For first time, Iowa girl wins a state wrestling match ... by forfeit
source: http://rivals.yahoo.com/highschool/blog/prep_rally/post/For-first-time-Iowa-girl-wins-a-stat...
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- MotherForTruth
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According to the Cedar Rapids Metro Sports Report, Des Moines Register and Associated Press, among other outlets, Cassy Herkelman, one of two girls who qualified for the Iowa state wrestling tournament, won the opening match in her Class 3-A, 112-pound classification by forfeit when her scheduled opponent, Joel Northrup, officially reported and withdrew from the bout, earning a loss but ensuring he could continue to participate in later matches at the tournament.
Northrup, a sophomore at Lin-Mar (Iowa) High, cited his personal faith as the motivating force for his forfeit. The withdrawal ensures he can finish no higher than third at the tournament, which follows his third-place finish in the 103-pound classification as a freshman.
"I have a tremendous amount of respect for Cassy and Megan [Black] and their accomplishments," Northrup said in a statement given to the media following his official forfeit. "However, wrestling is a combat sport and it can get violent at times.
"As a matter of conscience and faith, I do not believe that it is appropriate for a boy to engage a girl in this manner. It is unfortunate that I have been placed in a situation not seen in most other high school sports in Iowa."
While girls have been allowed to compete as part of boys wrestling teams in Iowa for more than two decades, the 2010-11 season marks the first time that any girls have qualified for the state tournament. In addition to Herkelman, who you can see wrestling in the video above, fellow 112-pound wrestler Megan Black is also competing at the historic state tournament.
When Northrup's forfeit was made official, Herkelman, a freshman at Cedar Falls (Iowa) High was summoned to the middle of the mat and her arm was raised aloft, as you can see in the picture above, signifying the first official victory for a girl at the Iowa wrestling championships.
Though there was plenty of reason for disappointment, Herkelman's father, Bill Herkelman, told the Des Moines Register that the family harbored no ill will toward Northrup whatsoever.
"My understanding is that they've got strict convictions [as a family], and I respect them," Bill Herkelman told the Register. "I don't have any ill will toward them and I don't think it's any kind of boycott about [Cassy Herkelman] being a girl."
In a subplot that could prove to be as intriguing as the initial forfeit, it's possible that Northrup -- who entered as the No. 5 seed in the 112-pound classification -- will be faced with an identical scenario later in the tournament. With Northrup working through the loser's bracket following the forfeit, he will be forced to face off with the losers of other matches later in the event.
If Herkelman or Black, who wrestles for Ottumwa (Iowa) High, lose in the early rounds of the event, they would enter the same bracket that now features Northrup, meaning that there is an outside possibility that the Lin-Mar sophomore would be paired against a girl again.
Another forfeit would all but end Northrup's tournament altogether, though it would hardly generate the attention or notoriety that his initial forfeit gained, given its history-making role in the annals of Iowa high school sports.
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MotherForTruth
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I support girls achievements but not a the cost of boys suppression. Boys competition and girls competition should not be combined. I bet if there was a competition in boxing, for example, and a boy won leaving the girl beat up the media would be all over the boy analyzing his fighting strategies and public would be outraged. This boy should not be put in position to choose a step down. It is important for boys just as for girls self image.
- 1 year ago
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MotherForTruth
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jeffreyak
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Pussy!
- 1 year ago
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jeffreyak
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randallr01
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The boy who forfeited is lame.
- 1 year ago
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randallr01
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KSirys
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She won, Great for her!!!! a win is a win!
- 1 year ago
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KSirys
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arbil333
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so would he of did the same thing if it was a championship match? if not, then he should of fought the match.thats unspotsman type sportsmanship.
- 1 year ago
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arbil333
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jeffreyak
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arbil333:
You need to think b4 you speak.
- 1 year ago
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jeffreyak
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arbil333
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a loser who turned out to be a winner
- 1 year ago
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arbil333
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arbil333
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i would of loved to see that match
- 1 year ago
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arbil333
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arbil333
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he just didnt wanna get beat by a female. lol
- 1 year ago
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arbil333
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arbil333
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equal rights.even in wresteling
- 1 year ago
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arbil333
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arbil333
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if everyone eles is and was ok with it.then he should of been ok with it to
- 1 year ago
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arbil333
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arbil333
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its just 1 loss.its ok
- 1 year ago
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arbil333
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arbil333
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theres some honor
- 1 year ago
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arbil333
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CitizenHill
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Two very together and worthy families that understand the meaning of family values - total class acts !
- 1 year ago
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CitizenHill
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SayNoToGOP
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Mother -Thanks for bringing this news to my attention. I grew up playing sports in Iowa, in fact my high school softball coach has spent about 30 years at Ottumwa HS, where Black is from. The state has a long history of allowing girls to prove themselves in sports. I can say that helped me in my carer, competing with men in business. I also played men's softball with the engineering company I worked for, That did not have enough women to working for them to field a team.
However, a contact sport like wrestling, is truly intimate contact. I thought that Herkelman and his family gave a really sincere and sensitive statement. Theirs is a class act. I feel bad that the competitor had to take an automatic pass to the loser's bracket. He is a winner.
- 1 year ago
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SayNoToGOP
