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DALLAS -- Three years ago as a freshman at Molina High School Ofelia Valdez learned she was a natural at wrestling.
"The coach is like, 'just get on the mat,' so I'm like okay, I got on the mat, I started practicing, the next day they had a match and I wrestled and I won my first match with one day of practice," she recalls.
Three years and 51 medals later Valdez's future should be bright. Instead, it's uncertain.
Valdez and her family are from Mexico and moved here when she was 2.
"Our problem is that we were brought here illegally," says her brother, Adelfo Valdez, "so we broke the law just being here. We can't become residents or citizens, because we didn't get a permit to arrive here."
That means that while Valdez can go to any college she wants, she will have to pay for it. Without a social security number, she can't accept the scholarship offer she received from Oklahoma City College and she won't be able to take out school loans.
"The money," she says, "that's what's holding most of it back, because I can apply, but I can't do the FAFSA (Free Application for Federal Student Aid) funds and get more scholarships because of my social. I don't have one, so that's the problem."
Molina Athletic Director Charles DeVille has been in contact with a U.S. senator, trying to see whether there is anything that can be done to get Valdez into college.
"I'm afraid that the way it's going now we're going to have a girl that's one of the top wrestlers in the nation staying in Oak Cliff," DeVille said.
It's a problem her older brother encountered when he graduated from Molina three years ago.
"Her older brother, he was a really good athlete, played football for me here, he wrestled and he had several opportunities to go to school too but ran into the same thing," DeVille says.
"I was an American," Adelfo Valdez said, "that's all I considered myself ever since I was younger. There's nothing that changed until I hit a lot of walls when I graduated. Tried to go to school, tried to go to military, like I said, a lot of closed doors."
DeVille says this is not an isolated issue.
"How many other athletes do we have out here like that? How many athletes are there in the Dallas area? How many athletes are like that in South Texas?
And the immigrations laws are not just impacting athletes.
"Academically," DeVille says, "We had a young lady I think last year who had the grades to get into an Ivy League school and she didn't go. And I think the reason being, they wanted her, she went early in the year. I think the problem was getting her in school because of her status."
Valdez's wrestling coach, Kelly Walker, has been trying to figure out a way to get the Valdezes into college. He's even looked into adopting both Ofelia and Adelfo as his own kids.
"I'm looking at it like it's going to happen," Walker said. "I'm not considering any other options, so that's what I focus on every single day, is making sure her and her brother are where they need to be in the fall and competing. And we're going to have it happen. It's going to happen."
About a month ago, the DREAM Act was reintroduced in Congress. "DREAM" is an acronym for Development, Relief and Education of Alien Minors. It would allow students like Valdez to go to college or enter the military. But until that happens, she can only wait, and hope.
"I was raised here," she said, "so I mean, United States that's all I know. I was raised here and this is where I want to be."
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Hawaii|
The Maui News /
MATTHEW?THAYER?photo
Napili’s Breanna Dudoit controls Molokai’s Cendall Manley during their novice match Saturday at the Hawaii AAU Wrestling Championship. Dudoit won 8-2. |
LAHAINA - The Lahaina Roughnecks won their first Hawaii AAU Wrestling Championship on Saturday at the Lahaina Civic Center.
A record 487 wrestlers competed in seven age divisions at the final event of the Maui Style wrestling season.
Defending champion Central Maui Style was second while Molokai Wrestling Club was third. Lahaina led with nine individual champions while Central had seven winners. The Napili Surfriders, Keiki Warriors, Lanai Ka'ulula'au and the Scorpions each had six champions. High School and Open division matches did not count toward the team title.
Javen Alo of Team Hawaii won the largest menehune division (45 pounds, 12 wrestlers). He pinned all four of his opponents.
Jasye Lalim-Rillon of Molokai (45 pounds) and Ronald Criste of Napili (58 pounds) won the largest bantam divisions, each of which had 12 wrestlers. Lalim-Rillon had two wins by pin and three wins by decision. Criste earned four wins by points.
Teniya Alo of Team Hawaii (65 pounds) and Ka'onohi Hamakua of Lahaina claimed the largest midget divisions, each of which also had 12 wrestlers.
Alo, the only girl in the division, pinned all five of her opponents. The Honolulu resident recently won the Women's Bodybar Nationals at Colorado Springs.
Hamakua had three pins and two decisions.
Zachary Diamond of Armed Forces won the biggest novice division (75 pounds), which had nine wrestlers. Diamond recorded two pins and a decision.
Four Oahu wrestlers claimed nine-wrestler schoolboy divisions: Treylan Kobayashi (100 pounds) of Oahu, Alex Ursua (110 pounds) of Scorpions, and Tyler Egami (150 pounds) and Laurent Remillard (170 pounds) of Punahou. Remillard pinned all four of his opponents.
Three wrestlers won eight-wrestler high school divisions: Punahou's Todd Murakawa (130 pounds) and Bryan Peralta (150 pounds), and Austin Bloch (130 pounds) of Keiki Warriors.
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HawaiiTe'o headlines new
Hall of Honor class
POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, May 18, 2009
Taylor Ibera, Farrington: She's the latest in a long line of wrestling/judo gold medalists from Kalihi. Ibera recently repeated as wrestling champion at 98 pounds and won four state judo titles.
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Logan Howard, top,
keeps a competing wrestler on the mat during a match against Pine Valley in
January. Logan will continue her wrestling career at King College in Tennessee
in the fall.
Submitted photo |
MAYVILLE - It's one thing to be a consistent member of the honor roll in high school.
It's another to be part of the Top 10 of your graduating class.
It's quite another altogether to reach that level of achievement in between trips across the country - and training with the United States National Team Developmental Program.
That's what Logan Howard, a senior at Chautauqua Lake Central School, has been able to accomplish.
Logan, the daughter of Bryan and Sandra Howard of Dewittville, took first place in her class in the United States Girls' Wrestling Association Women's Nationals competition in Ypsilanti, Mich., in March. She is currently ranked 10th in the nation in the USGWA's senior age group in the 55-kg weight class - impressive enough, but even more impressive when considering the senior group is for wrestlers aged 19 and up.
''A lot of it is on the breaks and weekends, but I do miss a lot of school,'' Logan said of the travel schedule that her competitions requires. ''They're excused absences, but it's hard because you to stay focused, and any free time is spent doing homework.''
''It's hard to balance, but wrestling teaches you dedication and gives you what you need to stay on track,'' Logan continued.''
Logan's dedication to wrestling has earned her invitations to U.S. Olympic training camps across the nation every year since she was 12 years old - earlier this month, she spent a week at the U.S. Olympic Committee's headquarters in Colorado Springs, Colo., attending a camp there. She has also attended camps over the years in locations including Lake Placid, N.Y., and Chula Vista, Calif. She has even traveled to Sweden with the U.S. Cadet National Team.
''I've stayed in the same dorm as Michael Phelps, who was just down the hall from us during our one camp,'' Logan said. ''You meet all the athletes, you learn all the different sports and coaches - you learn their work ethic.''
She plans to continue her education and wrestling career in the fall at King College in Bristol, Tenn., where she has been accepted into the honors program and has signed up to be part of the college's inaugural team of women wrestlers. The school is currently in the process of transitioning its athletic programs in the National Collegiate Athletic Association's Division II.
''They have a fully funded program,'' she said. ''I have my full tuition paid for through that.''
Logan also hopes to continue her coaching career, for which she is already bronze-level certified. She has coached at area tournaments as well as at nationals in Colorado.
''It's was funny, because for a while there, our coach - because he's just getting into girls' freestyle - had the same level of coaching as I did,'' she said. ''But, I mean, obviously he was way more experienced.''
While high school wrestling takes the form of what is called ''folkstyle,'' Logan will be wrestling freestyle for the rest of her career, as that is the form of wrestling for women in college and national and international tournaments.
Logan hopes to make the Junior National Women's Team and to be a College All-American. She also has an even bigger goal in her sights.
''The Olympics are within reach,'' she said. ''I think there are wrestlers (in the Olympics) who are in their late 20s and 30s, and some of them have even had kids. So there's plenty of time.''
Logan, a member of National Honor Society at CLCS, hopes to work as an elementary school teacher after college. She is getting some training in that field as a member of the Big Buddy Program at Chautauqua Lake, through which she helps elementary and middle schoolers by tutoring and providing a positive role model.
''I just love working with kids, coaching and everything,'' she said. ''The smiles on their faces make everything worth it.''
Logan has kept busy during her time at Chautauqua Lake as a member of the varsity wrestling, track, swimming and tennis teams; and as a member of the Spanish Club and High School Bowl team. She is a three-time winner of the school's Tom Drake Memorial 5K Run, and she volunteers time to help with Kristie's Kruise, which provides scholarships to Chautauqua Lake and Westfield students.
She is also a member of the Ladies' Auxiliary of the Dewittville Fire Hall, with whom she has helped put on dinners and put together Christmas baskets for the less fortunate.
The auxiliary's mission of helping others will turn toward Logan on June 6, when it will put on a spaghetti dinner to help raise funds for furthering her wrestling training and travels. Tickets for the dinner are $7 for adults, $4 for children aged 6 to 10, and free for children 5 and under. For more information, contact the Dewittville Fire Hall at 753-7231.
Logan, meanwhile, will be finishing out her senior year at Chautauqua Lake and doing what she can to maintain a level of excellence in class despite her busy extracurricular schedule.
''I definitely can't be afraid of staying after and working with the teachers,'' she said of how she manages to do it all. ''It's getting helping from other friends, being resourceful, and the Internet definitely helps a lot for communicating back and forth. But mostly I'm on my own, and what's really helped me is that I love reading - I read all the time. It gives be the background and something to grow off of.''
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