So apparently I'm not the only Glader who knows there's a roller derby league in his area.
Good!
First things first -- many of you guys probably have a local league, too, even if you've never heard of derby. You should go check it out. Heck. Some of you guys have the privilege of having some of the top roller derby teams in the country right in your backyard -- I know we've got regulars from or near San Francisco, Austin, L.A., Des Moines, St. Paul, Denver, Philly, Seattle, St. Louis, Columbus, Detroit, Vegas, etc. It's one of the fastest growing sports in the world, and the largest association of leagues (the Women's Flat Track Derby Association) boasts
238 member leagues (use the link to look up ones near you -- they often hide behind city or regional nicknames, references, or homages, like Windy City, Gem City, or Burning River) across the globe, with most of them right here in the US. Derby is awesome, and if you love contact sports, I can't fathom how you could overlook or dismiss it. It's very grassroots, featuring amateur athletes and volunteer support and officiating staff, and as such it's easy and rewarding to really plug into the community surrounding it.
Beyond that.. let me kick this thread off with how I discovered roller derby, and what the last year spectating and officiating my hometown team (the Gem City Roller Girls) has offered me. Some names have been abbreviated to protect the innocent. Well, to protect the people who I don't want to just plaster non-derby names all over the internet for, at least.
So a year and a half ago, "B" got hired on as full time faculty at the small college I work for. Being a small town, she was old high school buddies with one of my coworkers in my department, "J" -- they were thick as thieves back when. J and I had neighboring desk areas, so we're pretty friendly. B would come by to talk to J, and I'd occasionally join in the conversation, getting to be more friendly with B than I am with the average faculty member as a result. When B and I discover we both like board games, she invites me over to her friends' fledgling weekly game night that they had been running for a few months. Turns out to be a good fit, so I quickly make, oh, another 6 friends there. Two of them are "C" and "N". C had skated with Gem City for a little while, but then stopped when she and her husband started trying for a baby. She encouraged N to join the ref squad since he liked skating and was looking for an extracurricular activity. This was shortly after I joined the game night group.
Well, March of 2013 rolls around, and with it, derby season for Gem City. N invites us all to come watch him ref his first live bout. We all do (along with J), and have a blast. (
Because roller derby is amazing fun to watch, of course.) I promptly bought season tickets, as the Saturdays they played home games were interleaved well with my biweekly pencil and paper RPG sessions. J and B were so enamored with it after one bout that they asked how they could join -- turns out the league had just done an open recruitment session the week before but N offered an introduction that bypassed that near miss.
(Oh, this is probably a good opportunity to explain the league terminology. A league is localized to one city or metro area; WFTDA is actually made up of lots of member leagues, unlike something like football or baseball, where it's all one big league with teams in multiple cities. Large leagues have several teams that often play home bouts against each other, but field a single "charter" team (either a permanent team that uses the others as local farm teams or an "all-star" team that comprises the best skaters from each of the other teams in the league) that is the one that represents the whole league in WFTDA standings and interleague tournaments. Smaller leagues may only field one team (the charter team by default) or, like Gem City, field a permanent charter team and a B team that don't play each other in public bouts because they're not good matchups with each other... Many leagues offer open recruitment to help develop new skaters who will practice basic skills until they can pass muster to be cleared for contact drills, and then continue to practice with the league until they roster, others (usually bigger leagues) hold periodic intensive clinics for fresh meat and then hold try-outs to join the league proper)
So now I have 3 friends, two of which I see regularly at work, who are skating 6 hours a week with Gem City. You can see where the claws begin to sink in on top of the hook of derby itself.
I go watch my second bout, still great. I start picking up some strategy and rules with the help of J, N, and B. By the 3rd bout, J has convinced me to come volunteer to learn how to help out on bout day. I show up at a designated practice where Anna Lytical, one of the experienced NSOs (formerly a skater who jacked up her knee and had to stop taking hits on a regular basis, and was at the time learning reffing) was teaching the new skaters (and a couple unaffiliated volunteers like me) how to perform the various NSO positions properly. Based on J's recommendation that I was good with numbers and detail-oriented (hah! selectively, sure), I had scorekeeping thrust upon me.
So for the 3rd home bout, I didn't punch my season ticket... I was on the NSO crew, scorekeeping. (Scorekeeping in derby consists of watching for reports from the Jam Refs and documenting, tallying, and relaying the score updates to the scoreboard operator. We don't count the points as they come in -- that's the Jam Ref's job since they're on the track with the right angle to watch that accurately. But we keep the official score total and all the related paperwork in order. Oh, and for that matter, NSO stands for Non Skating Official. Versus Refs, which are technically called Skating Officials. If you see pictures, Refs wear stripes, NSOs wear pink or solid black.) And I spectated only one more bout that season, and that only because I had another commitment that meant I I couldn't make it for the first half of that day's double header.
By the middle of the season, another of the girls from the game night group, "M" had joined the team, as well, during the late summer open recruitment. J was rapidly improving her skills in the meantime (B was a little slower coming up because she was trying to build endurance while struggling with newly discovered exercise induced asthma), and by the end of the season, J was skating with our B team.
Fast forward past the off-season. Gem City's explosive growth (the league literally tripled its active skaters over 2013) saw it move venues from its practice rink (owned by the Head Coach) to a larger venue that hosts Dayton's minor professional hockey team, which had the benefit of not only a larger venue, but one with a beer license. Then, in December, the league completed its Apprenticeship requirements and regained its full WFTDA status, which, as I mentioned in the Flora and Fauna Commentary thread, makes us eligible to earn a spot in the WFTDA rankings, which will open up the scheduling opportunities as we become more attractive for other WFTDA members to play since we now will meet division play requirements and offer opportunities to earn points in the standings against.
Two weeks ago saw M and B's debut bout on the B team. By now, both J and Anna Lytical have been encouraging me to work towards NSO certification. After all, now we're WFTDA members again, but we don't have any certified NSOs or Refs. Certification also opens up the opportunity to apply to officiate WFTDA tournaments (which is on J and Anna's list of things to do, hehe). So, lately I've been looking into the requirements for that. The biggest hurdle is serving under Head NSOs not a part of your own league in order to solicit evaluations, which means travel. The good news is, our team is travelling to a few other nearby WFTDA members and apprentice leagues this season, so I should be able to finagle that. So far, I've only scorekept, too. That makes it a little trickier serving on somebody else's NSO squad, because while my reliability and non-skater status carries some weight when it comes to position preference (I *like* scorekeeping, as the nature of watching the jammer and jam ref means I can follow one team's side of the scoring action as I volunteer, and I've gotten quite comfortable with it over the course of scorekeeping a dozen bouts, now), you're a much more useful NSO for other teams that don't know you if you can fill multiple positions depending on who else they have and their strengths/preferences. So, now I'm in the process of learning penalty box timing. I've done it in a few practices, now, and in two weeks I'll be pbt for the two bouts then and I'll see how I like doing it in a live bout. The end goal is for me to get my head around penalty box timing so I can graduate up to penalty box managing, which requires some more intimate understanding of the rules regarding jammer penalties and penalty queues. It's a position that you can't just give to any NSO and it's definitely one you can't teach in ten or twenty minutes and consider a newbie ready to give it a shot in a live bout. Since the ballooning league size hasn't been matched with a similar growth in the NSO crew, and several of the former NSOs are now skating on the B team which is skating regular double-headers rather than occasional ones, and the league leadership has been having a hell of a time getting fresh meat to suck it up and learn to NSO... we've been short officials to the point where we have been scraping together the last few volunteers just days before the bout lately.
Oh, yeah. So what have I been getting out of all of this? I've discovered a sport I love to watch. I've met a lot of fantastic people; the skaters range from tough-as-nails badasses to sweet women you'd never expect to lay somebody out on the track, the refs are tightly knit and always appreciative of the fans and NSOs, the fans are fantastic in their support (often of family and friends on the track!). The camaraderie both within the league and with opposing teams is really cool, and the afterparties are usually pretty epic.
So that's my derby story. I can't recommend enough that you look up your local league(s) and see what it's about for yourself. I will happily field questions about the sport, rules, etc. here if you're curious about anything in particular. If anybody else gets bit by the bug, then as the season progresses, maybe we can discuss hot teams, great clips, or tournaments. This past year I've been mostly paying attention to Gem City at a local level -- I haven't been travelling, or digging into internet footage of other teams, etc. But with WFTDA certification on my mind, and Gem City's reinstatement to full membership status, I've been slowly broadening my perspective and horizon.