Montreal Gazette

Montreal set to host roller derby tourney

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While the roller derby of today might not quite provide the crazy and often violent entertainm­ent the sport offered during the 1960s and ’70s, the 24 women’s leagues in Canada are a sign of its increasing popularity.

They have names like Eves of Destructio­n, whose players are from Victoria, or Fog City Rollers, from Saint John, N.B.

They belong to the Women’s Flat Track Derby Associatio­n (WFTDA), the internatio­nal governing body, which has leagues in North America, South America, Japan, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa.

This weekend, the spotlight is on Montreal as it hosts a big internatio­nal tournament at St-Louis Arena (5633 St-Dominique St.).

But don’t expect to see a lot of violence. Along the way, roller derbies have become more profession­al and played on an oval flat race track instead of the older version, which featured a banked track.

Brigitte Charest, a spokeswoma­n for the Montreal Roller Derby league, said the focus of the sport nowadays is on strategy.

“It’s a full team contact sport like rugby, like football, where you don’t just hit someone just to hit someone,” Charest said. “It’s a strategic move because you need to move that person to make someone take their place.”

Charest says today’s roller derbies are a far cry from the earlier hugely popular televised shows — “where they would do things to the other players, trip them with their skates and hit them in the face.”

She said the sport has reached a new level because it is better controlled with rules and penalties.

Charest started playing last year after attending an annual boot camp that is held every August for any woman who might be interested in joining MTLRD, the Montreal league. She goes by the nickname Eye Roll, “because I roll my eyes a lot.”

“The boot camp is three months, so you basically learn how to skate, to brake and turn and everything else you need to know,” she said.

Montreal Roller Derby has six teams: three that play only at home, A and B teams that compete in internatio­nal tournament­s and a farm team known as The Smash Squad. The A team is known as The New Skids on the Block and the B team is The Montreal Sexpos.

The volunteer-run league was founded in 2006 and joined the WFTDA in January 2009.

Team members, whose average age is around 25, all have nicknames, like Cheese Grater, Miracle Whips and Lau Rider, whose real name is Laurence Lemieux.

Lemieux, 30, the mother of a two-year-old son, is in her sixth season with Montreal Roller Derby. She says it’s a very competitiv­e sport with rules that prohibit shots to the head. Lemieux wants to play a few more seasons and join Team Canada for the next Roller Derby World Cup.

Montreal’s three-day tournament begins Friday and ends Sunday.

The competitio­n brings together teams from Montreal, Texas, Jacksonvil­le, Fla., and London, England.

“Texas is ranked No. 6, while Montreal is ranked 11th,” Charest said. “They play against each other to get points to try to beat those with high rankings.”

 ?? RYAN QUICK/ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Modern roller derby is not the crazy and often violent sport it was in the 1960s and ’70s.
RYAN QUICK/ THE CANADIAN PRESS Modern roller derby is not the crazy and often violent sport it was in the 1960s and ’70s.

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