麻豆放映免费

Official Student Newspaper of Henry M. Gunn High School

麻豆放映免费

Official Student Newspaper of Henry M. Gunn High School

麻豆放映免费

Official Student Newspaper of Henry M. Gunn High School

麻豆放映免费

Meteoric growth of women鈥檚 wrestling affords new opportunities

This year, Louisiana joined the 45 states that certify girls wrestling at the high school level. Of these states, Kentucky, Rhode Island and Pennsylvania hosted their first state-sanctioned girls wrestling tournaments.

In the broader scope of women鈥檚 wrestling, the National Collegiate Athletic Association announced plans to add the sport as the 91st NCAA championship sport in winter 2026, with the vote set for next January. These recent developments mark the progress of girls wrestling as the fastest-growing high school sport in the country, according to the National Federation of State High School Associations.

It鈥檚 honestly a lot easier to compete with girls after drilling with these heavier, stronger guys. It just toughens you up.

— Junior Angelina Jiang

Despite the uptick, wrestling remains a coeducational sport at Gunn due to a matter of numbers, according to head coach Jorge Barajas.

鈥淔inancially, we would have to figure out the number to grant another coach for a girls team and recruit more female wrestlers,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut (a girls wrestling team is) definitely the goal.鈥

Aspects of the coed practices, in which both genders drill against each other and compete with their respective gender brackets, have been ideal for junior Angelina Jiang.

鈥淔or me, (the routine is) mostly drill with the guys during practice and then go out and compete with girls,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 honestly a lot easier to compete with girls after drilling with these heavier, stronger guys. It just toughens you up.鈥

Wrestler sophomore Aurora Woodley embraces the opportunity to grapple with her teammates鈥 different styles.

鈥淏eing coed is being able to wrestle with a bunch of different people, which is more important than just wrestling with people who are stronger than you,鈥 she said.

This season, the number of female wrestlers on the team has doubled. Alongside the returning members 鈥 senior Isabella Lee, Jiang and Woodley 鈥 the team welcomed five freshman girls: Mei Elgierari, Thea Kissiov, Avni Lochan, Zara Vivekanand and Mina Van Roy.

While these girls are the minority in the male- dominated team, this imbalance is the very thing that creates camaraderie, according to Elgierari.

鈥淒uring the SCVAL (Santa Clara Valley Athletic League) sectionals tournament, (the girls) each went to one another鈥檚 matches when we could, and although some of us didn鈥檛 qualify, we still stayed together and supported one another,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t really helped, especially for those who weren鈥檛 done and were really nervous.鈥

Emerging players may shy away from the sport because they don鈥檛 know what the wrestling experience is like for girls.

鈥淲restling is super intense, but people don鈥檛 understand that it鈥檚 not something that you should fear while being a female because the team is supportive of you,鈥 Woodley said.

At the collegiate level, women鈥檚 wrestling is still something of a niche sport, as only four NCAA Division I institutions have varsity women鈥檚 wrestling teams: South Carolina鈥檚 Presbyterian College, Connecticut鈥檚 Sacred Heart University, and Missouri鈥檚 University of Iowa and Lindenwood University.

鈥淩ight now, there are only four colleges that have DI women鈥檚 wrestling, and a lot of colleges only have clubs or they don鈥檛 have women鈥檚 wrestling at all,鈥 Jiang said. 鈥淪o it鈥檚 really hard to get a scholarship. I know a lot of really good wrestlers, some who got into Stanford, (and) couldn鈥檛 wrestle anymore because there wasn鈥檛 a women鈥檚 wrestling team up until now.鈥

This limited opportunity does not deter Jiang from further pursuing the sport. Rather, fellow female wrestlers 鈥 such as 18-year-old Audrey Jimenez, who became the first girl to win an Arizona state high school wrestling title while competing against boys on Feb. 18 鈥 have become role models for Jiang.

鈥淭here have been a couple of times where I鈥檝e considered challenging one of the boys for a varsity spot for duels, because at duels, in all technicalities, a girl (is allowed to) challenge and wrestle guys, like in a lot of other states like Arizona,鈥 Jiang said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not allowed the other way, just because of physiological differences. It brings up the whole thing of women in men鈥檚 sports and how women can bring themselves up to the challenge if they want to.鈥

Barajas recalls how 2014 Gunn alumna female world-level wrestler Cadence Lee, known for pinning down boys during her high school wrestling career, paved the way for girls in the absence of sanctioned girls鈥 wrestling. Because of women like Lee, along with women鈥檚 wrestling advocate Lori Ayres, who co- founded the organization D1 Women鈥檚 Wrestling and helped start the Stanford University women鈥檚 wrestling club, Barajas鈥 wrestling perspective has experienced a full-circle moment.

鈥淚鈥檓 able to see where (wrestling) was to where it is now,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 think (local female forefront wrestlers) help our community of wrestlers. We have a good support system for girls鈥 wrestling just down the road at Stanford, where Lori Ayres is that voice (saying) that girls wrestling is something that needs to be going.鈥

For Barajas, coaching Jiang and Lee at the Feb. 22-24 California Interscholastic Federation State Wrestling Championships came against an important cultural backdrop: larger girls wrestling tournaments in the future. Girls state tournaments are now held at the same level as the boys鈥 and have full brackets. According to Barajas, brackets were around 20 girls, but now they reach 32-40 girls.

鈥淚f (this growth) continues, I could see the girls, within next year, at a 64-person bracket as well,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just that fast-growing.鈥

I think it鈥檚 so important that wrestling teaches women how to deal with pain and loss and how to fight for yourself in the real world.

— Sophomore Aurora Woodley

Woodley has found that wrestling entails more than mere physical prowess, requiring intellectual and mental strength.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 so important that wrestling teaches women how to deal with pain and loss and how to fight for yourself in the real world,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檝e learned to just have the fearlessness to stand up for myself.鈥

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Sophomore Sylvie Nguyen is a reporter for 麻豆放映免费. In her free time, she enjoys trying new foods and spending time at the beach.
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