Cherry City Derby Girls warm up at Armory Auditorium
in Salem, Ore. (Ken Palke photos)
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These days, though, there are women's leagues drawing crowds all over the country, including here in Salem and Portland. Recreational skaters are swapping their in-line models for the old school four-wheel skates that are used in the sport. And Roller Derby was even part of the plot on a recent episode of television's Hawaii 5-0.
My Roller Derby reverie began in the 1950s when Mom and Dad took us kids to see the Los Angeles Thunderbirds skate on the banked track at the Olympic Auditorium. The sport was popular on L.A. television in the 1950s-'60s when there was lots of air time to fill. Roller Derby then was something akin to professional wrestling with skating personalities and a heavy diet of over-the-top bumping, thumping and elbows thrown at members of the opposing team, often the rival San Francisco Bay Bombers.
Channel 5 TV announcer Dick Lane sold the sport to the
masses with his colorful commentary and a few well-placed "Whoa Nellys"
when a skater was shoved into the track railing and doubled over, or some
similar stunt.
Men's and women's squads on the teams alternated skating
periods. After both teams started around the track in a pack, the object was to
free a skater -- the jammer -- who was catapulted out front, sped around the
track, then worked his or her way through the pack, scoring a point for each
opposing team member passed. Pushing, shoving and issuing the requisite number
of body blows was the order of the day.
People can relate to Roller Derby because, like riding a
bicycle, most people have tried roller skating at one time or another. As a
kid, I strapped steel-wheeled skates onto my shoes and traveled the sidewalks
of my neighborhood. I even met one of the Roller Derby stars who lived a few blocks
away in Torrance, Spec Saunders.
Several times while in the Navy stationed at Alameda,
Calif., I went to the nearby Oakland Auditorium to see the San Francisco Bay
Bombers skate . . . featuring the mighty blonde Joan Weston.
And lately I've enjoyed the rough and tumble matches of
the Roller Derby women here in Salem. These gals take their skating seriously
and fight hard to win.
I'll agree that Roller Derby isn't everyone's cup of tea,
but there's plenty of action . . . and that's good enough for me.
Skaters take a few turns, top, and check out opponents
from the bench, bottom.
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