allicatraz's blog

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Recipe for a Derby Bout

OHRG is getting ready to start off our fifth season in just over a month.  And that means that the work towards what we call “Bout Production” has already begun.  There’s a million little (and big) jobs involved with getting everything ready to welcome our fans, friends and family into a game.

About two months before, we’re getting our online sales set up, printing tickets, ordering flyers and advertising. At 30 days out, we’re doing the administrative paperwork: making sure our insurance is in order, getting our team charters and rosters are submitted to WFTDA and to the other team, making sure the venue is all set for us to come in. We’re making sure merch is ordered or made, getting the programs ready, making sure all our new rookies are properly outfitted with jerseys and uniforms. Referees are getting their crew in order, from the home and visiting leagues, and around our region.

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What is the WFTDA Anyway?

If you’ve been to our website, one of our games, or talked to one of our skaters, you’ve probably heard this mysterious word, that sounds something like “Wiffda” and wondered just what that is. Well, it’s our lazy pronunctiation of WFTDA, or the Women’s Flat Track Derby Association.

The WFTDA is a sort of coalition of leagues (in fact, its original name way back when was the United Leagues Coalition), kind of like what the NFL or NCAA might be.  But unlike those other governing bodies, the folks who make up the WFTDA aren’t nameless administrators — they are the leagues and skaters themselves. Each member league of WFTDA has representatives who not only handle voting and discussion on behalf of their league, they also do the day-to-day work that makes the WFTDA run.

What does WFTDA offer leagues? The thing that most folks bring up first is the official ruleset.  WFTDA rules are what most flat track derby leagues play by, whether or not they are members of the organization. That ruleset is not just made up by WFTDA and disseminated; in fact, each rule change is debated about, written by and voted on by the member leagues. 


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Roller Derby On and Off the Flat Track

I’ve been meaning to start this blog for quite some time now, and ironically, the very reason I’ve been delayed is the topic I plan to focus on here: how we Ohio Roller Girls balance our work, home, derby, and derbywork lives.

When I’m talking to someone who is unfamiliar with modern derby, and we land on the subject of my league title (President) and start talking about what exactly is entailed in the “business-side” of derby, probably the thing that shocks people the most is that no one involved gets paid to do this.

At first glance, that may not be all that shocking; after all, lots of people play recreational softball, soccer, etc. and don’t get paid. They sign up at the beginning of a season, pay their team fee to the organization running the league, and hit the field.

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