Posted on 01/21/2018 4:12:25 AM PST by SandRat
SIERRA VISTA For years, wrestling was always seen as a mens sport.
But thats no longer the case. Girls across Cochise County are breaking that stereotype one half nelson at a time and doing it well.
Lyla Pacheco is a freshman at Buena High School and a junior varsity team member on the schools wrestling squad. She is one of three girls on a team made up of more than 50 players.
Though shes a freshman, Pacheco is no newcomer to the sport. She started her wrestling career in junior high school because she said she wanted to follow in her fathers footsteps.
He did wrestling when he was a kid and when I tried it I really liked it, she said.
When she finished junior high school, joining Buenas team was the logical next step. While she knows shes making a mark in the community for being one of the few girls on the team, Pacheco said she didnt join the team for that reason wrestling is more than an after-school pastime; its a passion.
The thrill of three minutes of wrestling it really pushes me to discipline myself, Pacheco said. You have to exercise out of practice and we practice almost everyday. Its a hardcore sport and its really brought me to discipline (myself).
Giuliana Duncanson, a sophomore on the wrestling team, joined the junior varsity team with her friend, Bryttany Gurule. Before the season kicked off this fall, Duncanson said she had never stepped foot on a wrestling matt. She thought the sport looked like fun and, before she knew it, Duncanson was hooked.
But, she got injured early on. At Duncansons first match of season, she dislocated her elbow wrestling one of boys. Since then, shes had to sit on the sidelines and watch her teammates take the mat. She doesnt want to let that stop her, though. Once shes cleared to play, Duncanson wants to return next season and make a name for herself wrestling at Buena.
I really like the sport and I want to come back next year, Duncanson said.
Like Pacheco, Duncanson didnt join the team to prove anything to anyone. Instead, she wanted to participate in fun and engaging sport, adding to her list of hobbies that include volleyball and basketball.
I like it, its a lot of fun, Duncanson said. I wanted to try something new.
They arent the only girls to take to the mat with the boys. In fact, they are part of a movement of girls joining male-dominated sports. Girls across the country are joining teams and changing much of what modern society thinks about high school wrestling.
But girls in wrestling is nothing new.
In reality, women have been wrestling for well over 500 years, according to a PBS report. Girls wrestled each other in ancient Sparta and in some parts of Africa. One tribe in West Africa used wrestling as a marriage engagement the champion boy fighter would marry the champion girl.
And there are girls leagues and teams popping up in high school divisions across the U.S. However, until local schools garner enough interest to fill an entire roster, the girls will play on the boys team.
But the girls arent treated any differently at Buena, said wrestling coach Mark Dannels. Hes been leading the team for the last eight years and said the training among all teams members is the same there are no modifications for either girls or boys.
We try to excel them just like we do the boys, Dannels said. They are athletes and my job is to help them succeed as student athletes.
Dannels said he would like to see more girls try out for wrestling to fill a full girls team. For now, when the get the chance, Duncanson and Pacheco spar with other girls at tournaments.
For Rick Ross, Douglas High School wrestling coach, having an integrated team just proves how far girls have come in sports.
Right now, Ross has seven girls on his wrestling team, but hes had 11 in years past. Some of his athletes have gone on to win scholarships and wrestle on college teams across the country.
But it wasnt always that way. When he first started coaching in 2005, he didnt have any girls on his team. Once the first few started trying out in 2009, they inspired other girls to get involved.
Its helped a lot of young women and it shows them the opportunity, Ross said. They see whats happening really these girls are all go-getters.
As a coach, Ross is excited to see how girls change the game of wrestling. Having them in the game will change the future of the sport, he said.
-PJ
...so what’s the difference between sexual harassment and wrestling?
I don’t know, ask a FemiNazi.
lawsuit waiting to happen. if i had a son on that team, he would be quitting immediately.
some manly looking chick is going to come forward several years from now and accuse one of these boys of sexual assult years ago. especially if he or his family has some money,
You can get on it.
Meant to say bet on it!
That was an overuse of force.
Bet the boy’s wrestling squad call it feel up time cupping to ensue.Not the greatest idea wonder about the coach’s reasoning and the mothers idea of it?.
I like it, its a lot of fun, Duncanson said. I wanted to try something new.
OK Duncanson, try Kick BOXING INTERNATIONAL Rules.
And before you ask, if the shoe was on the other foot, I would say the same thing.
My youngest wrestled in Junior High. We also told him it was OK to forfeit to a girl ... but ... as it turned out the girl wrestlers easily outweighed him so it ended up being a non-issue.
A man breakingma womans arm wou have white knghts and women calling 911 on him and he would be jailed and sued. Dont tell me it would turn out the same way or that you,wouldnt think its overkill. Gynocentric society would crucify him.
To your point, men have successfully defended themselves against assaults from women AND won in courts. I personally know of one, who used to laugh at "husband abuse" until he became a victim of domestic violence. Fortunately for him, other males chose to support him rather than play the role of the "white knights", and he actually won.
As for the "white knights", that's THE CHOICE OF MEN hoping to score with the damsel's in distress.
Exactly
Moore wasn’t a DA, but I see the media has convinced you he was. Score for them, they won that race by telling bald lies.
How long til pinning a girl in a wrestling match will make a guy guilty of sexual assault?
Sure, I made an implied parallel, but I could just as easily have said the boy grew up to run for school board, or a judge, or a congressman, or a local business leader... or an assistant DA.
I wasn't specifically meaning to track Moore's career path exactly, and I never mentioned him by name. I wrote "DA" because it was simpler as an example, nothing more.
-PJ
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