Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Wilwohl Rises


Kayla Wilwohl's trading card
in the 2011 State Finals.
The clock winds down. 46 seconds left. The Mercyhurst Lady Lakers are down by three points to the Villa Victors, a rival basketball game being held at Mercyhurst University to a sold out crowd of 1,600 people. The Lakers run a play to try and score, but the play doesn’t work. Kayla Wilwohl, a senior shooting guard for the Lakers, has the ball in her hands. 37 seconds left. She shoots from outside of the three point line and scores. Tie Game! Overtime!  The Lakers pull out the win 45-39.

The Mercyhurst Lady Lakers
head basketball coach, Dan Perfetto.
Wilwohl scored a game high, 20 points in the Lakers win over the Villa Victors. "Her shot generated a lot of excitement; we knew that she was going to have to score in that game. It was a broken down play, and Kayla being the senior she is stepped up and made a play. After that shot, you could see we had a little pep in our step in overtime," Dan Perfetto, The Mercyhurst head basketball coach said. Not only did Wilwohl have an impact on that game, but she has impacted every game throughout the entire season, in spite of a prior shoulder injury.

After four shoulder separations, Wilwohl stepped up for the Lakers to make big plays in big games. It wasn’t like that at first. “My first game back I was scared and that’s completely changed I’m actually kind of fearless now.” Wilwohl said. “This is my last year as a senior and I got to go all or nothing. I’m hoping that (my shoulder) will stay in and thus far it has.” Wilwohl is focusing on her senior year and thinking about her future.

Wilwohl will attend Allegheny College in the fall. Where she plans to study pre-med. She also plans to play basketball. “I think going D-III and being able to still do school and everything it’s perfect, and I’m still close enough to my family.” Wilwohl said.

The Merychurst Lady Lakers 2011-2012 basketball team
After seeing what she can do for her team and coaches through a tough senior year, Wilwohl fell back in love with the one thing she never truly wanted to give up; basketball. Finishing her senior year as one of the tops players for Mercyhurst, Wilwohl will pursue her dream of becoming a doctor, as well as play basketball for Allegheny College in the fall.

Friday, February 10, 2012

Professor by Day, Eerie Roller Girl Roller Girl by Night


Penn State Behrend's Professor,
Elizabeth Fogle
 A professor by day and Psycherella by night,“At first I was seeing it more like a super hero thing, a Clark Kent during the day, Superman when I go to roller derby,” Elizabeth Fogle, a Women's Study professor at Penn State Behrend said. During the day she gives many lectures to students about Women's Studies, but at night is a completely different story.

It’s 7:00. Roller Derby time! Walking into the skating rink it’s surprisingly filled with an awkward silence, with a bit of chatter from the Eerie Roller Girls. Middle-aged women covered in tattoos fill the rink. Each and every woman start skating around  track to play "Roller Derby."

Roller Derby is a sport with very many rules and different positions each player can play. “It can be very confusing,” Fogle said as she pulled up her five inch thick black pads. “We are actually having a test on all the rules and positions coming up and I am nervous about passing it,” said Fogle. Even though Roller Derby may be complicating, Fogle is more confident than she has ever been, “It’s all about beating these bitches around the track,” Fogle said while gazing out into the skating rink, “I just love it.”


Eerie Roller Girls skate around the track
at Evan's Skateland
 Roller Derby is a contact sport played by two teams consisting of five skaters on each team. Four of the skaters form a, in roller derby terms, “pack.”  The fifth skater is a “jammer.”  This skater’s main objective is to skate around the track and lap all the rest of the skaters. Each time she laps the skaters, that team gets a point. The blockers in the “pack” try not to let the “jammer” through. Roller Derby is a complicating sport, but a sport Elizabeth Fogle has fallen in love with.


One of Eerie Roller Girls
 logos

Sitting at a desk waiting for students to arrive. Tying up the laces to the skates. Writing e-mails to other professors. Strapping on the helmet. Starting a lecture on the Introduction of Women. Putting on the knee pads and elbow pads.  6:00, class dismissed. The sound of the whistle, start skating. Gathering up the books and papers on Women’s Studies. Boom! Crash! Pow! Each and every skater falling to the ground as they get rammed by “Psycherella,” a woman who lives an unexpected life.