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Let's call a timeout on this charade
Jan. 22, 2003 ,TimesLeader.com
About a dozen or so years ago, a female - her name is not important - went out for the Wyoming Valley West varsity football team.
The aspiring placekicker caused quite a stir in the community, not to mention a few logistical problems for the athletic administration. Yet, every provision was made to ease the situation and make the young lady comfortable.
There was just one teensy weensy problem. The kid couldn't kick - a lick.
That didn't stop her from wasting the rest of the team's valuable practice time going through the motions. Of course, she was allowed to stay on the team. Realizing he was in a potentially flammable situation and refusing to compound an already unnecessary headache, then-Spartan coach Bill Chase wisely let the kid finish out the season. And that was that.
Which brings us to the current times at Wyoming Area High School.
A 16-year-old, determined to prove that girls can do anything guys can, goes out for the Warriors wrestling team and causes a stir, including a sports front profile in Sunday's Times Leader.
Disregard, for a moment, that her only victories have come by forfeit, and that she has been pinned every time she's taken the mat against a live opponent, including a 17-second clamping on Saturday.
Like her football counterpart at Valley West so many years ago, the young lady hasn't shown the ability to compete with the boys at this level. That's really the larger picture here, isn't it? These kids simply can't compete.
For heaven's sake, even the founder of the United States Girls Wrestling Association said as much in these pages on Sunday.
Because of the obvious physical nature of the sport, it's unfair to put a male wrestler in such a precarious, no-win situation. Didn't we learn at an early age that boys parts are different than girls parts?
What teenage male can risk being the first wrestler in the conference to give up points to a female opponent, let alone lose to her?
And what happens when some overzealous youth, fearing the taunts of his schoolmates, inadvertently causes a serious injury while applying one of the sport's many potentially dangerous moves?
Does anybody honestly doubt this is a tragedy waiting to happen?
What's the point?
A few years ago, a Wyoming Valley Conference field hockey team played a postseason game against a squad that included a very capable male player. At game's end, the local team complained loud and long that they feared for their safety during shots on goal because the boy was so much stronger and skilled.
Know what? They were right. He had no business playing on that team.
And, in case you're wondering, that freshman coed who attempted to walk on at Penn State as a place-kicker last summer? She gave up the dream one day after watching the scholarship kickers practice.
It's called common sense.
Reach Kellar at 829-7243 or jkellar@leader.net
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By Richard Motroni 1/22/03
South San Francisco brought only five wrestlers to the ASICS Napa Valley Girls Classic, yet all five would eventually make a big contribution. In a girls wrestling tournaments that fielded 57 teams including schools from Nevada, Oregon and Michigan, South City managed to finish ninth overall with 44.5 points, just seven points shy of fifth place.
"I was surprised by our performance because this is supposed to be the largest girls wrestling tournament in the state, and I expected that we would get a couple of wins," said South City coach Jerrold Gor. "For us to get past of couple of rounds with this level of competition is pretty impressive."
Equally impressive is the fact of the five South City wrestlers that competed, three placed within the top three. Christina Fong, a sophomore who has competed in boys junior varsity tournaments, powered her way to the 110-pound third place match. Facing Tori Crosby of Castro Valley, Fong dominated from the start and scored a 19-4 tech fall win to finish third.
Christina Delgado wasted little time in the 122-pound third place match against Wilcox's Lana Cary. Quickly getting her opponent on her back, Delgado needed just 40 seconds to record the pin and take home the third place medal.
South City's third placer was Elaine Bartolome who finished third in the 114-pound class. Linda Villegas (118) won her first match, then lost the next two, each by one point. On February 1st, all nine female South City wrestlers will compete at the girls state wrestling championships in Vallejo.
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Kubasaki's first female wrestling coach embraces winning tradition
By Dave Ornauer, Stars and Stripes
Pacific edition, Thursday, January 23, 2003
Dave Ornauer / S&S
Dave Ornauer / S&S |
CAMP FOSTER, Okinawa Chest heaving, gasping for breath, Dominic Canno gathered himself, hands on knees, in the corner of the mat.
Offering a bottle of water, Terry Chumley, the Kubasaki Dragons coach, quietly exhorted her charge between periods of the 122-pound bout with Chris Maxey of the Kadena Panthers.
Youre doing fine. Keep working him, Chumley said, patting Canno on the side of his headgear. Three more minutes, and youve got it.
Canno went on to win an 11-6 decision, helping his coach to a successful Okinawa High School Athletic Association dual-meet debut, winning 35-13 over Kadena.
Later, back in the Kubasaki practice room, Chumley reflected on the victory while staring at a quarter-century of Dragons wrestling lore.
Photos of past individual weight-class champions, their names and others stenciled in white over painted green fields, were arrayed on the wall. They were emblematic of a Pacific-record 18 Far East tournament championships.
Of that record haul, 13 titles were achieved by Chumleys predecessor, Jeff Pellaton, who transferred to Würzberg, Germany, last summer.
Just inheriting that legacy might be enough pressure, but Chumley also is the first woman coach in the wrestling programs 25-year history.
Quite a challenge, quite a task, she said. Its truly amazing what this program has done. But I have high expectations for myself and the team.
I plan to carry on the tradition that people before me have set.
In the Pacific, only two of those people also were women: April Scott (Robert D. Edgren, Japan, 2001-02) and Lori Howell (Kadena, 1991-93).
Chumley, 40, already proved herself in the Far East tournament arena with a girls soccer title last spring. She views herself as a coach, she said, whether what shes coaching is soccer, volleyball or wrestling.
Im a coach coaching wrestlers, thats how I feel about it. I dont think it bothers any of the guys, she said.
The Falls Church, Va., native got started in Kubasakis wrestling program as an assistant in 1998.
She realizes the pressure, but shes a good coach no matter what sport she does, said Steve Schrock, the Kadena coach whose team the Dragons vanquished in that dual meet.
He coached against Chumley-led teams while he was at Naples, Italy, and she at Reykjavik, Iceland, during the 1980s.
It doesnt matter that shes a woman, he said. Shes a good coach and she knows wrestling.
Though she never wrestled in high school or college, Chumley, a 17-year veteran of teaching and coaching, said she first got involved with wrestling when the DODEA school in Iceland needed a coach.
Ive always enjoyed watching and learning the sport, she said. I have books, tapes, you name it. Thats how I got started.
A year after she arrived at Kubasaki in 1997, Chumley moved into the wrestling program under Pellaton when his then-assistant, Jim Hall, took over the girls basketball team.
Among Pellatons and Chumleys young acolytes was Bobby Duncan, who would go on to win a pair of Far East individual freestyle gold medals in 2000 and 2001. Now a University of Maryland student at Camp Foster, he assists Chumley and says the program isnt missing a beat with her in charge.
Shes done quite well, said Duncan, working to earn his teaching credential. She and Coach P taught me a lot and inspired me to follow in their footsteps.
Not someone who just carries a clipboard and remains on the sidelines, Chumley even warms up with her wrestlers before workouts, said 148-pound senior wrestler Will Appling.
When we learn technique, shes the one who shows us, Appling said. Besides desire and hard work, every day we do hard conditioning. Shes there every step of the way with us.
More than just teaching freestyle wrestling moves, much of what Chumley does is motivational, in much the same mold as her predecessor.
She teaches us to just be strong, that we have what it takes to win, Appling said. Its up to us, six inches between the ears and eight inches below the throat and a little left of center, as to whether we will win a Far East title.
She wont accept the word cant, Duncan added. Its not a word in her dictionary.
More than learning the rudiments, Chumley considers the mental aspect to be crucial in developing a good wrestler.
By the time Far East comes along, everybodys in shape, everybodys learned the technique, Chumley said. Its central when you get on the mat, your mental imagery and your heart refusing to quit no matter what.
All these things, she said, were integral to Pellatons philosophy. Now its up to Chumley to carry it on, amid the added pressure of replacing a dynamic personality such as Pellaton, and amid whispers that the program will decline now that hes gone.
Thats a natural, she said. He was a stellar figure. Of course, people will think the program will drop, but I dont feel that way. Im very secure and comfortable in what I am doing.
Shes not Coach P, Appling said, but I think what shes doing is excellent. Those are some big shoes to fill but if anybody in the Far East can fill those shoes, she can.