Judy Sowinski on the radio From 2009

Read the full story and listen to the audio here

An Original Roller Derby Girl

Judy Sowinski

The sport of roller derby is getting a lot of attention this fall with the new movie, Whip It.

Roller derby has a proud history as an American sport that’s been played since the 1920s. It’s one of the few high-powered contacts sports that put women in the spotlight.

Judy Sowinski, also known as the Polish Ace, coaches the Penn-Jersey She-Devils in Philadelphia. But Judy had her own storied career in roller derby in the 60’s when she was known as the Polish Ace. She joins Dick to talk about the sport then and now.

* See pictures of Judy in action

* See Judy with her current team, the Penn-Jersey She-Devils.

* Judy and arch-rival Judy Arnold then and now

MP3 Radio Download

July 28, 2011 | Posted in: Press | Comments Closed

Dead Girl Derby on NBC Action News

Dead Girl Derby Team Photo

Dead Girl Derby Team Photo

http://www.nbcactionnews.com/dpp/sports/Dead-Girl-Derby-expands-in-second-season-with-bigger-venue-and-more-teams

Dead Girl Derby expands in second season with bigger venue and more teams

By: Bobby Bierley

RIVERSIDE, Missouri – It was a record turnout at River Roll Skate Center Sunday night.

Cars lined the streets and filled every parking lot on the block. Orange cones, volunteers, and even police helped direct traffic as a line of eager fans stretched out the door and around one side of the building.

It was all in anticipation for “Night of the Loving Dead 2,” the action-packed first game of the new season for Kansas City’s Dead Girl Derby roller derby league.

This is the second season for the DGD, but Sunday’s event proved this is a whole new game for the league. Welcoming a crowd of more than 550 people—at least a hundred more than the largest turnout from the first season—the Dead Girls entered a new realm of legitimacy.

In a new bigger venue this year and with four teams compared to last year’s two, the league now boasts almost 80 players, both veterans and rookies, decked-out in professional jerseys. The two head-to-head matches in one night feature six referees and two silver-tongued announcers calling the plays. Mix that with a screaming, sign-waving, standing-room-only crowd, and it’s clear the league is bigger and better in almost every way imaginable.

By the end of the first night, the Fearleaders were bested by their rivals, the Deadly Sirens. Meanwhile the Lovely Lethals handily bested the Royal Pains.

The next match is March 13 at 6 p.m. at River Roll skate Center.

Visit www.deadgirlderby.com for ticket information.

Orlando Derby Girls in March Orlando Magazine

http://www.orlandomagazine.com/Orlando-Magazine/March-2011/Elbows-and-Alter-Egos/

Her victory on the roller derby track complete, Cupquake exits the hardwood and leaves it to the person who knows her best to assess the damage.

The night’s physical toll: a banged-up knee and a sore tailbone. Nothing major, Kate Dunn concludes. Only moments before, Cupquake was barreling along an oval-shaped course as fast as her skates would take her, fighting off opposing players, scoring points and taking her share of spills onto the unforgiving floor. The demanding performance helped her team, the Sunny-land Slammers, defeat the rival Serial Thrillers by a score of 47-43.

Now that Cupquake has finished her victory lap, she returns to her more low-key persona —that of the 22-year-old Dunn. Still wearing her pink team shirt and black fishnets, she apologizes for her sweaty handshake and takes a swig of bottled water.

Dunn is a member of the Orlando Psycho City Derby Girls, a startup women’s roller derby league that began hosting competitive games late last year. On this night in January, more than 300 people have paid to attend the league’s fourth-ever public match, at Universal Skating Center on Goldenrod Road in east Orange County. The spectators range from derby girls on other teams to friends and families of the competitors in tonight’s “beatdown” to curious outsiders. There are families with young children sitting beside tattooed twentysomethings sipping beer. There’s music blaring over the loudspeaker from a group called Eagles of Death Metal. There’s a Harry Potter-themed costume contest for the kids.

For newbie fans, there’s even a pre-match primer on the rules of the sport.

They learn that tonight they’ll see a five-on-five competition where women ranging in age from 18 to mid-40s with monikers like Bonez, Bloch Ness Monster and Tiger Beatdown will race around a course, jockey for position and attempt to keep a designated teammate known as a “jammer” in the lead. If the jammer stays ahead of the pack, she will earn her team points, while illegal maneuvers like throwing elbows or hooking an opposing player’s arm will result in penalties. It’s a full contact sport in which the physicality resembles hockey, the constant threat of danger echoes NASCAR and the girls’ over-the-top personalities are reminiscent of professional wrestling.

As the action begins, some spectators take seats on the hardwood floor around the track, just inches away from the hum of speeding roller skates. You have to be at least 18 to sit in the aptly named “wreck zone,’’ presumably old enough to deal with a bumped, out-of-control skater careening toward you. On this night, none of the competitors end up in the audience, though the crowd is buzzing after the player Knock ’Em Over Clover of the Serial Thrillers twice leaps over skaters who have fallen onto the track.

Some in the crowd hold signs in support of their favorites. Others, like Dunn, have their own personal cheering section. About 10 of her friends have come out to support her tonight. They already know all about Cupquake, her derby alter ego, and how the name was inspired by her day job—as a pastry chef at Walt Disney World’s Swan and Dolphin resorts. And they know how hard she’s worked to get here.

Women who participate in the Psycho City league must pay league dues; successfully complete a grueling “boot camp,” where they learn the basics of derby; and finally be drafted by a team in the league. The practices are no cupcake either. A few nights before the tilt between the Slammers and Thrillers, a league practice session starts out like a normal open-to-the-public skate, with girls coasting around in a friendly clockwise circle. Hell on wheels it’s not. But things quickly pick up, as the team members break into physical drills, hard skating and intense training.

Dunn takes a break from the scrimmage to talk about the friends she’s met and relationships she’s forged through roller derby. Her wrinkly white practice T-shirt is pushed aside so she can tuck her mouth guard under her sports bra’s shoulder strap. Again she apologizes for her perspiration. She admits she’s not as aggressive off the track as she is when she takes on the role of Cupquake. “You let it all out, out there,” Dunn says. “I don’t normally go up to people and, you know, shoulder block them.”

In the 1950s, roller derby was a staged event choreographed for sports entertainment, much like professional wrestling. But it has recently undergone a revival as an athletic contest thanks to the 2009 Drew Barrymore-directed movie Whip It, starring Barrymore and Ellen Page. The Psycho City Derby Girls group started in October 2009 with the help of Sharisse Roberts, who competes under the name Felix Bashit (pronounced Bash-it). She’s also spearheading an expansion for the league, which would introduce mixed-gender match-ups.

Among those training for their first match is Katie MacDonald, a 24-year-old student at the University of Central Florida who, by day, is studying for her master’s degree in history. Her more aggressive side gets to come out when she becomes the character Guantanamo Slay. At the practice, MacDonald is suited for combat, wearing pads, skates and black shorts adorned with orange jack-o’-lanterns. The chatty brunette is not quite ready for prime time—at the Slammers-Thrillers matchup, she watches the action eagerly from the scorer’s table—but she beams a big smile when talking about her plans to obtain a Ph.D. and teach at the collegiate level. She’s equally excited about the opportunity to play an exaggerated persona in the heat of battle.

MacDonald’s dual identities of scholar and skater might sound diametrically opposed. But the truth is they encapsulate the culture of roller derby quite well. The sport is a cross-section of American culture that’s just as much pink fishnets and punk-rock music as it is fitness and friendship. On a derby team, a young and rebellious “wild child” might be paired with a thirtysomething mom taking a break from her rambunctious children.

“Whether you consider yourself to be aggressive or not, you do take on an aggressive side, and just have fun and kind of let loose,” says MacDonald. “I think that’s what kind of attracted me to derby.”

There’s also an element of danger and excitement that’s appealing to participants like her. “Does it sound sick if I say that’s what drew me to it?” she asks.

This article appears in the March 2011 issue of Orlando Magazine

Family Feuds at Roller Derby Convention in Wildwood Article

Full Article Here


WILDWOOD – Stephanie Caulford was a standout softball player for Vineland High School. She was a Press first-team All-Star in 2004 and 2005 before playing at Widener University, where she broke the school’s single-season and career home run records.

“When I got out of college, I needed something to do,” said Caulford, 22, of Vineland. “So I decided to start trying to hurt people – I joined the roller derby.”

Caulford’s toughest competition doesn’t come from a hated rival or a dirty-playing bruiser.

It’s her mom.

“The only reason I decided to do this with her, at my age, is I used to freestyle skate,” said Kimberely Snyder, 44, of Vineland. “It was 30 years ago, but it still gave me a skating background.”

The mother and daughter skate on different teams. Caulford’s skating name is “Punch, Drunk, Shove,” and her mom’s is “Assault N Pepa.”

“Since we’re on opposing teams, I get to hit my mom,” Caulford said with a devilish grin.

“And I get to hit my daughter,” Snyder rebutted sternly, although she is currently on the disabled list after breaking her wrist in action.

Both were on hand for this weekend’s second annual Colossal Coastal Roller Expo, a three-day roller derby extravaganza at the Wildwoods Convention Center featuring more than 20 leagues from as far away Florida. The teams were mostly women, but there were also co-ed and men’s teams.

As expected, there were brightly colored costumes, clever nicknames and flying elbows galore on Saturday, which was the main day of competition. But surprisingly, many of those elbows were being thrown at loved ones, as the field was packed with siblings, spouses and, yes, mother-daughter combos.

The event’s organizer, Melissa “Mos Deathly” Morera, grew up watching roller derby on television with her father. And when she had an opportunity to participate in the revamped sport, she jumped at it.

“It has some of the old-school derby association rules mixed together with some newer ones. … The rules we go by are the best parts of both,” said Morera, 34, of Mullica Hill. “We play on a flat track, instead of a banked one. And it still does get very competitive.”

Morera once was thrown into the second row of the stands. The person who so unceremoniously removed her from the track was her younger sister, Raechel “Billy Rae Siren” Morera.

“I played a lot of sports growing up, but being a girl, they never let you play full-contact. This is my chance,” said Raechel Morera, 24, of Mullica Hill. “Most people have a very different interpretation of this sport because of what it used to be, with all of the theatrics and professional wrestling-like storylines. But it’s really not like that all at. It’s competitive and there are injuries, but everyone’s just out here having a good time.”

Collingswood resident Laurie “Beast of Burton” Burton said she had never been very athletic.

“But I went to a roller derby match one day and thought that it was something I could do,” said Burton, 20. “And I signed up the next day.”

Burton’s husband, Vasily Pappas, did not object. But he also wanted no part of it at first.

“I’ve always been a big skater. But it was playing in-line hockey, not on these things,” said Pappas, 30, referring to the traditional roller skates strapped to his feet that all contestants wear. “But I was going to all of her games anyway, so I figured that I might as well give it a try.”

The most difficult part for Pappas was not learning how to skate again, but rather learning how to deal with his wife getting hit when they’re on the track together in co-ed events.

“It is tough to see her get hit, but I’m not one for retaliation,” he said. “So I just try to clear the way for her as much as I can so no one has a chance to get to her. Like a prevent defense.”

Other couples might think that this is a strange way for a husband and wife to spend time together. But Pappas and Burton said the important thing to them is that it is another – albeit, slightly violent – way to spend time together.

“There’s definitely a lot of work that goes into this. We practice a lot, and then there are events that you have to travel to,” Pappas said. “So if only one of us were doing this, we’d probably never get to see each other.”

Burton joked, “And it gives us stuff to talk about in the car.”

Contact Robert Spahr:

609-272-7283

June 28, 2010 | Posted in: Events, Press | Comments Closed

PJRD in the news

North East Times Article on PJRD


The roller derby is on a roll

By Tom Waring

Times Staff Writer

Mayfair’s Rachael “lateTbug” Ferguson, a secretary at St. Mary Medical Center in Langhorne, loves the physical aspect of roller derby.

“It’s not often you get to hit somebody and not get in trouble,” she said.

At the same time, Ferguson said there’s plenty of sportsmanship in roller derby. Competitors are friends on and off the track.

Bensalem’s Natasha “Classy Chassis” Tunaitis, who manages a shoe store in Franklin Mills mall, echoes that view.

“We beat the living hell out of each other, but afterward we kiss and make up and party,” she said.

Roller derby has been around for decades, but hasn’t been prominent since the mid-1980s. The local professional team was the Philadelphia Warriors. Games were played at a high speed on a banked track.

In 2004, a couple of entrepreneurs founded the She Devils, an all-women’s league that held practices and games at the Cornwells Skating Center in Bensalem. Roller derby legends Judy “The Police Ace” Sowinski and Arnold “Skip” Schoen served as volunteer coaches.

The league later moved to Jamz Roller Skating Center, located 7015 Roosevelt Blvd., and to the International Sports Centre in Mount Laurel, N.J.

At all three locations, the ladies practiced and played on a flat track with a hard surface.

Recent years have brought some major changes. The league became skater-owned and operated, added men and was renamed Penn Jersey Roller Derby. The owners purchased a 96-foot-long by 50-foot-wide banked track – the first one in Philadelphia in a quarter-century – and rented a warehouse at 18th Street and Indiana Avenue.

Participants agree that the banked track presents challenges, but the plywood surface and foam-cushioned rail make the sport safer.

“The falls aren’t as hard. There’s lots of give to it,” said Bristol’s Christina “Lucky” Luciano, the league president and captain of the Sadistic Sweethearts.

All skaters wear knee and elbow pads and wrist guards for protection when they fall.

Still, a skater could get hurt in other ways, such as being knocked over or under the rail to the floor.

Years ago, roller derby was sometimes about showmanship as much as the skating. Today, the game is real, the skaters say.

“We like to entertain, but the hits are real, the falls are real and the injuries are real,” said Luciano, a licensed sales assistant for a brokerage firm.

In fact, to avoid injury, Ferguson is taking some time off so she doesn’t limp up the aisle at her September wedding, where Luciano will serve as maid of honor and other skaters will make up the bridal party. Ferguson’s fiancŽ, Robert Wyatt (known as Bobby Carnage), is also on hiatus until the wedding.

The league features more than 50 skaters ranging in age from 19 to 40-something. Rosters are filled with housewives, hairdressers, computer programmers, tattoo artists, nurses, real estate agents and chefs.

Games consist of four 15-minute quarters, with each jam lasting 90 seconds. Teams have five skaters apiece on the track, including a pivot to control the speed of the pack and a jammer to score points.

Players are allowed to hit each other with their hips or deliver a hit with their shoulders, followed by a shove with the triceps. The “booty block” can also be effective.

There are penalties for fighting and a game misconduct for the third-skater in.

“Wedgies are OK if it’s not seen,” joked Ferguson, an accomplished, veteran skater who coaches the rookies.

New players are welcome. They take part in a three-month program to get them ready for the circuit. The only requirements are that they be at least 18 years old and in good health. Dues are $50 a month. And time commitment and dedication are musts.

The current batch of new skaters will compete in a “Rookie Rampage” game on Saturday night in Mount Laurel, with existing teams scouting the talent for an upcoming draft.

On July 17, the Sadistic Sweethearts will square off with the Dishonor Roll.

By the fall, the league hopes to have its first game on a banked track.

Tunaitis is Ferguson’s co-coach of the rookies and captain of the Dishonor Roll, a team of villains. She made her debut after an acquaintance, who knew she worked at a skating rink, learned that she got into a fight at a concert.

“She needs to join roller derby,” the acquaintance said.

Among the new skaters that Tunaitis and Ferguson are coaching is Dave Pope, a Collegeville resident and science teacher at Excel Academy in Castor Gardens.

Since signing up, he’s learned how to maneuver, jump, squat and deliver and absorb a block.

“It’s physically challenging, especially with me being a novice skater,” he said. “But everybody has been beyond supportive.”

Tim Spann joined the Hooligans, a men’s team, in 2007, one year after his wife, Stephanie, – a research scientist known as Hard Licker – started to skate. She’s unlaced her skates, temporarily, to give birth.

A resident of Hightstown, N.J., Spann’s skater name is “Maschine,” the German spelling of the word machine. He started as an announcer, referee and security guard before skating full-time. He describes the men’s game as a combination of speed and hard hits.

“It’s really cool to be able to play a game I’ve seen on old videos,” he said.

Some of those old videos feature Sowinski, a Chicago native and current South Philadelphia resident who was roller derby’s top villain from 1959 to the early 1980s. Her archrival was fan favorite Judy Arnold.

Sowinski, the coach, is excited about the banked track, explaining that it will add speed to the game. She joined the circuit two weeks out of high school and made it a full-time job, with money generated through television revenue.

A member of the Roller Derby Hall of Fame, she yearns for a return to the sport’s glory days.

“I would love to see it come back in full force,” she said.

For more information, visit pennjerseyrollerderby.com or write to recruitment@pennjerseyrollerderby.com

Reporter Tom Waring can be reached at 215-354-3034 or twaring@phillynews.com

June 10, 2010 | Posted in: Press | Comments Closed

OSDA and Dead Girl Derby Press

Thanks to Susan Chase with the Kansas City Roller Derby Examiner for this article!

There’s no school like the old school

With the grass roots explosion of roller derby occurring over the past decade many fans are familiar with the Women’s Flat Track Derby Association (WFTDA). However, they are not the only derby league on the block. For those die hard derby fans out there you need to check out the Old School Derby Association (OSDA).

According to the OSDA website their mission is to, “restore ties with “Old School” skaters, trainers and coaches from past decades and learn from their experiences and input.” By combining current developments in flat track derby with the old school banked track derby from the 70′s, OSDA hopes to create an exciting game for both the players and the fans. Their website also states, “We believe that it is possible to entertain and inspire a crowd with an aggressive, hard-skated Old School game. OSDA believes that the draw was, is and should continue to be The Game. Pure & simple. No gimmicks – just the incredible skill of the skaters.”

In July of 2009 a new league was formed under the OSDA guidelines. Skating out of Liberty, the Dead Girl Derby KC league is Missouri’s first OSDA league. Founded by Sabra Bunger aka Stormy Trooper and Joei North aka KiKi Yoasis, this league was designed to provide a recreational alternative to the sport in the Kansas City area. They received their OSDA affiliation in early 2010 and have been rapidly growing ever since.

Growing a league is not something that can be done on its own. Dead Girl Derby KC has several opportunities to support the league. If you are interested in becoming a referee, scorekeeper, crew member or a player contact the ladies that run Dead Girl Derby KC by emailing recruiting@deadgirlderbykc.com. Their next game will be held this coming Sunday May 23, 2010 at the Rolladium in Liberty.

Stay tuned for more to come on these ladies and the Dead Girl Derby KC league.

May 20, 2010 | Posted in: Press | Comments Closed

New training facility for South Jersey Derby

Congratulations to South Jersey on their new training facility! Read the article in the Delco Times here

Crozer Mills Enterprise Center has roller derby

By KATHLEEN E. CAREY
kcarey@delcotimes.com


Sisters Raechel and Melissa Morera, of the South Jersey Roller Girls, stand inside their 7,500-square-foot roller derby training facility featuring a full-service skate shop, six dressing rooms, a lounge and bar area and a 3,000-square-feet wooden floor at the Crozer Mills Enterprise Center at 601 Upland Ave.

UPLAND — Melissa Morera spent her childhood Saturday mornings watching Polish Ace Judy Sowinski and her sport of roller derby on television.

After building a team from three women to a 60-member team in three years, Morera and her sister, Raechel, are prepared to take their sport to the next level as they open a 7,500-square-foot training facility at the Crozer Mills Enterprise Center at 601 Upland Ave. this month.

“I’ve always admired this space,” Melissa Morera said. “So when it opened, I jumped on it.”

Morera, a Mullica Hill, N.J., resident, works as operating manager and co-owner of the insurance marketing business, Secure Benefits Group, which is also housed in the building.

But, how her team, the Old School Derby Association-sanctioned South Jersey Derby Girls, rolled their way into Delaware County started in 2007, when Morera and her sister placed a few inquiries on Craigslist and My Space.

“Anybody interested in roller derby?” was the post and the sisters would meet whoever showed up at a nearby park. It started as three women and has grown to more than 60 men and women, who are more than willing to face off against each other.

“It’s fun,” Melissa Morera said. “I love playing with the guys.”

The sisters even plan to have a special “Couples Counseling” exhibition game where the husbands, boyfriends and brothers will confront the wives, girlfriends and sisters for a winner-take-all bout.

Many people may not understand the concept of roller derby, but the sisters explained the allure.

“For the people who play it, it’s highly addictive,” Melissa Morera said. “It feels so good to get out there. You need a lot of endurance. It’s great exercise. It’s a great stress relief.”

Her sister added, “Most people skate one game …”

“And they’re hooked,” Melissa finished.

The Upland facility is on the second floor of the Enterprise Center and will feature a full-service skate shop, six dressing rooms, a lounge and bar area and a 3,000-square-foot wooden floor that will expand to 5,000 square feet once two walls are knocked down.

“I love it,” Raechel Morera said. “I’m excited about the space.”

Yet the two said most roller derby competitors are flexible when it comes to practice space and they would know.

Melissa Morera, 34, has been actively participating in roller derby since 2004 when she adopted the competitive name of “Mos Deathly, the Most Def-est Jammer on the Block,” in line with her favored position on the team.

Her 24-year-old sister started in January 2007 and is known as “Billy Rae Siren – Achy Breaky Your Face.”

The pivoter explained her fascination with the sport. “It’s very competitive,” she said. “My best block so far I put a girl on six months disability.”

But, they say, it’s also about fun.

“It’s like a big family,” Melissa Morera said. Some of whom, she added, don game personas.

“We have one player – Tutu Toxic,” Raechel Morera said, “she has different color tutus for each game.”

Raechel herself has been known for dramatics.

“She grunts every time she blocks somebody,” her sister offered. “Now, they can hear her coming.”

They said the facility would be open to all levels of participants with a rookie class starting Jan. 19.

“Some people just skate for fitness, some people are competitive, some skate for fun,” Melissa Morera said.

Her sister said those interested in the merrier version can get involved as a referee.

And, there’s other ways to support the sport, as well. Five feet from the track floor is the special spectator section called “Suicide Seating,” so named because of the tendency of participants to land on those positioned there.

The sisters have great expectations for the space from the eventual construction of a slanted, banked track to the evolution of the sport itself.

Last month, Melissa and Raechel Morera traveled to Mexico for a 17-day vacation.

“We sat in the hotel room and ‘Roller Jam’ was on T.V.,” the elder sister said.

As they watched this and the Mexican version, they compared it with American roller derby.

“They jump up and kick each other in the back,” Melissa Morera explained of the Latino skate. “In (our) league, we’re not allowed to clothesline.”

Raechel Morera has high hopes.

“I’d like to get back to that,” she said. “It will get more theatrical. It’s a serious sport at this point, but I like the gimmicks.”

Her sister also has her own roller derby aspirations.

“We’re really hoping that the public embraces what we’re doing,” Melissa Morera said. “It’s just a dream come true.”

January 8, 2010 | Posted in: Press | Comments Closed