Why I Skate: Media Blitz

Why I Play – Media Blitz

I moved to Hampton Roads in October of 2004. I was immersed in work, and on the weekends, I sat around my apartment. Months went by, and I longed for a life outside my stressful job as a TV News Producer. And the pounds crept up on me. By October of 2006, I was at my highest weight ever. One of my co-workers skated derby, and I went with a group of friends to watch the Halloween bout. That’s when my life changed. I was hooked.

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January, 2007. My first derby practice as “fresh meat.” It was hard, I was out of shape, and I didn’t know ANYONE. The coaches were tough. I toughed out the sore muscles, the bruises, and the stinky gear. I fell in love with the sport! The feeling you get after making it through a tough practice is like nothing you’ll ever feel again. With each practice, I felt stronger. And I made some great friends. And the weight came off!!!

A year later, and 60-pounds lighter. My calendar has filled up with so many “non-work” things. And the friends I made in the league, well they became my second family. We work to run the business we call the DDG. It’s a lot of work, but it’s rewarding. In the long run, I know we’ll flourish!

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My league-mates and I have our ups and downs, but in the end, they’re still there. And even though there are times when I feel like I’m not moving forward, the coaches remind me how far I’ve come as an athlete. And my derby friends remind me that they’re still my second family.

Tales from the Fresh Meat Locker: Angie

Sat Oct 25, 2008

Tales from the Meat Locker: Fresh Meat Angie

The reason I play roller derby is for the love of the sport and how it makes me feel. Roller derby requires a lot of physical and emotional strength. It is so liberating to skate your angers away and to just keep skating until you cant skate anymore. I don’t think any other sport could make me feel this good. I have tried dance, softball, and field hockey but those were not the same. There are not too many women’s contact sports, and out of those few sports derby stands out. Derby is a race, it is contact, and all you need are a pair of skates (and some extra padding) to play. It isn’t just the speed that keeps me anticipating every practice it is the women and men that make up the team. DDG doesn’t only consist of the girls that play, you cant forget the reffs, the fans, the other teams, the old players who have left, and the players who haven’t even put of a pair of skates yet. Roller derby is expanding, and I am glad I am able to be part of it. This is why I LOVE ROLLER DERBY!

Why I Skate: Van Hellion

Fri Oct 24, 2008

Why I Play – Van Hellion

One night, while beating the boys at poker over at Pretty Skate Machine’s house, she mentioned roller derby and sold me a ticket to one of the interleague bouts. The bout was a lot of fun, but I was pretty intimidated by the girls. I never thought that I would be one of those girls one day.
During another drunken night at poker at my house, I asked Skate Machine to tell me more about this roller derby. She was so excited to talk derby, and I felt like I found out everything there was to know about it. So I did what any potential derby girl would do; I went out, stole some skates off of a bum, found some pads, and bought some fish nets. Shortly afterwards, Skate Machine took me skating, and made me feel like my “basic” skills were so awesome. I looked forward to nothing more than the fresh meat tryouts.

So here I am. Derby has brought out the confidence in me that I didn’t think I had. I’ve made 20 “sisters” and would trade nothing for these awesome girls.

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Why I Volunteer: Luke Slytalker

Mon Oct 20, 2008

Why I Volunteer – Luke Slytalker

Why not? I do it for many reasons…the rush, the fun, the people, the sport. When I first came to this league, I tried to figure out what I could do that would really make me a part of the team. Announcing just seemed to click really well. I’m not saying it was an overnight success for me but it definitely came pretty easy.

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I needed to learn the sport and how to announce it. To do that, I did a lot of hands on work with the microphone at practice. I also studied the rule book as well as what my team did at practice. You see, an Announcer is calling the bout from start to finish and is pretty much the voice that is telling you what you are seeing. That is two periods and a halftime that you need to know what you’re talking about and sound good while you’re doing it. To fill this time, you need to be able to call what is going on (play by play) during the bout, have the personality to add a little color and fun, and know your skaters. If don’t know your skaters, you can’t talk about them. So getting to know the sport and the skaters who do it is pivotal in calling the sport. Let’s face it, nobody comes to watch roller derby to hear you talk about the weather or what’s going on with the stock market. After some experience and lessons learned, I finally came into my own and established my announcing style. However, it is a constant learning process and I am always finding out new things.

Becoming involved in Roller Derby is like joining a nationwide extended family. You are not only close with your team; you get to be close to other teams all over the country. You will make friendships with a huge network of people that share one huge common interest. Whether I was announcing at home or on the road with the DDG, I have made some great friends along the way that I talk to on a regular basis. We trade ideas, styles, opinions, etc. Plus, you always have a couch to crash on when you are in a different city. I would have to say that my favorite event so far has been the East Coast Derby Extravaganza. It is hosted every year by the Philly Roller Girls. Instead of having a bout and seeing one team, this event hosts continuous bouts throughout the day with teams from all over the country. Plus, you get to check out all kinds of great products from the vendors that are setup at the event.

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Since joining the DDG, I have traveled to some cool places, I have called a lot of exciting bouts, made a lot of friends, and had a great time along the way. I would encourage anyone to become involved in Roller Derby whether you want to skate, ref, or volunteer. It will change your life for the better.

-Tenacious Steve

Tales from the Meat Locker: Zanna

Sat Oct 18, 2008

Tales from the Meat Locker: Frest Meat Zanna

I didn’t know what derby was until Cristie, Van Hellion, got hired at my work. She showed me her tattoos and said “I’m a derby girl!” and I was in awe. So I came to a bout. I couldn’t believe the way these girls moved on skates! I loved watching them annihilate the other team. I have been an athlete all my life and knew this is a sport I had to get into.

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I joined this league right before Commotion by the Ocean. It was a huge event at the Virginia Beach Convention Center and I was blown away that 20 girls, (with full time jobs, college classes, husbands, kids) put it together and executed it!! I knew then that this is a group I had to be a part of. These ladies are chargers. Go getters. They make stuff happen and I love that energy.

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I had never skated before in my life and the coaches were patient with me as I coasted around the track like a toddler. I finally started to get the hang of it and now my favorite part is getting whips and pushes! I’m still fresh meat so I haven’t really gotten a taste of bone-crushing derby but so far I am obsessed with skating. I like how I get so sore I have to plop into chairs because it hurts too much to lower myself into them. I like how I can’t bear to wear high heels to work because my fatty blisters will pop. I like wearing fish nets and stench filled pads. I have caught the derby disease, the skating syphilis, and I can’t wait to spread it!!

Love,

Fresh Meat Zanna

Why I Skate: T.Rex Ya Face

When I first saw that commercial on TV for roller derby in April 2006…I thought Roller Derby, Whaaatttt thhaaa??? Then I pondered… “If its anything like what i think it is, a full contact race, on skates, them count me IN! I jumped up leaving the snug in the spot I’ve so lazily made for myself over the past year on the couch to ran to the computer. I quickly googled “Virginia Roller Derby” F’in Right! We had a league. I didn’t know anything about Norfolk’s league, how long they had existed, if they were good, and most importantly how can I join? In reviewing the website I easily located the “join” section and starting speed reading to get directly to the contact name! I quickly began writing that email, only to sit and stare at it for what felt like eternity before I clicked send. It seems within minutes I had a reply telling me there was a general meeting that I could come and listen and see for myself who these alleged “derby girls” really were.

Shit. What have I done. I was the most nervous than I’ve ever been. The meeting was at the Chrysler Museum about a week later. A few of the girls worked there at the time and were able to secure us a meeting room. Fancy! I didn’t know Norfolk too well, ya see, I’m a beach girl….needless to say I got lost on my way and had to walk in late. The Nightmare! Everyone was looking at me! I quietly sat in the seat in the corner and glanced around the room. There is so many girls! Did I have to try out. What If i get cut? What if i can’t skate anymore? I thought i was dead meat, all the other girls in there look tough. It was suggested that you should go to an open skate first and get your bearing so to speak before trying out. Also they said they have mandatory PT on Saturdays. I felt my heart fall into my stomach. I was a retail manager of a slow nursery(plants, not kids) out in the middle of no where. Although we were never really busy, I had to be there Saturdays. Well this won’t work out I thought and pushed the whole roller derby thing to the back of my mind.

The seasons passed, spring turned into summer and summer slowly turning into fall. My life went on…One day I was at a Murder No Motive show, selling merch for the band and this girl, I call her fate, but her name was Noelle walked up to me and asked if the band would be interested in playing at the halftime show for roller derby. WHAT! I yelled, Did she really just say roller derby.

She said she was Fresh Meat with DDG and told me about a new round of tryouts the following Thursday! (this was a Saturday night) Little did I know in 5 days my life was about to change.

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I had from Sunday morning to Thursday to get my gear. Shit. Gear! What do they wear? What do I need? I went to Dick Sporting Goods, bought, now looking back, the cheesiest skates ever and some bobo pads and a helmet. I was geared up. Thursday rolled around and I got dressed and headed to tryouts. On my way, the boboness of my pads got to me and I stopped by Target for something better. One wouldn’t think that you’d choose a Target over a sporting goods store for protective pads but the trusty Target came though, and I had decent pads to begin with. I arrive early and roll around the rink a few times with the open skate skaters trying to blend in but my gear is screaming BRAND NEW and my face looks petrified! HA! The memories…So it began without a hitch-we all were passes into Fresh Meat status and thus started my training as a Dominion Derby Girl.

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The training as a fresh meat was about three months long. Meanwhile back at the Nursery my boss,she was such a feminist you’d think she be all about Roller Derby but, no, her concern was that I’d break something and couldn’t work for her, As she once told me. Really! Well, that, having to work weekends, not being able to travel, and a perfect opportunity opening up for me at my dads shop, I quit retail. I miss working with plants everyday, I really really do. But I think that my degree in Horticulture and my passion isn’t going anywhere. This body won’t be its 20’s forever, i need to skate now!! (Although I’m young at 25 in terms of average derby girls age!) Plus I needed some freaking weekends to myself. I had been in retail forever and was quite sick of it.

I passed my WFTDA training eval in December of 2006. I tried out for the ‘07 Travel Team as a brand spanking new rotten meat and made it. Shit. I was gonna be bouting in 3 weeks! (That same time we were just accepted into the Women’s Flat Track Derby Association(WFTDA). Holy Hell That’s awesome. We were a team that will be nationally recognized. “This is a great time to begin derby” I always told myself!) The captain at the time was Sweet N. Lowdown,transfer skater from Tuscon with a derby background already, told me that since I was new and knew nothing of the game except that I could skate fast, I’d only be jamming. Only be jamming, ONLY, dang that’s huge. That means I would be the only person on the track at a time(besides the other team) that could score points. Well if she wanted to say only, whatever, that was good enough for me! I jammed my ass off that game. And continued from then on being a jammer for Dominion Derby Girls.

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I love and let me say it again LOVE to jam. I will jam 99% of the time you hand me the pantie. (Panties are the helmet covers we wear to denote the jammer and pivot) To be a jammer defiantly has its drawbacks. Frankendoll, a current DDG blocker once said to me…”No way!, do I want to jam, You might as well tape a thundered dollar bill to my forehead, there are all out to get me” But that’s what I love. The get me if you can attitude. I’m a big fan of a jammer isn’t any good without the help of her blockers BUT the jammer needs to hold her own as well. One of the biggest things I tell new jammers as they begin is to keep moving your feet. The easiest jammer to stop is one that will stop. Sounds easy enough, huh. So if you keep your feet moving, juking around like a boxer, you can usually out step them. But the second you end up behind someone and stall with your feet, your a sitting duck. Be ready for another blocker to rush in and knock your ass out. The 3 main things I would say when trying to avoid super big takeouts as a jammer is, Don’t take the outside, Don’t stop skating and, use your teammates as pawns on your track. I would say the biggest drawback for me is the pressure. As I mentioned before, you ain’t jack without your blockers, but no one but yourself can pull out the power, endurance, and strategy with split second thinking when barreling into the pack as a jammer.

Jamming also has is advantages. Obviously the name recognition. The announcer usually says the jammers name a few more times than some of the blockers. And in turn, the crowd remembers you. Although some blocker are famous world wide, like Beyonslay from Gotham. The whole damn country knows her name! My favorite thing when jamming is “Open Air Jamming”. I made up the term but its when your pack of blockers do a wonderful job blocking and also helps if the other team isn’t paying attention and you soar right on through the pack. Untouched. Like as if you were flying in a big open space. They are kinda rare but a most excellent feeling. I usually roar when coming out of them?! Habit I guess. Its the Dino in me. I have always begun the game on the jammer line. Being the first jammer makes for your nerves to be amplified 10x. The pressure you feel when your waiting for the second whistle to start the game is huge, but in those moments its when I realize that this is what I love to do.

Skate hard and turn left.

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Jamming is a awesome position to play. If you have the endurance, courage and, determination anyone can be a jammer. Whats beautiful about roller derby is that all body types are welcome in derby. Sometimes the wider you are the better you are at pack play! Sweet N. Lowdown weighs about 90lbs and was the best all around player we had.(She has retired and is moving to Abu Dahbi…sigh..)

If you’re thinking about joining, Please do. If you don’t like it don’t stay but, for me and many thousands other across the country, It will change your life.

Why I Skate: Frankendoll

In February 2006 I was planning my return to Texas for that summer to be closer to my family. I had befriended a guy I met online who lived in Houston. Through our talks I learned that he was close friends with several girls who skated roller derby for The Houston Roller Girls. As soon as I heard that Houston had a team I knew I had to be part of it. I never played sports before so I’m not sure why I was so certain that I would love roller derby. But one thing I knew without a doubt that because I’ve always been an extremely aggressive person, I felt that roller derby was perfectly suited for me. The biggest appeal was the violence, I like the prospect of being hit but even more excited about dishing out brutal blows.

I immediately called my closest friends and told them that roller derby was indeed alive and I was going to join no matter what it took. Some laughed and said that “roller derby fit me” and some thought I was being ridiculous, “don’t you know that you’ll get hurt doing that!?” Of course I knew I would probably get hurt but I didn’t care. That weekend I got together with my best friend and we watched several of the Roller Girls reality series. I was sooo excited, watching this show cinched the deal. I was definitely going to skate or die trying. I started to rethink waiting to move that summer to hurry up and move that spring so that I could check into the HRD as soon as possible.

One evening while having dinner with a friend I casually mentioned my intentions of moving earlier than planned on account of my interest in Houston’s Roller Derby and that’s when he mentioned that Tidewater had a derby league. WHAT?!!! I’d never heard of a league in this area. I flew home and found the Dominion Derby Girls on myspace, just where he said he had seen them, AND they were recruiting! I immediately emailed Molly Shipwreck, the leagues founder and asked what I needed to do to join. That week I met up with the DDG at Plaza Roller Rink in Hampton and the rest is history.

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It took me almost a month to save up to get the skates and gear. Some of the girls told me later that they never thought I was serious because it took me so long to get everything I needed. I don’t think I’ve ever been so serious about something ever in my life. Now I had everything I needed to start skating except one crucial element… I hadn’t skated in about 15 years. I thought it would be like riding a bike, right? Well, kind of.. but not really. I had never worn speed skates before and skating in bulky equipment seemed to make it even more difficult BUT because I fell.. a lot, like every 3 or 4 steps I was thankful to be wearing it. I laughed at myself more than they laughed at me and to play a sport like this you have to be able to laugh at yourself and have some thick skin, it’s just how it is. The girls taught me everything they knew to prepare me for my final test. Eventually, 3 months later I passed my minimum skills requirements and graduated from Fresh Meat to Rotten Meat, I was ready to hit and scrimmage! Woo Hoo!

The following Monday night, July 10th I was going to scrimmage. The day went by so slowly, it was like the night before Christmas. I said good bye to my doctor at the close of the day and told him I was off to scrimmage for the first time. He wished me good luck and told me not to break my arm. I’m an orthodontic assistant so you understand that my arms/hands are important tools I need to be able to do my job. My job wasn’t thrilled when they learned of my new hobby but they were supportive because they saw how happy derby made me. That night, sure enough, first scrimmage second jam I fell and broke my arm. I knew it instantly as I had already broken several bones in my lifetime… I told you I was an aggressive girl. I was so upset, I didn’t even get to hit anyone.

Four surgeries, one rod, nine screws later my arm was on the mend. My doctor came to visit me in the hospital to beg me to take on a new hobby like golf or tennis. I declined, those were way too boring for me. Apparently the office had made bets on whether I would return back to skating after such a horrible break. I told Dr. Shivar that my mom never raised a quitter and besides I never got a chance to hit anyone. I didn’t skate for months and months to fall once and quit. Three months later I was back on the track and skating.

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Why do I love roller derby? I love derby because it balances out my aggressive tendencies, just as I thought it would. I enjoy pushing through the burn and the pain of the hits but even more I love seeing the other girl hit the ground. It’s a release from work and life’s frustrations. It’s proving that I’m not afraid of the pain. It’s the physical manifestation of the years of anger I had yet to let go. It’s my therapy. It’s my job as blocker 3 to be as aggressive as possible. It clears my mind and makes my body warm and tingly and my body hum. Roller derby is my crack and mistress. There is nothing about derby that I do not love… ok well maybe not because I hate P.T. but I do it anyway, cursing under my breathe the whole time. Grrr.

Right about now I’m imagining that you may think I’m crazy but I assure you I’m not. Most of the women I skate with have only heard tales of my past aggression and find it hard to believe. I’m not a monster. I work with children all day long and I love them. I’m extremely kind hearted and caring. I just have inner aggression that I need an outlet for and roller derby is the answer. I can’t imagine my life without it.

However, what I’ve come to love most about roller derby is the kindred friendships that I’ve made. I feel as if all the girls I skate with are my sisters. We skate together, dream together, cry together.. we are Dominion Derby Girls, a small but fierce group. We are a support unit for each other. We’ve been through weddings, births, divorces, even death together. I feel so blessed to be part of such an awesome group of women. Hopefully, when we’re old and gray our friendships will still remain and we can sit on our porches, likely in wheel chairs HAHA, and reminisce of our days in fishnets and skates and how we helped pave the road for future of roller derby to finally be seen by everyone as a real sport and not just as girl on girl action.

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