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History Of Rollerderby
Long, long, ago in an era far, far away... In 1935, during the worst times of the Depression era, a sports promoter named Leo Seltzer invented a spectacle he called Roller Derby. Originally intended to compete with then-popular dance marathons, the derby was a simulation of a cross-country roller skating race in which participants circled a track thousands of times to simulate covering the distance between Los Angeles, California and New York, New York. Occasionally, massive collisions and crashes occurred as skaters tried to lap those who were ahead of them. Seltzer realized this was the most exciting part, and tweaked his game to maximize the carnage.
First
Wave Roller Derby achieved its first wave of televised popularity in the 1950s. In 1958, the league split into two organizations, Roller Derby and Roller Games, each of which maintained regional strength through the early 1970s. The most fabled team in the sport throughout these years was the Bay City Bombers. In 1973, Roller Games bought out Roller Derby, but high overhead costs and other factors led to its demise two years later. Several attempts were made in the late 1970s and 1980s to revive the sport, including an effort in cooperation with ESPN, without much success.
RollerGames Revival In 1989, television producer David Sams teamed with Roller Games owner Bill Griffiths Sr. to create a modern version of the sport called RollerGames. Instead of a banked oval track, a figure eight track was used where one side heavily banked, and included obstacles such as the "Wall of Death" (which was located on the heavily banked side) and the "Jet Jump". As a tiebreaker, two skaters would skate around a pit full of alligators. The first skater to skate around the pit five times or to throw his opponent into the alligator pit was declared the winner. The show also included "halftime entertainment" by musical performers and commentary by Wally George. Main commentators for the show were former college basketball announcer Chuck Underwood and producer David Sams. Former Phoenix, Arizona news reporter Shelley Jamison served as sideline reporter. RollerGames premiered in 95% of the country, and, though generally panned by critics, was well-received among teenagers. The world famous Los Angeles
T-Birds were one of the teams used for the show. Other teams were The Rockers,
Hot Flash, The Violators, RollerJam Revival Between June 1998 and June 2000, Knoxville, Tennessee television impresarios Ross K. Bagwell Sr. and Stephen Land staged another revival known as RollerJam. Bagwell and Land recruited numerous stars from the Roller Derby of yesteryear, as well as newer stars from various athletic backgrounds, to skate in the six-team World Skating League (WSL). Jerry Seltzer, the son of the game's creator Leo Seltzer, was named RollerJam "commissioner". Games were televised out of "RollerJam Arena," situated on the grounds of Universal Studios in Orlando, Florida. Despite strong funding and a television deal with The Nashville Network (TNN, now known as Spike TV), this venture failed as well, probably due to a lack of consistency with respect to how to present the product. Today's Roller Derby In the early 21st century, after two decades in relative obscurity, the sport began to experience a grassroots revival, particularly among women, with amateur leagues, in an indie spirit, forming in urban centers across the United States. The leagues, of which there are at least 30 nationwide, are thus far all-female, self-organized (many are non-profit organizations), and mostly compete on flat, not banked, tracks. Each league is locally-focused; teams in each league compete against each other, but rarely compete against teams from other cities. In mid-2005, representatives from various leagues began discussing how to facilitate interleague play. Skaters in these leagues use quad (traditional) roller skates, not inline skates. The End
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