September
2007 - Tour Great Miami
(^link to original article)
Lighting up the Track:
The Gem City
Rollergirls
tourgreatmiami.com
Blood, Sweat
and bruises is what drives the women of the Gem City Rollergirls
as they participate in the fastest growing sport in North
America, flat track roller derby. Beneath their rugged exterior
are hearts impassioned with a love for the sport.
Blood, Sweat and bruises is what drives the women of the
Gem City Rollergirls as they participate in the fastest growing
sport in North America, flat track roller derby.
Beneath their rugged exterior are hearts impassioned with
a love for the sport.
Let’s be honest, good looking women, rather scantily
clad, fighting with each other and on skates is appealing,
so I was pleased to work on this story, while also a little
fearful for my well being. I used to watch Roller Derby on
television and see how they annihilated each other so what
would they do to me? But I found kind, normal every day working
women, mostly mothers, who only become ferocious when their
skates are laced up.
“I am much different on the track. Normally, I am a
shy, quiet person, on the track I am fierce and loud and
love the whole physical aspect of the game,” Shan Seitz
said, who skates under the name Killian Destroy.
Seitz works as a billing manager and is a mother of
three who uses the time on the track to alleviate life’s
stresses.
In its second year, the Gem City Rollergirls
are Dayton’s first and only skater-owned and operated
flat-track roller derby league. Their bouts are held once
a month at the Ervin J. Nutter Center and include no script
or theatrics as the competition and injuries, if any, are
real.
“If I don’t come out of a bout feeling like I
have been hit by a Mack truck, I have not done my job,” Seitz
said.
The action is fast paced as they skate with ease, playing
offense and defense simultaneously. There is much more skill
and precision to the bouts than I expected, it’s a
race and a battle of wits played out on top of hard concrete.
It’s the heat of competition that makes all the
work worth it and provides the energy to perform without
any thought of the risk involved. “My favorite part
of being a rollergirl is the bouts. I love lining up on the
flat track against some of the best athletes in the sport.
Teaming up with my fellow Gem City Rollergirls and putting
up the best fight we can is what it is all about to me,” Seitz
said.
Each team has five players on the track at a time, consisting
of one Pivot, three Blockers and one Jammer. The Jammer,
with a star on their helmet, lines up 33 feet behind the
others and scores points by passing each opposing skater
during a two minute jam period.
It gets physical in the pack while everyone is trying to
prevent the Jammer from being able to pass.
“It’s not as easy as it looks,” Cassie
Thorpe a.k.a Right Turn Clyde said, who is in her rookie
season.
A long time skater, Thorpe is thrilled to be able to use
the talent she developed as a child with many trips to Skyborn
Skateland in Fairborn where the team now holds their practices. “Growing
up in the 80’s you had to know how to skate,” she
said.
Thorpe received some perplexed looks from those at the National
City Mortgage Company where she works when she shared her
plans to become a Rollergirl. “My boss asked, ‘Are
you crazy?’ I said, ‘Yes.’”
Despite warnings from those around her, such as her father’s
fear of breaking her neck, Thorpe continued the pursuit of
her interest. “It’s cool to get to hit women
and not get arrested,” she said.
Beyond the thrill of competition, a goal of the Rollergirls,
while balancing family, work and social engagements, is to
build positive relationships with other women. And despite
what the scoreboard might say, the personal friendships are
a victory achieved.
“It’s a sisterhood; we share a lot about whatever
is going on in our lives. And everyone is really caring,
when there’s an injury everyone always checks on you,” Thorpe
said. They all share a united love of the sport and spend
many hours a week, sweating together to be the best they
can be. While everyone is like family for Seitz there is
actually a blood line connection as her sister who skates
as Hannah Barbaric is on the team and she aspires to eventually
add more relatives. “I have an 18 year old daughter
who is starting dental hygiene school this fall. Once she
graduates, I hope to have the only league that has a mother/daughter/sister/aunt
combination burning up the flat track,” she said.
A red head, it is roller derby that brings out Seitz’s
fiery alter ego which, otherwise, stays hidden. “Everyone
who knows me, once they hear I play roller derby, are very
surprised, especially once they see me play. Killian Destroy
is nothing like Shan Seitz,” she said.
It’s on the track that the women release their rabid
aggression, all for the delight of the audience. There are
two more chances this season to check out the Gem City Rollergirls
at the Nutter Center; September 8th and October 21st. Bouts
start at 7:30 p.m.
The Rollergirls provide a viewing experience you won’t
soon forget.
Where else are you going to see women fighting on skates?
If you know, tell me about it because I want to write that
article.
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