludwig, Kara Stevens (MO, fr.)
138 Lawani, Erin Zimmerman (FL, fr.)
147 Truchan, Ashley Schalow (WA, fr.)
158 Milfort
176 Richardson, Kelly Nardiello (CA, soph.)
Menlo College
Another team that has a stronger overall lineup than in previous years is Menlo College, which has struggled with depth and injuries in recent seasons. Coach Lee Allen can put an experienced wrestler in seven of the eight weight classes, and has athletes who have the ability to challenge for individual college national titles.
The star on the Menlo team is Sara Fulp-Allen, the daughter of the coach and a U.S. Senior Nationals champion a few seasons ago. Fulp-Allen has been a member of Womens Team USA, and has a ton of experience on the international and national levels. Injuries during the college season kept her out of the U.S. College Nationals last year, but she was able to return to participate at the major Senior-level tournaments. As a senior, Fulp-Allen is one of the top stars in North American womens college wrestling, and is the leader on this team.
The other top national title hopeful is junior Lauren Daniels at 130 pounds, who also missed the U.S. College Nationals last season. Daniels has done well at a number of national level events, and she has shown the ability to wrestle well against top opponents.
Sara Fulp-Allens younger sister Katherine joins the team as a freshman this year at 112 pounds, after a strong high school career with a number of national honors on the age-group levels. Also at the weight class is Carla OConnell, a sophomore who showed some promise last season, but finished sixth at the U.S. College Nationals. Whether it is Katherine Fulp-Allen or Carla OConnell on the mat, this weight is well represented.
The experience continues at 121 pounds with junior Sabrina Lancelotti, who was fifth last year at the U.S. College Nationals. She started her career at Lassen College, and fits nicely in the Menlo lineup. Another wrestler who wrestled well when healthy is Jade Prudent, the junior at 147 pounds. Like Daniels, she did not compete last year at the U.S. College Nationals.
Add in returning wrestlers Ashley Evans-Smith at 138 pounds and Monique Cabrera at 158 pounds, and the Menlo lineup is completed. The only weight filled by a freshman is 176 pounds, where Vallerie Ollada comes in this year.
Coach Allen has a few other returning athletes, and a handful of unproven freshmen to look to if any of the starters cant compete. However, for Menlo College to do well this year, the experienced wrestlers will need to stay in the lineup and also make progress in their wrestling skills.
Menlo College projected started lineup
(with state, year and final 06 U.S. college ranking)
105 Sara Fulp-Allen (CA, sr., No. 1)
112 Katherine Fulp-Allen (CA, fr.) or Carla OConnell (CA, soph., No. 7)
121 - Sabrina Lancelotti (CA, jr., No. 6)
130 Laurin Daniels (WA, jr., No. 4)
138 - Ashley Evans-Smith (CA, soph.)
147 - Jade Prudent (TX, jr.)
158 - Monique Cabrera (CA, soph., No. 8)
176 Vallerie Ollada (CA, fr.)
Menlo College depth chart
105 S. Fulp-Allen, Lauren Tallman (CT, soph., No. 8 at 112), Rita Ramirez (CA, jr.)
112 K. Fulp-Allen, OConnell, Shareese Muholand (CA, soph.)
121 Lancellotti, Jamie Sage (CA, soph.)
130 Daniels, Emily Espana (CA, fr.)
138 Evans-Smith, Sasha Avila (TX, soph.), Jaimie Trentadue (WI, fr.), Linda Hernandez (CA, fr.)
147 Prudent, Tamara Gravesande (CA, fr.)
158 Cabrera
176 Ollada
U.S. Olympic Education Center at Northern Michigan Univ.
This unique program provides wrestlers with an opportunity to compete in womens freestyle wrestling and receive an education. This team is not a varsity program for Northern Michigan Univ., but is affiliated with the U.S. Olympic Education Program. It is designed for college athletes in Olympic sports that are not sponsored by the NCAA, the NAIA or other college associations.
Coaches Shannyn Gillespie and Tony DeAnda will work with a mix of athletes. The Northern Michigan team has not been included in the U.S. college rankings as a team or individuals. However, the undergraduate athletes are included in the North American college rankings, and the team wrestles a full schedule which includes college matches and tournaments against U.S. and Canadian squads.
There are young women on the team who are graduate students, as well as some athletes who are completing high school in Marquette, Mich. and train with the team. None of these athletes will be included in this preview nor in the North American rankings.
Last year, a number of undergraduate wrestlers completed their careers at Northern Michigan, moving over to train fulltime at the U.S. Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs, Colo. The two most prominent wrestlers to move up were 2006 U.S. World Team member Mary Kelly at 105.5 pounds and 2006 U.S. Nationals champion Sharon Jacobson at 121 pounds.
Among the wrestlers with national rankings who return from last year are Amy Borgnini at 121 pounds and Stefanie Shaw at 147.5 pounds. Shaw has a No. 2 Senior National ranking, based upon her finish at the World Team Trials, and Borgnini is ranked No. 3 in her division on the Senior level.
Other veterans on the USOEC roster include Liz Short and Sadie Kaneda at 105 pounds and two-time Junior World medalist Danielle Hedin at 121 pounds.
Among the talented freshmen coming in are Junior National champion Dallas Monreal-Berner of Illinois at 158 pounds, as well as nationally respected Alyssa Lampe of Wisconsin at 112 pounds and Whitney Conder of Washington at 121 pounds.
Nicole Darrow, who has placed in many national age-group championships during her career, is currently injured, but will be competing at 121 pounds when she returns to action. Others to watch include Amanda Breezley at 121 pounds and Shyla Iokia at 130 pounds.
Northern Michigan USOEC depth chart
(with state, year)
Note: Only college undergrad students listed
105 Liz Short (IL, sr.), Sadie Kaneda (HI, jr.),
112 Alyssa Lampe (WI, fr.), Vianny Amparo (NY, fr.)
121 Amy Borgnini (IN, sr.), Danielle Hedin (HI, soph.), Cherac Pascua (HI, fr.), Whitney Conder (WA, fr.),
Nicole Darrow (MA, fr.), Amanda Breezley (OH, fr.)
130 Shyla Iokia (HI, fr.),
138 - Open
147 Stefenie Shaw (CT, fr.)
158 Dallas Monriel-Berner (IL, fr.)
176 Open
San Jose State University club
There is a new womens wrestling club at San Jose State Univ., coached by Robert Redman, that is providing opportunities for college wrestlers from the university, as well as a few other nearby colleges, to participate in womens freestyle wrestling. Also working with the club is former Womens Team USA member Julie Gonzales, as part of the Spartan Wrestling Club.
The club features three students who attend San Jose State, plus five others who are attending college on other campuses. We will evaluate this group as a team as the San Jose State WC. For individual ranking purposes, the athletes will be identified by the college where they attend classes and the Spartan WC.
In addition to training college wrestlers, there are a few high school athletes who work out with the club, but will not be included in this preview.
The top athlete in the program is Missouri Valley College transfer Sharlee Solis, who attends San Jose State and competes at 121 pounds. Solis, a sophomore, won the U.S. College Nationals last year at 121 pounds and showed great promise on the mats.
A few of the athletes on this club came from the program at Lassen College, which no longer fields a womens team. Two of the athletes who placed last year at the U.S. College Nationals for Lassen who are on this new club this season are Irene Proulx of Lassen College at 176 pounds and Ashley Nethercott of Chico State at 130 pounds.
Another wrestler who has been successful on the womens college circuit has been Amantha Hordagoda of Cal-State Bakersfield at 105.5 pounds. Joining the club with past womens college experience is Natasha Phinney of Fresno State at 158 pounds.
The team features a number of freshmen, all from California, who will have to make their mark on the national scene this year.
The San Jose State Wrestling Club has a complete national schedule, including the U.S. College Nationals and a number of major USA Wrestling events. The team will also compete against some Canadian college teams. Look for this program to grow in size and prominence once this initial group of athletes hits the college circuit and makes an impact.
San Jose State Univ. club projected started lineup
(with state, year and final 06 U.S. college ranking)
105 Amantha Hordagoda (Cal-State Bakersfield, CA, sr.), Martiza Martinez (CA, fr.)*
112 Caroline Williams (San Jose CC, CA, fr.)
121 Sharlee Solis (CA, soph., No. 1)*
130 Ashley Nethercott (Chico State, CA, jr., No. 8)
138 Open
147 Isabelle Sanchez (CA, fr.)*
158 Natasha Phinney (Fresno State, CA, soph.)
176 Irene Proulx (Lassen College, CA, sr., No. 4)
*San Jose State Univ. student
W.O.W. club of Pennsylvania
A club program in the Philadelphia region, W.O.W. (Women Only Wrestling) is coached by Ron Tirpak, and includes women wrestlers on the college and high school levels. They compete on the USA Wrestling national circuit, and also have entered competitions in Canada. There are two college wrestlers who will compete this year for W.O.W., both who have been active on the college womens scene for years.
Jen Chu, a senior at Haverford College, who has held national rankings on the college and Senior levels, will be competing this year at 130 pounds. Kristen Condello of the Univ. of Pennsylvania, also a senior, who placed second in last years University Nationals, will be competing at 112 pounds. Coach Tirpak expects that there might be other college women wrestlers who join the club later in the year.
W.O.W. club projected started lineup
(with state, year and final 06 U.S. college ranking)
112 Kristen Condello, Univ. of Pennsylvania (PA, sr.)
130 Jen Chu, Haverford College (PA, sr.)
There are also some athletes who are competing or training with mens college teams who will be considered for national individual rankings if the compete at the college events or USA Wrestling events during the season. They will be included in the rankings and coverage of womens college wrestling as the season progresses.
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desmoinesregister.com 10/28/06
Tim Steiner of Bismarck, N.D., the father of twin sons Terry and Troy Steiner, who won NCAA wrestling championships at Iowa, died of cancer Friday.
Troy Steiner won a championship at 142 pounds in 1992 among his four all-America honors between 1990 and 1993. Terry Steiner was the NCAA champion at 150 pounds - and selected as the tournament's outstanding wrestler - in 1993. He was a three-time all-American between 1991 and 1993.
Terry Steiner is the women's freestyle coach for USA Wrestling. Troy Steiner, a former assistant coach under Jim Zalesky at Iowa, is now on Zalesky's coaching staff at Oregon State.
Services for Steiner were pending Friday.
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Coach Tadaaki Hattas artistic talent helped raise funds for wrestling
Larry Nugent USA Wrestling
10/27/2006
The wrestling community is full of interesting characters, many with abilities and avocations off the mat which might surprise others. It has been my pleasure to have known many of these personalities. One of my favorites is the paradoxical Taddaki Hatta, a respected wrestling coach from Ohio who is gifted in so many ways.
My personal interactions with Coach Hatta include receiving his advice in my corner during the 1988 U.S. Olympic Trials final wrestle-off, and the discipline I absorbed from him during one of the world team training camps I attended during that decade.
More recently, when organizing the 2006 New Jersey Drive and Night of Champions, which was a benefit golf outing and banquet for USA Wrestling and the U.S. Olympic Committee, I asked Tadaaki if he would be willing to provide one of his works of art for the auction. When he accepted, I knew the auction would benefit tremendously.
Coach Hatta has been positively affecting both United States wrestling as well as international wrestling for several decades. His father, Ichiro Hatta was the founder of wrestling in Japan. Hatta, Sr. came to the United States to promote Judo when he was a college student in 1929. He traveled through the USA with his teammates, demonstrating Judo to our nation. After the demonstrations, there were free-for-all-fights between Japanese Judo men and American wrestlers. He got whipped by the American wrestlers. Ever since then, he decided to study wrestling.
Obviously, this provided a strong foundation in the sport for Tadaaki. He enrolled at Oklahoma State in 1961 and wrestled for another icon of our great sport, Myron Roderick. Coach Rodericks Oklahoma State teams won seven of 11 NCAA Team Titles between 1958 and 1968. Taddaki Hattas own NCAA Championship performance occurred in 1964 at the height of that dominance.
Oklahoma State so dominated the sport the NCAA Rules Committee actually legislated a new rule designed to hamper the Cowboys strategy of take them down let them up and take them down. They did this by only awarding two points for the first takedown in a match each subsequent takedown was worth only one point.
OSU kept winning, even after the new rule was introduced, said Tadaaki Hatta. OSU wrestlers learned to ride....that's what the Cowboys loved to do..."ride'em Cowboys. We took them down for two and took them down again at the end of the period and rode them out.
I was curious about how art and wrestling became such an important part of Tadaaki Hattas life.
My college advisor at Oklahoma State University was an artist/wrestler who taught me all about etching, said Hatta. He also taught wrestling classes. I was a wrestler who studied art at Oklahoma State from 1961 to 1966. Then I got my Master's degree in painting from Northwestern University in 1968. Now I consider myself as an artist who teaches art and coaches wrestling and rugby. I played rugby for three years with the Chicago Griffins.
Are there similarities between wrestling and art? Coach Hatta believes there is.
"In order for one to do well in art, wrestling, and/or any other disciplines, one must study, work, practice hard. One can always acquire skills and techniques of any discipline if he or she works hard at it. I earned my black belt in Kendo (Japanese fencing) when I was 58," said Hatta.
"I think artists are trained to see things as a whole and positive space and negative space at the same time," he continued. "I don't know if being an artist can be beneficial to wrestling but being creative can be very beneficial to any activity that one participates. Also being an artist will make his life more pleasant. Cael (Sanderson) is very creative in his art and that creativity clearly showed up in his matches. He executed his moves the way they are supposed to be executed every time. He reminded me of my approach to coaching wrestling techniques."
I am personally grateful that Coach Hatta accepted my request to provide one of his paintings for the Drive and Night of Champions auction. He knew that one of the main features of the event was to be a Roast of Rulon Gardner. Appropriately, he decided to capture on canvas, the moment of Rulons victory in Sydney over one of wrestlings greatest performers in history, Russias Alexander Kareline.
The result was a stunning painting of Rulon carrying the U.S. flag after his historic victory.
"When I paint wrestling pictures, I am trying to capture the actions and emotion of the moment. I think I have captured Rulon's action and emotion in my painting," said Hatta.
Others agreed, as the bidding for the painting went back and forth all night and eventually sold at auction for $2,000.
"I get great satisfaction from getting paid for doing something I love, like painting. In this case I am getting satisfaction from supporting the sport I also love. I hope everyone feels the same way," said Hatta.
It is a noble legacy to help the sport move forward and for its athletes to follow in the footsteps of people like Coach Hatta.
Larry Nugent is the Director of Development for USA Wrestling. He helped direct the successful New Jersey Night of Champions event in May.
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Othella Lucas named TheMat.com Wrestler of the Week for Oct. 17-23
Craig Sesker USA Wrestling
10/25/2006
Othella Lucas (San Diego, Calif./Univ. of the Cumberlands/New York AC) has been named TheMat.com Wrestler of the Week for Oct. 17-23.
Each week, TheMat.com will select an Athlete of the Week, based upon performance within wrestling for that week. The selection committee will consider any level of wrestling, from youth programs through the Senior level. The announcement will be made each week on Wednesday.
Lucas knocked off Junior World silver and bronze medalist Dany Hedin to lead the University of the Cumberlands women to a 4-3 win over a team from the U.S. Olympic Education Center at Northern Michigan Univ. in a season-opening dual meet on Oct. 19 in Marquette, Mich.
Lucas, who placed seventh at the World University Games this year, defeated Hedin by a 6-3, 1-0 margin at 130 pounds. Hedin was a Junior World bronze medalist this year at 121 pounds.
Lucas was coming off a fourth-place finish at the Sunkist Kids/ASU International Open on Oct. 14 in Tempe, Ariz.
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Thwarted by coach, would-be girl wrestler picks up basketball
www.localnews8.com 10/28/06
POCATELLO, Idaho (AP) - Melissa Plato made her varsity eighth-grade girls basketball team this year, but says she's still disappointed.
Because instead of doing lay-ups as a starting cager for Irving Middle School in Pocatello, Plato says she'd rather be putting other youngsters in a "half nelson" and pinning them to the wrestling mat.
Plato had hoped to be among a small cadre of girls across the U-S who have been allowed to cross over into the traditionally male sport of wrestling. She says the coach said no.
She says "I'm kind of bummed. Girls should be able to wrestle."
Though girls have participated in state championship matches in recent years in other states, Irving's wrestling coach says there are sports where girls should be separated from boys.