05 April 2010

Roller Derby: Strong Women, Strong Roles

Planned Parenthood of Western Pennsylvania has recently become a proud sponsor of Pittsburgh’s only all-female flat-track roller derby league, the Steel City Derby Demons. The focus on strong, independent women makes an affiliation between these two great organizations a perfect fit.



If you aren’t familiar with the Steel City Derby Demons, let us tell you what all the fuss is about. They are currently ranked by WFTDA (The Women’s Flat-Track Derby Association) as sixteenth out of over 100 leagues nationwide. The SCDD consists of three teams. The Steel Hurtin’ is the A-team or varsity-level team. They play other top teams from around the nation such as Detroit, Philadelphia, Maine, and Houston. The other two teams, the B-Unit and the Blitzburgh Bombers, are the B-level teams. They play similarly matched junior-varsity leveled teams; most recently Toledo, West Palm Beach, and Rideau Valley from Ottowa, Canada.

The Steel City Derby Demons is a skater-owned and operated organization that was founded in 2006 by a group of hard-working women who wanted to get fit, make friends, and have fun. In addition to training to be top athletes in their sport, they also run every aspect behind the scenes. From building the website, to P.R. and marketing right down to renting the bouting venue and paying the bills, the roller girls do it all.

Today’s roller derby has eschewed the professional wrestling style of showmanship of the past to be reborn into a full-fledged highly competitive fast-paced sport. Nothing is faked here; although some of the flair from your mother’s roller derby has remained, such as the derby nicknames (‘Snot Rocket Science and Busty Brawler, to name a few) and the occasional pair of fishnet tights. Training for derby can be extremely grueling, and derby girls do it strictly for the love of the sport and that fleeting bit of glory to be snatched at the end of a victorious game. Roller derby is not a professional sport and no one gets paid.

Roller derby is played on a circuit track between two teams of roughly 12-14 players each. Four “blockers” from each team form the “pack.” It is their job to assist their “jammer” (or, point scorer) to pass as many of the opposing team’s blockers as they can in order to score points. At the same time, the blockers must also try and hinder the opposing team’s jammer from scoring points by blocking and checking her off of the track. Roller derby is unique in this way that offense and defense are played concurrently. This makes the game incredibly fast, with outcomes that can change on a dime.

Roller derby girls have often been portrayed as “counter culture” or “punk rock” in the media, but to try and categorize these women into such narrow stereotypes would be misleading. Members of the Steel City Derby Demons cover the whole spectrum when it comes to daytime jobs; examples of which are optometrist, lawyer, junior high school math teacher, nurse, graphic designer, and mother. However, the women of the SCDD and roller derby in general do share many qualities. They are strong, athletic, outgoing, energetic, and lots of fun, but they are definitely not all cookie-cutter copies. The SCDD celebrates diversity and the opportunity for women to lead extraordinary lives and hopes others can embrace those concepts too.


For more information about the Steel City Derby Demons, or to buy tickets, visit www.SteelCityDerbyDemons.com. Bouts are held every third Saturday of the month at Romp n’ Roll skating rink in Shaler off of route 8. Catch the next home bout on Saturday, April 17th, when the Steel Hurtin’ will play The Dutchland Rollers (Lancaster, PA) and Blitzburgh Bombers face off against the Dutch Blitz. Planned Parenthood of Western Pennsylvania will have a table at this event.

Post by Planned Parenthood Volunteer and Steel City Derby Demon Heather Wood

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