Daily News (Los Angeles)

Girls wrestling is fastest-growing high school sport

- By Marc Levy

Jody Mikhail was a sophomore at Pennsylvan­ia’s Cumberland Valley High School when a poster for a new girls wrestling club caught her eye. So Mikhail, a senior now, tried the sport.

“I fell in love with it the first time,” she said.

Unlike previous generation­s, she’s hardly alone.

Girls wrestling has become the fastest-growing high school sport in the country, sanctioned by a surging number of states and bolstered by a movement of medal-winning female wrestlers, parents and the male-dominated ranks of coaches and administra­tors who saw it as a necessity and a matter of equality.

Where once girls wrestled on boys teams and against boys, increasing­ly they are wrestling on girls teams and against girls. And now that they are wrestling in sanctioned and official tournament­s against girls, their names are going onto plaques on their high schools’ walls and into state record books.

This year, Kentucky, Rhode Island and Pennsylvan­ia held their first statesanct­ioned girls wrestling championsh­ips, while Louisiana became the 45th state to sanction the sport. At the collegiate level, women’s wrestling is designated as an “emerging” sport and is on track to become a championsh­ip-level sport in 2026, the NCAA said.

MECHANICSB­URG, PA. »

including Mikhail, after years of girls having no choice but to wrestle boys or, if they did wrestle girls, seeing the same handful of faces, year after year, in tournament­s organized by local wrestling organizati­ons.

Even for girls who compete nationally or hope to wrestle in college, wrestling in state-sanctioned tournament­s brings status.

“It really does bring this level of, I think, having these girls feel seen,” said Brooke Zumas, a former wrestling coach who was active in the movement to get the sport sanctioned in Pennsylvan­ia.

Girls who have competed for years are seeing new faces and big crowds in this year’s state-sanctioned championsh­ip tournament­s.

“There were never tournament­s like this,” said Savannah Witt, a state champion wrestler from Pennsylvan­ia’s Palisades High School who has wrestled for 10 years. “It’s awesome to see. I’ve been used to running into the same, like, three faces at tournament­s. Now you come here, I’m like, ‘I don’t know half these girls.’ ”

Over the past decade, the number of high school girls teams quadrupled nationally and the number of girls wrestling in high school quintupled to over 50,000 through last year, according to figures from the National Federation of State High School Associatio­ns.

Last year alone, it shot up nearly 60%, the biggest increase for the sport in decades.

Still, the number of girls wrestling in high school was one-fifth of the number of boys last year and the 14th biggest by participat­ion, trailing the stalwarts of American girls’ athletics — track and field, volleyball, soccer, basketball and softball — but also tennis, swimming, golf, lacrosse, cross country and cheerleadi­ng.

Another leap will likely vault girls wrestling past field hockey. sport that is unmatched in teaching inner strength and discipline.

Some see the rise of girls wrestling as part of a larger arc in women’s sports: the U.S. women’s national soccer team has captured the nation’s attention and the Big Ten’s women’s basketball tournament sold out after Caitlin Clark smashed the women’s NCAA scoring record.

“When women first had a chance to participat­e in sports in an organized fashion, it was in sports that were considered feminine,” said Jackie Paquette, who two years ago became the first female executive at the National Wrestling Coaches Associatio­n. “It was tennis, it was golf, it was swimming. It was considered graceful. Wrestling is the opposite of that in a sense, so it has been hard for some to accept women in that form. But we are finding out now that the world is changing.”

Still, boosters say wrestling is accessible: there’s a weight class for every body type, there are fewer competing winter sports and all a wrestler needs is a pair of wrestling shoes.

In 1990, barely over 100 girls were on high school rosters in the entire country, and before 2018 just six states had sanctioned it.

In 2016, national champion wrestler Sally Roberts founded the advocacy organizati­on Wrestle Like a Girl and began talking to USA Wrestling, the National Wrestling Coaches Associatio­n and the National Wrestling Hall of Fame — male-dominated organizati­ons that neverthele­ss got on board for girls wrestling.

Something else happened that year: American wrestler Helen Maroulis scored a shocking victory at the Rio De Janeiro Olympics to win a gold medal — the first ever for an American in women’s wrestling.

“Other girls said, ‘I want to be her,’ ” Roberts said. wrestled are introducin­g their daughters to this sport and having this connection through the sport,” Wright said.

Some who watched Ultimate Fighting Championsh­ip bouts saw Sara McMann and Tatiana Suarez — collegiate wrestlers who won medals in internatio­nal competitio­n, including McMann’s silver medal at the 2004 Olympics.

“And they’d look at their daughters and say, ‘Oh, do you want to wrestle?’ ” Roberts said.

Some never thought it would be sanctioned.

That includes Serge Bouyssou, who recalled the vile things that coaches and parents said to his daughter when she wrestled in high school before graduating more than a decade ago.

“You thought people are never going to give in to the fact that girls are more than capable of participat­ing in this sport,” said Bouyssou, who last month coached girl wrestlers from Scituate High School in Rhode Island’s first sanctioned state tournament.

Gary Abbott, of USA Wrestling, said wrestling is growing quickly at the youth level, too, and the organizati­on is encouraged by its highest Olympic medal count ever for women — four — in 2021. USA Wrestling hopes to see a day when as many girls are wrestling as there are boys, Abbott said.

In perhaps a decade or two, a new generation of mothers who wrestled on girls teams in sanctioned tournament­s may teach their daughters to wrestle.

“It’s really good for girls, especially that are new to the sport, to see like that’s how it should be,” said Aubre Krazer, a state champion and senior at Pennsylvan­ia’s Easton Area High School. “It’s very organized. ... It’s nice to see that, especially for the upcoming generation­s, it’s going to be better for them than it was for us. And that’s what I would want for them.”

 ?? MARC LEVY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Palisades (Pa.) High wrestler Savannah Witt, top, competes in a semifinal match during the Southeast Regional wrestling tournament in Quakertown, Pa.
MARC LEVY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Palisades (Pa.) High wrestler Savannah Witt, top, competes in a semifinal match during the Southeast Regional wrestling tournament in Quakertown, Pa.

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