California
Posted By
SCOTT HADDOW THE SUDBURY STAR 2/11/10
It wasn't only rookies making noise at the championship. Sacre-Coeur
began a boys and girls wrestling program at the start of the school
year. The team caught on quick and made a big splash at the event,
earning the overall boys, girls and city championship banners.
Three banners and a pile of
medals was an impressive haul for the first-year program and they were
all feeling good about it.
"We
didn't start with much," coach Patrick Wissell said. "We trained four
times a week and everyone was at every practice. They showed a lot of
heart and determination and it paid off for them. It was unreal to see
them do it. They wanted to show everyone in the city they could do it
and they proved a lot this season."
The Sacre-Coeur wrestlers
couldn't wipe the smiles of joy off their faces as they passed around
the banners and trophies they earned.
"It means a lot to all of us,"
Christopher Davidson said. "We all have confidence in each other and we
all support each other. We improved all season and we all worked hard
to do it. We're all proud of what we accomplished."
Champlain's Mercedes Byrnes,
who earned her second straight gold in the girls' 72-kg division, has
her sights set on bigger and better things. She placed third at the
provincial championship last year.
"I'm excited for OFSAA," she
said. "I'm hoping to scoop up the gold medal this year. The first-and
second-place girls are gone now from high school. There's a better
chance for me to get gold."
Chelmsford's James Brebant also
won his second straight city gold in the boys' 83-kg categor
y. The win put him in a good
mood.
"It means I'm moving on to
NOSSA and I have a shot at OFSAA and bragging rights for a while," he
said. "It took hard practice, four days a week. (At NOSSA) I'm looking
for gold. I got silver last year. I have to keep my head on straight
and focus."
Gold medal winners from the Ron
Preston city wresting championship are as follows:
GIRLS
44-kg: Josee Pelletier,
Macdonald Cartier;
51-kg: Victoria Day, Lockerby;
61-kg: April McCullagh,
Sacre-Coeur;
64-kg: Indira Moores, Lo-
Ellen;
67.5-kg: Danielle Leroux,
Macdonald Cartier;
72-kg: Mercedes Byrnes,
Champlain;
77-kg: Shelby Philips Sudbury
Secondary;
TOP ROOKIES
Tanner Poirier of Lively and
Indira Moores of Lo-Ellen.
MVPS
Mercedes Byrnes, Champlain;
Spencer Burton, Chelmsford
=================================================================================
Indiana
INDIVIDUAL
SEMISTATE
By
TIM CREASON
Tribune
Correspondent
Sarah Hildebrandt didn't set
out to make history when she started wrestling a few years ago. But
since she's already done it once, why not again?
"I'm feeling a little extra pressure, but I'm not letting it get to
me," says Penn's junior 103-pounder, who is about to become the first
female ever to wrestle at an IHSAA individual semistate tournament.
With a record of 17-3, Hildebrandt faces Munster freshman Santo
Marciano (25-6) around 10:15 a.m. (EST) Saturday in the tourney's
opening round at Merrillville High School.
If she can win that match — and then one more — she
would take history a step further, becoming the first girl ever to
reach the Hoosier state finals in this roughest of boys sports.
It's a longshot, yes. But a realistic longshot. Everyone who has seen
the Merrillville 103-pound bracket agrees Hildebrandt's got a chance.
In fact, the wrestling Web site, IndianaMat.com, predicts she will
finish among the top four in her weight class and earn a trip to
Conseco Fieldhouse in Indianapolis on Feb. 19.
"I'm pretty nervous; sure, I'm nervous," says Hildebrandt, who reached
the semistate by finishing third at last week's Rochester regional.
"People keep coming up and asking me about it. But everybody is so
supportive. It's kind of neat to know all these people are cheering for
me."
It's not that a girl wrestler, by herself, is anything new. Girls have
been participating on area high school teams for years.
But it's fair to say Indiana has never seen a girl wrestler this good.
Hildebrandt burst upon the scene in December when she won the 103-pound
weight class at Elkhart Memorial's huge Charger Invitational. Not just
won, but dominated her male opponents, pinning two and whipping another
by major decision.
Yet, ironically, one of the few boys she couldn't beat was her own
teammate, Mikey Witous. Because Witous won all the challenge matches,
Hildebrandt spent most of her season wrestling junior varsity.
But a medical condition knocked Witous out of Penn's lineup just before
the sectional, opening the door for Hildebrandt. Local coaches, knowing
her talent, made her the No. 1 seed at Mishawaka's sectional. She ended
up finishing second.
"I felt really bad for Mikey; that was rough, he deserved better," said
Hildebrandt. "It's not the way I wanted to get into the (varsity)
lineup."
But she's there, now. And yes, she knows everybody's watching.
"It adds to the pressure. I'm not trying to prove anything. I'm just
trying to wrestle my best," she said. "Yeah, it gets to me a little.
When I go out on the mat, sometimes I wish every eye in the place
wasn't watching me. I wish people wanted to see me wrestle, not just
because I'm 'the girl.'"
Even though she finished fourth at a women's national tournament last
summer, Hildebrandt admits it's a different feeling this time. To calm
herself down before a match, she paces ... and paces, frequently
covering long distances. That could be a bit of a challenge in
Merrillville's cramped, narrow hallways.
"Yeah, I've been thinking about that," she says. "I may do a lot of
laps (through the concession area)."
WRESTLING SEMISTATE
When:
Saturday
Advancement:
Top four finishers in each weight class advance to individual state
finals at Conseco Fieldhouse in Indianapolis on Feb. 19-20.
MERRILLVILLE
Where: Merrillville High School
Admission:
$9 all day; $6 finals only
Wrestling starts:
9 a.m. (CST)
Tribune area wrestlers:
103: Sammy Ferdig (Adams) 32-5;
Tyler Kuzdas (LaPorte) 20-10; Sarah Hildebrandt (Penn) 17-3; Zech Weese
(Rochester) 32-9; Jared Brooks (Warsaw) 31-0.
==================================================================================
South Carolina
A 12-year-old girl in Irmo,
South Carolina is taking the world of middle school wrestling by storm.
And it could lead all the way to the Olympics for young Genesis
Patterson. Drew Stewart reports.
=======================================================================================
Maine
Posted:
Wednesday, February 3, 2010 12:50 pm | Updated:
1:19 pm, Wed Feb 3, 2010.
By
Brandon McKenney bmckenney@keepmecurrent.com
|
Scarborough
High School wrestlers Kaylee Reny, left, and Molly O’Connor
are just two of the female wrestlers who have been competing in Maine
this season. Female athletes have been integrated easily into a sport
that was once all-male, coaches and wrestlers say. Staff photo by
Brandon McKenney
|
As the lights shone down on the
mat at a recent wrestling meet in southern Maine, everything was as it
should be. The stands were packed with spectators who watched a
wrestler, surrounded by his teammates, getting pumped up for this
match. The official was readying the red and green leg bands, and the
announcer was calling out the competitors’ names.
Even the female wrestler
strapping her headgear on and getting ready to walk out into the
circle, which would have drawn strange looks not long ago, seemed
completely normal to the spectators surrounding the mat.
But what used to be a rare
sight – as recently as 1996 girls were not allowed to wrestle
on boys teams ¬– is now becoming almost commonplace
as female wrestlers pop up on teams all across the state. Girl athletes
at Maine high schools – including Scarborough, which has two
girls on its wrestling team, Westbrook and Massabesic – are
finding different reasons to hit the mats.
“In eighth grade, my
parents told me I had to figure out what sport I wanted to play. I had
the choices between swimming, basketball and wrestling,” said
Molly O’Connor, a senior at Scarborough High School.
“I figured, which one will make my parents mad the most? And
I went for wrestling.”
“Unfortunately it
backfired and they love it now,” O’Connor added,
with a laugh.
And for her Red Storm teammate
Kaylee Reny, a junior, wrestling just seemed to fit her personality
just perfectly.
“I’m a very
aggressive person,” Reny said. “I used to play
soccer before this, and I used to get a lot of red cards.”
Sisters
following brothers
Last year the second annual
Maine High School Girls Wrestling Invitational featured 54 wrestlers
from 28 schools competing in 10 weight classes.
The proliferation of female
wrestlers owes something to the popularity of the sport, coaches and
wrestlers say, as well as to the ages-old inclination to copy older
siblings.
Massabesic coach Rick Derosier
thinks that a lot of the younger wrestlers coming up, especially on his
team, came to the sport through a family connection. Of the four female
wrestlers on his team, only one doesn’t have a family member
who participated before them.
“Family is
a big thing here and I think that’s what it is for a lot of
these kids, including the girls,” said Derosier.
“You’re going to see more of it because they see
older brothers and sisters coming up and wrestling and they want to do
it too.”
Mustangs junior Kim Rogers said
that was just the case for her.
“I had originally
been a cheerleader, but my brother was wrestling in junior high and I
watched him and always wanted to try it,” said Rogers.
Westbrook freshman Tori Pabst
and Danielle Richards both started for a different reason: to prove
they could do what people around them told them they couldn’t.
“Our parents and
friends kind of thought it was just a joke and that we
wouldn’t really take it serious,” said Pabst.
“People said we
couldn’t do it, so we did, just to prove them
wrong,” added Richards.
Westbrook coach Ryan Hutchins
said that attitude is what impressed him the most when he first
approached the pair after their eighth-grade season to ask them to
consider wrestling at the high school level.
“I think it said a
lot about their character that they’re willing to go into a
sport where they know they’ll be the minority,”
said Hutchins. “I give them a lot of credit for wanting to do
a tough sport,” he adds. “Anyone, guy or girl, who
wants to go out for wrestling deserves a lot of credit.”
'They're
like our big brothers'
On all three teams,
Scarborough, Massabesic and Westbrook, both the wrestlers and coaches
say that they haven’t had many issues with mixing the females
into their teams. They say that their male teammates have been very
receptive of them joining up.
“Everyone treats
Molly and I like we’re one of the guys,” said
Scarborough’s Reny. “We’ll get picked on
every once in a while for being girls but that’s
fine.”
“If anything they
rough us up even more,” teammate O’Connor chimed
in. “They’re like our big brothers.”
While their teammates have been
quick to accept them as one of their own, some of the girls have seen
opposing wrestlers make a joke out of facing them. O’Connor
said she’s fine with that though, since it’s all
the more fun when she pulls out a win.
“One time a kid was
kind of laughing before the match and I ended up putting him on a
stretcher at the end,” said O’Connor.
“They’ll
see that they’re wrestling a girl and act like it’s
not a big deal,” said Rogers as a smile came across her face.
“But then when we beat them they walk off the mat with their
heads hanging.”
Scarborough coach Phil Hamilton
said that the intensity he sees O’Connor and Reny bring to
the mat has helped them be accepted by their male teammates.
“Every year that
Molly’s wrestled here she’s been
everyone’s favorite wrestler,” said Hamilton.
“She goes out there and gets about as pumped up and intense
as you can to wrestle and I think the other kids really look up to her
for that.”
While there still might be a
jesting attitude from some wrestlers when they see a female on the
other side of the mat, the disposition that once existed in the sport
has dropped off significantly.
Hamilton said that there
aren’t many problems at the high school level. Hamilton said
that in the peewee and middle school levels, he still sees parents and
wrestlers who put up a fuss, but that the stigma drops at the varsity
level.
“It’s not
so much the case anymore especially with them not just competing, but
being extremely competitive,” said Hamilton.
The wrestlers say that their
parents and fellow students have also been very accepting of the idea
of females wrestling.
With the rise in numbers of
girl athletes participating in the sport, it seems that all-girl
wrestling teams may not be that far away. While it could be a reality
in the future, opinions seem to be mixed among the wrestlers.
“I think it’d be great, because it would show that
there are a lot of girls getting into the sport now,” said
Sara Gilbert, a Massabesic freshman.
There are currently a few meets
in Maine that showcase only female wrestlers, and Rogers said that she
has competed in a few.
“I like it a lot
because it gives us a chance to wrestle people who are equal our
strength and it’s a change,” said Rogers.
But Amber Libby, a freshman who
attends Catherine McAuley, but wrestles with the Mustangs, said
she’d prefer that things stay mixed.
“I think
it’s good that we get to wrestle guys because a lot of girls
can be just as good if they try hard enough,” said Libby.
'I
don't think it's really awkward'
Though outsiders might see
teenage females and males grappling with one another on the mat as a
touchy subject, the wrestlers themselves say that’s not the
case for them.
“People give me crap
about it all the time, saying that it’s weird or
inappropriate,” said Massabesic sophomore Ashlee Ohmon.
“But when you’re on the mat it doesn’t
even seem different.”
When it comes time to grapple,
said Westbrook’s Pabst, the person across the circle is just
another opponent.
“I don’t
think it’s really awkward because they’re out there
to wrestle too,” she said.
Likewise, said Massabesic coach
Derosier, the boy wrestlers have to concentrate on something besides
the gender of their opponent, or risk losing the match.
“A lot of these girls
can handle a lot of the guys,” he said. “So
that’s what’s nice about it.”
======================================================================================
Canada
February
11, 2010 - 6:40am
Robert
Frigon, Sports Writer
The U of A's best will hit the
mats in a little over a weeks time, when they travel to Calgary for the
Canada West wrestling championships.
While the Bears' 10-man roster
is yet to be finalized the Pandas are all set to go with their
eight-member roster. The team of 18 will compete in the two-day
competition before setting their eyes on CIS Championship, which will
also go in the Stampede City come March.
This year's Can West final will
be a difficult task for the Green and Gold, as the top-four women's
teams in the country — Calgary, Simon Fraser, Regina, and
Saskatchewan — along with number-one ranked Simon Fraser Clan
on the men's side, will all be in Calgary. Alberta head coach Owen
Dawkins though is looking forward to the stiff competition.
“I'm excited to watch
our guys — I’ve seen everyone else wrestle, and I
want to to see how our guys have progressed over the year and how their
confidence has increased,” Dawkins said.
“I'm more excited to
see how our guys have become accustomed to the training regime, and how
they have adapted to what we have been planning.”
In particular, four-time
consecutive CIS champ and former U.S. Olympian Ali Bernard will be
competing in the 82kg class. Bernard will be the heavy favourite to
capture the title in the division, and will be looking to take a step
towards making history as well.
"She's going for her fifth CIS
wrestling championship and that's never been done by any other women,"
Dawkins pointed out.
In preparation for the event,
Dawkins has pushed the team hard on and off the mats, and is preaching
a much more thorough training regimen this time around.
“I came in and asked
our varsity athletes to do 100 per cent more then they were doing
before. It's tough, but I asked them to go from training once a day
just on the wrestling mat, to twice a day, Monday to Friday, and once
on Saturday,” Dawkins explained.
"They've been asked to do a lot
more, but I think they have rose to the occasion and I think they're
ready to go.”
Just a mere nine months since
Coach Owen Dawkins joined the club, both the Bears and Pandas sides
have seen great improvement. Though they're sitting fourth and fifth
respectively in Canada West, Dawkins expects great things from his club.
“We are young; I
mean, we had 19 freshmen on the team this year. That's unheard of. The
growth is huge, the learning curve is very steep. My goal is to keep
this group together. If you can keep a group together its almost near
impossible not to grow together and become a better team.”
As the “little
cousin” to many of the other clubs in Canada West, there will
be growing pains for the youthful Alberta wrestlers, but expect up and
comers like Jason Laos, Haley Smith, James Yurick, and Conor Melauy to
step it up and surprise.
=========================================================================================
Texas
Brazoswood
sending 14 wrestlers to regionals
Published
February 11, 2010
CLUTE
— Youth dominates the Brazoswood wrestling team, but 14
athletes still qualified to compete in the Region III meet in Allen.
“For the most part, we are fairly young and we are going to
lose our big boys,” Brazoswood wrestling coach Bill Baker
said. “But we had so many injuries that other wrestlers just
came in and did the job.”
Brazoswood is sending a big group to the regionals, but in the past has
qualified more — 17 wrestlers advanced in 2006 and 2007.
“You’d like to say you expect to win and we do, but
we still were very pleased with the way things worked out at
district,” Baker said. “Anything can happen when
you get out there, but these kids were real focused and
determined.”
The double-elimination regional starts at 9 a.m. Friday and continues
through finals Saturday for the boys and girls. The top four wrestlers
from each class will advance to Austin for the state tournament
beginning Feb. 26.
There are eight Bucs and six Lady Bucs who advanced to this
weekend’s event in Allen.
Wrestling for the Brazoswood boys are Martin Lozano at 103 pounds,
Justin Terrill at 112, Travis Hill at 135, Michael Martin at 140,
Dillon Parrish at 180, Stephen Poindexter at 189, Austin Perkins at 215
and Scott Brock at 285.
“We pulled off a big surprise in heavyweight, and Scott was
giving away a ton of weight,” Baker said. “He
wrestled a smart match because it got very heated and he was bleeding
and was not happy, but he kept his cool. It was an exciting
match.”
Parrish, Poindexter, Perkins and Brock all are seniors, the rest are
underclassmen.
Of the eight going to the regional, only Hill made the state tournament
last year. He is hoping that type of experience will help with his
quest for another state appearance.
“I know it is going to be tough, just like last year, so I
just have to wrestle a good tournament,” Hill said.
In last year’s regional, Hill lost his second match and went
through five more elimination matches before winding up as the fourth
seed in the 135-pound class to advance to state.
“I just want to be able to make another run at
state,” Hill said. “This week, I am just working on
my top game because my conditioning is pretty good and I am able to
wear them out on the mat.”
Terrill, just a sophomore, won his second District 24 title. According
to Baker, he was lights-out Saturday.
“This week, we are just spending time to get in our running
to make sure our conditioning is good,” Baker said.
“We are trying to blow those lungs up and wrestle a bit. We
don’t need to be in here killing ourselves because we want to
be fresh when we get there. We want to make sure we make weight and
just get our heads right.”
Brazoswood girls wrestling at regionals are Ann Hinds at 95 pounds,
Jenna Pisarski at 102, Kayse Slaughter at 119, Mary Quandt at 110,
Rayshel Newman at 128 and Jamie Baggett at 138.
Slaughter is the only senior of the group. Baggett and Newman are
juniors, Quandt and Pisarski are sophomores, and Hinds is a freshman.
Slaughter, Newman, Pisarski and Hinds won district titles.
Slaughter is looking for a return trip to Austin after qualifying last
year.
“Based on what we have in Houston area, trying to qualify for
state is crazy,” Slaughter said. “It’s
mainly because everyone is so much better here and you can get stressed
out about it by thinking too much.”
She is looking for a rematch with Katy’s Kristina Cockren,
who beat her last year in the regional.
“I lost to her 3-2 earlier this year and did better against
her, so I am hoping to get her in the finals,” Slaughter
said. “Hopefully, if I beat her, I will be the region champ.
And if not, then I will be second.”
Another Lady Buc making a beeline toward Austin is Pisarski, who has
breezed through her class this season.
“From last year to this year, I just don’t feel
that nervous,” Pisarski said. “I am better prepared
and I am a better wrestler. I just feel much stronger this year. I know
what to expect, so it adds a comfort level.”
=============================================================================================
California
Three area wrestlers win in
girls invitational meet
Christian Brothers' Ruby
Santos,
Folsom's Tianna Camous
and West Campus' Jamie
Scott
won individual titles at the Sac-Joaquin Section
Girls Wrestling Invitational on
Friday and Saturday in Stockton.
Santos won at 126 pounds,
Camous at 132 and Scott at 189.
Placing second were Elk
Grove's Sarina
Nieves (122); Olivia
Seppinni of Rocklin (126) and
Sheldon's Haylee
Kauanoe
(154).
Ashley
Taylor
of Lindhurst (122); DeAngela
Castex
of Laguna
Creek (132) and Seanna
Estes of Marysville (148) took
third.
Fourth-place finishers included
Beronica
Rivera,
Lindhurst (103); Darlene
Julian,
Bear
River (114); Brittanea
Terrell,
West Campus (118); Faby
Perez,
Lindhurst (126); Mallory
Velte,
Christian
Brothers (132) and Alia
Chang,
Johnson (154).
Fifth-place winners were Erica
Pena,
Burbank (103); Reed
Stroup,
Kennedy (118) and Kaylynn
Times,
Laguna
Creek (189).
Taking sixth were Leticia
Yasay, Florin (122); Arianna
Lopez,
Rocklin (132) and Tianna
Strebel,
Johnson (138).
=============================================================================================
Indiana
Penn
ready for wrestling
Semi-State on Saturday
For
the first time since Brad Harper became the
wrestling coach at Penn three years, the Kingsmen are sending 10
grapplers to
Semi-State on Saturday at Merrillville.
Posted:
9:53
PM Feb 10, 2010
Reporter: Angelo
Di Carlo
Email Address: angelo.dicarlo@wndu.com
Video
For
the first time since Brad Harper became the wrestling coach at
Penn three years, the Kingsmen are sending 10 grapplers to Semi-State
on
Saturday at Merrillville.
"For
Penn High School and
our coaching staff, it's a great thing for our program," Harper said
Wednesday after practice. "It just shows that we are moving in the
right
direction so it's pretty exciting."
The
Kingsmen are led by junior Alex Gregory who finished 4th in
the state at 119 pounds a year ago. Gregory could be a state title
contender.
"I
think if each one of our
individuals goes on to wrestle their best match, they
have a chance to move on
to State and that's what we are putting in their heads," Harper
explains.
The
top four finishers at each
weight class on Saturday will advance to the state championship.
Among
the 10 Kingsmen competing
this weekend is junior Sarah Hildebrandt. She is the first female
in Indiana
history to reach Semi-State.
Hildebrandt
got her opportunity
after senior Mikey Witous suffered a career ending injury two weeks ago.
We'll
have a special look at
Hildebrandt's journey coming up on NewsCenter 16 at 6 on Thursday.
Mishawaka
will have 13 wrestlers competing in Saturday's Semi-State
============================================================================================
India
Editor
2/11/10
The Fifth Commonwealth
Wrestling Championships were held in Jalandhar, Punjab, India between
18 December and 20 December 2009. Wrestlers competed in Freestyle
wrestling (men and women)
Female Freestyle
| 55kg |
| Placing |
Country |
Name |
| 1st |
India |
GEETA |
| 2nd |
India |
DEVI NIRMALA |
| 3rd |
Scotland |
CLASON JAYNE |
| 4rd |
Australia |
BENSTED EMILY |
| 5th |
New Zealand |
LAW SIAN |
================================================================================================
India
STAFF WRITER 15:1 HRS IST
New Delhi, Feb 11 (PTI) An
11-member contingent will represent India at the 41st International
Free Style, Greco Roman Style and Female Wrestling Tournament 'Cerro
Pelado Granma' to be held in Havana City from February 15-21.
Rajesh Kumar (84Kg) and Hari Krishan (55Kg) are among the six Indian
grapplers who will compete in the Greco Roman Style event. The other
Indians in that category are Anil Kumar (60Kg), Sunil Kumar (66Kg),
Sanjay (74Kg), Rishi Pal (120Kg).
The female squad consists of Neha Rathi (48Kg), Rachna Shekhawat
(51Kg), Nirmala Devi (55Kg), Rajni (59Kg) and Babita (67Kg), a
Wrestling Federation of India release said today.
Last year, the Indians had won four gold, six silver and five bronze
medals in this competition.
===============================================================================================
Arizona
Prescott
High School actors tackle teen angst
|
 |
| Les
Stukenberg/The Daily Courier
“The Wrestling Season,”
featuring the Ruth Street Players, opens at Prescott High
School’s Ruth Street Theater Thursday, Feb. 11.
|
 |
 |
| Les
Stukenberg/The Daily Courier
|
|

PRESCOTT - Real
high school students play-acting like real high school students in real
high school situations - that's the premise of Prescott High School's
new play, "The Wrestling Season."
"It's edgy and intense," said director Louisa Nelson.
"It's somewhat racy," added Tracey Mason, the technical director.
Throughout the one-hour play, the nine teenage boy and girl actors use
wrestling as a metaphor for the conflicts, pressures, betrayals, false
accusations and the complexity of high school friendships.
During the course of wrestling practice and a final match, the student
actors show fellow students and the audience how their seemingly
innocuous behavior can be destructive and cruel to each other, and how
easy it is for outsiders to recognize.
"The play gets into real issues that teens can relate to," said Nelson,
who has taught at Prescott High School for more than 30 years. "We did
this about five years ago, and I had so many students come up to me and
say that they saw their life in the play."
The set consists of a wrestling mat, weight bench and chairs. Costumes
are wrestling uniforms. Audience members sit on stage around the mat.
"The seating is limited, but the audience has to be on stage around the
mat as if they are at a real wrestling match," Nelson said. "It
wouldn't work if they were sitting out in the rows."
Willy, played by Carl Vanderpool, is a student wrestler jealous of
teammate Matt, played by Patrick Brewer, and he starts a rumor that
Matt and his best friend Luke, played by Liam Howard, are gay lovers.
The rumor grows, spreads and gets uglier with each student who repeats
it until Matt and Luke start to believe it about each other. The rumor
disrupts some friendships, which the audience learns are not as
friendly as the teens pretend, and ultimately strengthens true
friendships.
The drama students, called the Ruth Street Players, spent Christmas
vacation learning to wrestle and the rules of the sport. Mason
recruited Brewer, who is a wrestler, to teach his fellow students -
boys and girls.
"It was easier with the guys - it came more instinctively," Brewer
said. "With the girls, it was harder."
Nevertheless, the girls learned well - they flip and toss the boys
around the mat like veteran wrestlers.
Although most of the students are seasoned actors, Alan Davis has his
stage debut.
"This is my first play," Davis said. "It's a great experience. I
haven't been this excited about something in a long time."
A line repeated throughout the play, "You think you know me, but I'm
not sure I know myself," just about sums up high school students' lives.
Performances are 7 p.m. Feb. 11, 12 and 13 at the Ruth Street Theater,
adjacent to Prescott High School on Ruth Street. Tickets cost $5 and
are available at the theater box office, which opens at 6 p.m. before
each performance.
Seating is limited. For more information about the play, call 445-2322,
ext. 154.
"This play is just too much fun," Davis said. |
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