
The Alamo City Rollergirls hit the track
this Sunday in a long-awaited, dirty derby doubleheader at The
Rollercade. Dubbed “Red, White, and Bruised,”
Sunday’s matchup was the first ACRG bout in two months
— the league took off the months of May and June but
ACRG’s travel team, Las Tejanas, traveled to Fayetteville,
Arkansas, to take on the Northwest Arkansas Killbillies on June 14. In
addition to the matchup between the Prim Reapers and the Missyfits on
the ACRG regular schedule, Sunday’s bout included a second
bout between the ACRG’s Dragon Divas and the visiting
Oklahoma City Victory Dolls. The Prims stood atop league standings at
2-0 on the season heading into the matchup, having beaten both the
Missys and the Divas once this season. The Divas’ record
stood at 1-1, and the Missys looked to gain their first win of the
season at 0-2.
The parking lot and interior of The
Rollercade was packed just before game time; I made it just in time to
hear the National Anthem and team introductions. The doubleheader shook
up the game format a little — instead of one bout with three
20-minute periods, the teams played two 30-minute periods each. In
addition, the two bouts were split in half. The Divas took on the
Victory Dolls for the first period, then the Prims paired up with the
Missys for their first period. Play after halftime followed suit, with
a Divas-Dolls final period, then a Missys-Prims final period.

Both the Dolls and Divas were
decked out in red and black, the Dolls sporting red back flaps (like
girly letter jackets!) embroidered with their skater names. Bodies were
flying early — both teams landed players in the penalty box
within the first few minutes, and scoring remained low and even. The
Divas’ Devlyne Disguise wiped out hard at the 18-minute mark
and both teams took a knee. It looked like she got the wind knocked out
of her, but Devlyne bravely rose from the track after lying on her back
for a bit. The score was tied up at 10-10 with 17:17 left to go in the
period.
It’s always interesting to see
the way our league stacks up against teams from other cities. Thirteen
minutes into the first period, it seemed our Divas were a good matchup
for the Oklahoma City Victory Dolls. The two teams had been skating on a
fairly even keel, with controlled and measured scoring on both sides.
The Divas pulled ahead with a 20-14 lead right around the 16-minute
mark, but the Dolls overtook the Divas at 12:35 with a 22-21 lead. A
timeout at 10:14 was accompanied by a point discrepancy. The Dolls
bench screamed for new points to be put up while lively announcer
Ubetta Doant (sporting clown makeup) yelled towards the stat panel,
“I don’t know what’s going on up there,
does anybody have a clue?” The final verdict seemed to be
Dolls 32, Divas 24, and back on the track the Divas last line of
defense sent a Doll flying into kiddos sitting on the floor in the front
row. The bout was clearly far from over at this point, and looked like
it could come down to the wire if both teams could keep up the frenetic
pace. The Divas closed the gap to Dolls 43, Divas 40 with 2:30 to go,
and at the end of the first half the score stood at Dolls 49, Divas 43.
Rock en Español
three-piece Los Roxmantix turned up their amps for intermission
entertainment, while the Missys and Prims took the track to warm up and
fans headed for the beer stand. Sunday’s bout brought up an
interesting question for some derby fans I talked to during the break.
Do the girls hit harder when they’re playing a team they
don’t know? Although there are some heated rivalries in the
league, the ACRG is a close-knit group of skaters, many of which forge
friendships across team lines. But I’ve got to give it up to
the ACRG for keeping friendships off the track. Although it might be
easier to smash a skater you’ve never met before into the
rink walls, I’ve seen all ACRG skaters sending both friends
and foes flying, no holds barred.
I talked to two of the
Victory Dolls during the break also, and they relayed that
today’s bout was a bit last minute for them. Apparently a
different team dropped out of the scheduled interleague matchup, and
the Dolls picked up the bout because they were in the area and some of
their skaters have family here. They said they used to be part of a
multi-team league in Oklahoma, but broke off as a travel team and are
in their first year. The horn cut off our conversation, while the
Missys and Prims raced around the track in a flurry of black and
purple, pink and gray to start off the first half of the second bout.
The Prims beat the Missys 205-24 in their last matchup, a season
opening blowout in which Missys captain and exceptional skater Kitty
Glitter re-injured her knee. After being sidelined for three months,
Glitter was back in action for Sunday’s rematch, and the
Missys hope her reinstatement can jumpstart their
squad.
Prims lead jammer Tonya
Hurting was in usual speedy form, racing through the pack and racking
up points with relative ease from the get go. The Prims jumped out to a
15-1 lead less than five minutes into the bout and the lead ballooned
to 35 within five minutes. The score stood at 38-3 as the Missys took a
time out at 19:57 in an attempt to stanch the flow of blood. The
announcers relayed what was already apparent on the track —
the Missys couldn’t slow the bout down. The Prims were
already at the 50-point mark with 14 minutes left in the first half,
which would translate into another 200-plus point bout if they kept up
the pace. The bout seemed exceptionally lopsided, evidenced by a
12-minute stretch in which the Prims scored 23 points and the Missys
only 2. The Missys never gave up the fight, however, as Glitter
exchanged words with the Prims Shay Manu — “Get
outta my face! — as they skated side by side leading up to
the final minute of the half. “There’s always bad
blood!” proclaimed our announcers with excitement, and the
first half closed with a score of Prims 97, Missys 18.
After an exceptionally
exciting first half, The Divas scored some points off the bat to close
the gap — Dolls 52, Divas 51 — and Divas jammer
Skully Vera continued to break through the back in her red and black
cheetah print pants to give the Divas the lead, 56-52. With only two
skaters on the bench, however, the tide began to change for the Divas
as they struggled to keep up the pace of the first half. The Dolls
pulled away to a 71-56 lead with 18:42 to go and never looked back. The
Divas were still hitting hard and fighting harder, but the skaters were
looking more and more exhausted as they came off the track. The Divas
switched off jammers right and left, probably because they were down
skaters, but still weren’t able to close the gap. The
hard-fought bout ended with a final score of 112-72 in favor of the
Victory Dolls, who respectfully skated over to the Divas’
bench with hugs and compliments for their new rivals.

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