Thursday, 8 November 2012

5 reasons to attend New York Shock Exchange's roller derby boot camp in Manchester this month


SHE SAYS

Bootay blocking (Photo by Kate Robson Photography)

My top 5 reasons for attending the NYSE Bootcamp
by Booty Treatment, aged 30 ½



1.  The New York Shock Exchange work closely (and share trainers and refs) with the Gotham Girls, who are only the best roller derby team in the whole entire WORLD. (I once danced with Suzy Hotrod at an afterparty and was close enough to Bonnie Thunders to sweat into her beer. They’re seriously amazing in person, ergo the men stack up, because such awesome ladies would not hang out with uncool people.)

2.  Other things I could spend that £75 on include:

a) One slap up night out with my derby wife, complete with hangovers and regret.
b) Three sessions with a personal trainer who’s never heard of roller derby and thinks I skate round to cheesy music waving my arms.
c) Six new bout tee shirts to cut up and ruin with my derby stink.
d) Eight new wheels which may make me a better skater or may get consigned to the
pile of ‘seemed like a good idea’ along with the shiny pink leggings.
e) Twenty five pairs of Asda’s finest tights.

On reflection, that £75 is probably much better spent on a whole day of learning that I will carry with me for the rest of my derby career.

3.  Part of my brain thinks I am nowhere near good enough to go to a boot camp run by these guys. Um, guess what? That’s what boot camps are for. LEARNING. It’s empowering to get in over my head and manage to get up off the bench and go back for more. Vivi Section from Circle City Derby Girls (Indianapolis, USA) sums up my reasons for wanting to get my ass handed to me perfectly: “Had I ever had the chance to be hit so hard and so expertly? No, I had not. Had I ever been in a rotation with a jammer who played at Nationals? No, I had not. Was I going to miss an opportunity, this unique chance to get my ass handed to me, to get beaten up by a blocker who operates in a higher stratosphere of jammer-killing than one I had yet encountered? No, I was not.”

4.  I’m not worried about playing with guys. I’ve been hurt much worse by rookie players who went down like a shot deer in front of me than I ever have taking a huge hit from someone bigger than me. In fact, I really like playing with guys. I like that as someone who’s bigger than a lot of female derby players, I have to work not to get pushed around on the track. I like that my munchkin sized teammates can sail past terrifyingly giant men without being touched because they present a target zone that’s like three inches tall. I like the camaraderie and the thumbs up when I make a good hit and the fact that when we’re on the track, it doesn’t really matter who has boobs and who has balls, just that we all have skates on our feet and have a common goal.

5.  I’m not sure if it’s cool to admit this, but I really get a kick out of schooling men on the track. I’d like to say it’s because I’m a feminist and I believe strongly in equality, but really it comes down to playground politics. Boys and girls aren’t supposed to fight, it’s not…nice. What’s really not nice is not letting consenting adults decide what they want to do. If I want to be hit by men, I’ll be hit by men (in a safe and controlled environment mediated by referees and the most complicated rule set known to mankind). They just better believe I’ll hit back, and in a much better way after I soak up all the learnings at this boot camp!

HE SAYS

My top 5 reasons to be absolutely gutted I can't attend the NYSE boot camp
By Station, aged 38 16



1.  I skated against Abe Drinkin at the Men's European Roller Derby Championships in July, and the way he pulled The Expendables together into a coherent, focused team still blows me away. A lot of these guys hadn't even met before the first day of bouts, but Abe had them all working together in both defence and offence as if they'd been playing together for years. That level of derby knowledge, coupled with the kind of confidence that permeates a lineup and gets people communicating and working to the same plan... I need to train with players of that standard and hope some of that experience rubs off.

2.  Jonathan R and Ladies Knight - these guys have peerless technique, and the chance to learn from them would take my skating - particularly my jamming - up more than a notch or two. I train with some fantastic skaters, but our focus on tactics and gameplay doesn't leave a lot of time for a newer skater like me to refine my style and work past those bad habits I picked up along the way. An intensive session on jamming techniques and skills would hopefully see me dodging through and around walls, instead of relying on strength to try and blam my way through.

3.  Our coach brings a seemingly constant supply of tactics to training, and we work on how to perfect those that work for us as a team, and how to respond to those that we might encounter on the track, but there's always room for new ideas - left-field thinking that shakes up your understanding of the game. Roller derby is still so new in the UK - were it a person, the men's game wouldn't be out of nappies yet - so the opportunity to train with coaches that have seen the tactics and rules evolve, who maybe have more insight than most into where the sport is going, is a huge opportunity to consolidate our understanding of where we are now, ready for the new rules in January.

4.  As part of Manchester Roller Derby, I regularly train and scrim with the girls, but Booty highlighted one area where I really struggle - those tiny, high-velocity jammers that I just can't seem to out-manoeuvre. Sure, once their speed is gone I can hold them, but getting them stopped legally, that's hard, and I was looking forward to the chance to skate against the girls - both from MRD and other leagues - with input from these coaches, sharing their techniques for getting in low and legal, without low- or high-blocking. I know most leagues don't skate co-ed, but with small, agile jammers common in both the men's and women's game, and possibly becoming more so under the new ruleset, that's a skill upon which I'll be increasingly relying.

5.  As a player, I don't watch the track during jams in which I'm not playing. Seriously - I'll get yelled at if I'm staring at the track instead of talking to my lineup about our plan for the next jam. And as fans, you're watching at least half of the action from the wrong side of the track, so the one thing I was looking forward to most about the bootcamp was being able to discuss, examine, and learn how the NYSE had played on the previous day: "you did X, show me why". You can see what they do on the archived footage, but learning about how they do it - what they're thinking about and the plan they're working to - takes your understanding of their play so much further.

So, yeah, I had a long list of skills and experience I was hoping to take away from the day, so I'm highly disappointed, and just hope that you get to take advantage of this unprecedented opportunity.

NYSE BOOT CAMP WILL BE HELD ON SUNDAY 18TH NOVEMBER. TICKETS HERE.

There is also a big important bout the day before, tickets and info here. 

Friday, 2 November 2012

New York Shock Exchange boot camp & bout in Manchester this month

New York Shock Exchange flee one wet city for another to bout Manchester Roller Derby and host a roller derby boot camp. What's more, both of these events will be happening on the same weekend.  How much roller derby can YOU handle?

First thing's first - THE BOUT.  This is one of only two bouts that the New York team is playing in the UK, and the only one to be held in the north of England.  This is the first ever intercontinental men's roller derby bout.  This is not to be missed.  The mighty New York Shock Exchange are one of the best men's teams in the world and will be crossing the pond to take on MRD's New Wheeled Order.  The Order are not to be sniffed at however, anyone who witnessed their impressive performance at the European Championships will tell you as much - expect fast and furious skating, hard hits and big spills!  In true MRD style there will also be full-contact female derby as MRD's CheckerBroads face off against Imposters Roller Girls.  The last time they met it was a hard fought game with Imposters taking it 117 - 89. This is a re-match that will sizzle.

Second thing's second - THE BOOT CAMP.  Manchester Roller Derby is very proud to be hosting its first ever boot camp in conjunction with the New York Shock Exchange.  The Shockers want to skate with you and share their tricks of the trade. With sections for both beginners and veterans, this bootcamp is open to all adult skaters of any gender. This is your chance to work on jammer footwork, blocking technique, wall building, pack speed control, and then put your new skills to test in a full on scrimmage.

BOUT. DOUBLE-HEADER. SAT 17th NOVEMBER. 2PM. MRD CHECKERBROADS V IMPOSTERS ROLLER GIRLS. MRD NEW WHEELED ORDER V NEW YORK SHOCK EXCHANGE. ARMITAGE CENTRE, FALLOWFIELD, MANCHESTER. TICKETS £10.  

BOOT CAMP. SUN 18th NOVEMBER. 10AM - 8PM. NEW YORK SHOCK EXCHANGE. ARMITAGE CENTRE, FALLOWFIELD, MANCHESTER. OPEN TO ALL ADULT SKATERS OF ANY GENDER.  TICKETS £75.


Poster designed by Chris Howker 

Sunday, 23 September 2012

MRD go to Amsterdam


As you may have noticed by our furious fundraising, MRD is sending a mixed team of female skaters over to Amsterdam in just under three weeks - to take on the Amsterdam Derby Dames.

This is the first time we have sent a full team abroad to compete - making us international skaters! How exciting!  To keep track of any updates, whether you can make it or not, here is the Facebook event.

Some information on the bout from Amsterdam Derby Dames...

The Amsterdam Derby Dames are already in the Halloween spirit! On 13th October 2012 they will be playing a home bout entitled 'Amsterdamned'.

The duel against Manchester Roller Derby promises to be more exciting than ever and Amsterdam Derby Dames are putting out a squad of their best players from the All Star Team. Speed, tactics and a dose of controlled aggression on the track will take centre stage.

Amsterdam Derby Dames invite you to join them on Saturday 13 October to witness this event at the Sporthal Bankras in Amstelveen. If you can't join them, you could always follow the scores on Twitter.

WHAT Amsterdam Derby Dames vs. Manchester Roller Derby
WHERE  Sporthal Bankras, Oostelijk Halfrond 9, 1183 EL Amstelveen
WHEN 13 October 2012 - Doors open at 3pm - Starting whistle at 4pm

For extra information on the game, see videos here and here taken at the recent Roller Derby World Cup in Toronto.



Poster image appears courtesy of Dennis Stempher Photography.

Monday, 10 September 2012

Live Roller Derby... Counting Down to MRD's next Home Bout

Only five days now....

Don't forget, this Saturday, Manchester Roller Derby are hosting an afternoon of hard-hitting, nail-biting roller derby. 

In the first bout of the day, our fabulous women's B team, Phoenix Furies, will be skating out against Furness Fire Crackers.

And if that wasn't enough, in the second bout you will be able to watch our amazing men's team New Wheeled Order take on Lincolnshire Rolling Thunder.

Doors open at 1pm, so get down to the Sugden Centre in Manchester for some shouting and cheering. Bring kids, friends, neighbours, whoever wants to come.

As usual there will be stalls selling all kinds of exciting stuff from jewellery to clothing to cakes to derby goodies.  

Tickets are only £7 if you book in advance (£6 concessions) or £10 on the door. Click here to buy tickets and/or RSVP our event on Facebook



Friday, 31 August 2012

Live Roller Derby: Two weeks and counting...

I have never been to a roller derby bout.

I know. This is quite possibly a mortal sin. Especially as I’ve been training with Manchester Roller Derby for the past four months.

I could give my excuses and explain that I’m not often free on a Saturday, and I was ill one time, and double-booked another time. Or I could just tell you how excited I am that in just two weeks I will AT LAST be watching my first live roller derby bout!

Manchester Roller Derby are hosting an amazing double-header bout on Saturday 15th September. Yes, two bouts. The first sees MRD's Women's B team Phoenix Furies, skating against Furness Fire Crackers. And in the second bout, MRD's Men's team New Wheeled Order take on Lincolnshire Rolling Thunder.

Oh, I have so many reasons for being excited.

At last I’ll be able to witness first hand all the live jamming and blocking action. I mean, I’ve been to scrimmages, which are essentially practice bouts. I’ve watched and been a non-skating official at scrimmages. I've seen all the skills and techniques, the hard hits, penalties, falls, the fast jamming. But, I know from photographs, video clips, and talking to people in my league that bouts are a whole different experience.

My five reasons to be excited about seeing a live bout for the first time:

1. The Noisy Crowd
I can’t wait to be shouting, cheering and clapping along with more than two hundred other people. I want to hear the roar that Captain Malice from New Wheeled Order says you can hear on the track and from anywhere in the building whenever there is a big hit. I’m not sure whether I dare sit in the suicide seats right at the front. But I will be there, right in the middle shouting go, go, go!

2. The Skate Outs
I can’t wait to see the teams skating out, and hear their names introduced by the announcer. And some of my friends will be skating out, so I think I might yell until I’m hoarse when their skate names are called out. So many derby names are clever or funny plays on words or puns, and hearing those names over the PA, as the teams skate out… that’s got to be exciting… especially when they are names I know and love.

3. The Boutfits
Roller Derby is well-known for its amazing, alternative style. Personally I think it’s the coolest sport around. I love that each player can be an individual, as well as wearing team colours or patterns. All the face paint and war paint, the painted numbers on arms, the crazy socks, the hot pants, fishnets or patterned tights, the bandanas, the glitter and glam. And that’s just the girls...

4. The Derby
Of course, I’m there to watch the sport. I know how hard all the players train on their skills and endurance. I can’t wait to see it all put into action on the rink. Derby is so many things as a sport. It’s fast, skilful, tough, exciting, nerve-wracking, full-on contact. I can’t wait to watch the jammers racing round the track, the blockers trying to get in their way, assists breaking through so the jammer can whizz round again and score (hopefully many) points.

5. The Whole Event
Add to all the above... The stalls selling all kinds of cool (from jewellery to derby kit to cakes)... The fact that kids come along and get excited watching their mum, dad, big sister or brother playing derby and get high fives from all the players after each bout... All the derby love that fills the whole rink because people so genuinely LOVE playing, watching and talking about derby... And (hopefully) the after party

Sigh.

Two weeks and counting down...


Tickets are on sale now at only £7 if you book in advance (£6 concessions) or £10 on the door. Click here to buy tickets and/or RSVP on Facebook

Monday, 13 August 2012

Many hands make light work

Roller derby is an all-consuming pastime, as anyone involved in its ‘extra-curricular’ activities will attest to, but it doesn’t have to be.

I’ve been a member of Manchester Roller Derby’s committee since it was born in May 2011, and acted in a similar capacity before its birth. As PR Manager, it has been my job to promote the club and its events, oversee the design of any publications, write press releases, develop and maintain relationships with media professionals, ensure consistency in branding, and oversee social network management and website design. Bit of a mouthful I know, and that’s not even all of it.

It all sounds a bit boring and corporate, but can be lots of fun and very satisfying. The main reason I do it is because I want to use the skills I possess to let everyone know about the club I love and am hugely proud to be a part of. The fruits of this labour have seen us featured on BBC Manchester Online, The Telegraph, Chimp Magazine and the Manchester Evening News.

We have a club filled to the brim with talented individuals from all walks of life. We do what we do with minimal funding and outside support. Everyone who works to make the club the best it can be is a volunteer driven purely by passion and belief. Many of the volunteers in committee roles have been involved in some capacity since they started skating at MRD.

It can be easy to criticise how things are done, but it is important to remember that the people involved in the running of your roller derby club generally aren’t professional managers and are doing the best they can with the skills and resources they have. It is so difficult to make fair decisions that affect 80+ individuals with such colourful personalities and strong opinions as roller derby seems to attract! You will never please everyone.


As a skater for MRD’s A-team, the Checkerbroads, I will admit that my involvement in the adminstrative side of roller derby has on occasion affected my mental state when I should be focusing purely on skating, tactics and working with my team - whether it’s focusing on the wording of a release that needs to be written and sent out rather than a specific drill, or separating myself from various aspects of bout preparation in order to focus on the bout in hand. I guess this is an inevitable side-effect of not being ‘just a skater’, but it is beneficial to have more of a rotation of those involved and those not, like many clubs do these days.

Everyone at MRD has a life outside of roller derby. My life outside currently involves working long and/or late shifts at a shop (with the week’s rota decided a couple of days before if we’re lucky), practicing with my band, nights out for gigs, looking after my two kitties, weekly fitness classes and seeing my derby widow whenever our timetables allow. Some people have kids, work 12-hour shifts in stressful jobs, are carers, have Masters and PhDs to work on or have other important commitments. Despite these commitments, you will still find these people offering hours of their time and effort to help the club grow. This isn’t something that will happen of its own accord.

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: ‘We have a club filled to the brim with talented individuals from all walks of life.’ If you skate for us and have the skills, time and enthusiasm (or any of these things) – speak up! MRD has so many great ideas, but not always the manpower to make them happen. If we had people coming up with ideas and then going ahead and making these things happen, well… the sky would be the limit!

This is a call to arms. Don’t just skate for your roller derby club, own a part of it.
Much love,
Kate Push #11

MRD tearing it up. All images by our official photographer Shirlaine Forrest.

Getting involved...
MRD member? Get involved! Below is a brief description of each area and its current key contact.

  • Bouts (Cecil B. Demented) - Event management for our home bouts, also works hard to ensure our away bouts run smoothly. Works closely with PR and finance.
  • Training (Vic Tori Bee) - Our training taskforce. Concerned with all aspects of training - from session plans to recruitment to ensuring our floor-time is efficiently used. Works closely with secretary and PR.
  • Secretary (Jowanna Clout) - The backbone of everything at MRD. Arranges committee meetings, takes minutes, records training attendance, collects subs, looks after club documents/policies, insurance and much more.
  • Officials (Skabarella) - Our group of incredible referees and NSOs. MRD is very proud to be able to field our own dedicated officials team - both for home and for away games (not just for our own club either!). Also arranges training for budding refs/NSOs and works alongside PR to promote recruitment of officials.
  • Treasury (Ma Rollin' Munster) - For the accountants in town, or anyone who likes numbers. Makes sure our outgoings don't exceed our incomings, keeps lots of records and works out how we can turn a profit! Works closely with merch and our secretary.
  • Merchandise (Skulldozer) -Involves research of new items, evaluation of current stock, writing merch reports, looking after the online shop, selling advertisements in home bout programmes and stalls at bouts. Works closely with PR and MRD's sponsors.
  • Fundraising (Kerried Alive) - Looks into any grants we may be eligible for, applies for funding, arranges fundraising events. Works closely with PR and treasury.
  • PR (Kate Push) - All about shouting about our club and raising its profile. This involves writing/sending out press releases, arranging all promotion for home bouts and other events and looking after our website and social media presence. Works closely with fundraising and merchandise.

Thursday, 26 July 2012

SkullDozer's musings on life, love & merchandise

Dear friends,

I’ve been Head of Merch with Manchester Roller Derby for two years now and have seen it grow from a few t-shirts ordered on the spur of the moment to a fully functioning, profitable business. Bearing this in mind, now seemed like a good time to write a little blog about merchandise, its importance and how it can help your league. It’s good to share!

While working through the initial ideas that every league has (Which logo do we use? What colours should we have? How should we organise ourselves?) one of our members decided to take the plunge and order a few t-shirts, just to see how they would look. Needless to say they were an instant hit, if only with ourselves – OMG! We have our new league ON A T-SHIRT!! Newer leagues thought of all that PR stuff before they’d learnt to skate together but we took things slowly, step by step, and figured it out as we went.

The t-shirts proved popular and soon made the money back, although didn’t make any profit initially as they were sold at cost price. The next order we put in had our names on the back and these arrived on the day of our first bout. You can imagine our excitement! We had ordered a few extra to put out on a stall at our first game and made a little profit with that. We put this profit back into the club and placed a larger order next time. Through this process we slowly, slowly built our monetary reserves with a small profit each time, and gradually began to expand our range of merchandise.

First off, we invested in badges, and then stickers. Now we stock fridge magnets, keyrings, tote bags and we are expecting our very first delivery of embroidered patches any time soon! We found that little cheap things sell the best, the “pocket-money” priced things. Everybody wants a souvenir from the game, especially if it was a particularly exciting game or your team did a win - and not everybody can afford £10 for a t-shirt.

My advice to new leagues is to DO merch. Do a decent range and do it early. Build up your pennies by small profit margins at first, increasing this as you get more established. Use your money wisely – see what other teams are selling and constantly research suppliers. New supply companies are popping up all the time and you can often benefit from the new deals they use to lure people in. Loyalty is a great thing and it’s easy to find a company then stick with them, but if you find somewhere that prints the same quality shirts for cheaper, or they can offer you other advantages, move to them.

It’s very easy to get caught in the trap of “Well I want it, so why wouldn’t anybody else?” but think carefully before you order 1000 custom-made onesies, or glittery deely-boppers – ask the rest of your league to see what everyone else thinks! Pay attention to what the public ask for at your games and if you’re not sure – don’t order.

Legally you must declare your takings for taxation purposes, but only if you earn over a certain amount. Work closely with your treasurer, write down absolutely EVERYTHING that’s sold and keep records. Excel is amazing, I keep everything on a spreadsheet and report back to the treasurer once a month. Keep ALL your receipts and don’t spend your own money if at all possible, your treasurer should have a process in place for requesting funds, so follow them and work things out together.

It’s also useful to have a sub-committee to help with the organisation and research. We recently set one up, which means I only deal with three people ordering personalised t-shirts, as opposed to 70! Set up something similar and delegate to them. It’s much easier to ask one person to research keyrings, someone else to research promotional items such as pens and another to look at posters, rather than bog one person down with all the research and consequently end up with nothing. Derby is a life-eating hobby as it is - its easy to ignore the seemingly less important aspects!


Another thing: have an online shop! So many leagues only sell their merch at games and they really are missing out. If time is an issue, give another member a selection of stock and ask them to post out items bought online. It’s important to think carefully about postage costs – don’t underestimate them as your league will lose money, but don’t overestimate them either; no-one wants to pay £6 postage on a £10 t-shirt! Consider selling a goody bag for the small items - its pretty pointless listing a badge for 50p, then charging £1 postage on it. Always put a postage policy on there and state your responsibility for items lost in the post.


Finally, work with a web developer to build a decent platform for your online shop and have a photographer take photos of your merch items at their best! Consider using real people to model the clothing - you’ll probably find you have quite a few camera hogs in your league and this will show off the fit so much better than a plastic dummy or laying it flat on the floor.

If you are lucky enough to have a sponsor, work closely with them also, find out what works for you both and use it. We are sponsored by Extreme Largeness who are currently listing our products on their website, you can see our stuff here.

We are currently working on our website and building our own online shop, come see the results so far and see what you think! http://www.manchesterrollerderby.co.uk/

love,
SkullDozer

Photographs taken by Shirlaine Forrest, featuring SkullDozer and Penny Pinch'er of MRD