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First Person
A Battle for Survival
on the MatIn 2001,
Roger Brigham had his hips replaced. When they finished healing in
2003, he found he no longer had the ability to run and therefore
could no longer play rugby, soccer or softball or any of the other
recreational sports he had enjoyed for years as an adult.
So he decided to return to wrestling, 18 years after he had finished
coaching in Alaska and 28 years after his last college match.
Training for the 2006 Gay Games with Golden Gate WC, he made his
competitive return to the mat at the 2004 USAW Far Western Regional
Championships. Along the way he had to learn entirely new moves,
modify his footwork to accommodate his impaired mobility, overcome
some emerging metabolic disorders, served on the Federation of Gay
Games board ... and regained his love of wrestling. This is his
first hand account of what it was like to wrestle at 52 in the Gay
Games' new 50-and-over age group.
By
Roger Brigham
Done.
My competition career is now finally over.
The heat here was incredible and I was woozy from the moment we got
off the plane in Chicago. I didn't sleep Thursday night because the
pain in my torn rotator cuff was killing me, then I didn't sleep
Friday night because we flew all night. I had an 8:30 a.m. board
meeting, barely had time to eat a small lunch, then stood around for
several hours to go through the Opening Ceremonies. We ditched the
place during the national anthem cause we didn't feel like standing
around for a bunch of political victim rhetoric.
Sunday morning we got up at the crack of dawn to get to the arena.
There was so much to be done to get things set up. The building had
no air conditioning. The clinics were great but I got worn out
coaching. I didn't think there was anyway I could survive the next
day.
Monday we were up again at the crack of dawn and the heat was worse
than the day before. It seemed no matter how much I drank, it wasn't
enough.
I had only one match in my weight class/age division, so it was
decided that we would run the first couple of rounds of the classes
that had lots of wrestlers and put the smaller weight groups
directly in the finals. This meant I had to go with an empty belly
for a few hours until late afternoon.
But there was no time to worry about that. A bunch of the guys asked
me to coach their corner during their matches if I was available. I
was screaming my head off for every match and then getting my guys
fired up and refocused between their rounds. They listened and they
won, won more than they'd ever won before. Every time they had
someone in a pinning combination I'd yell for them to raise their
heads. They did and they immediately got their pins. It was a great
example of immediate positive reinforcement. Our team was rolling.
Somewhere around 12:30 p.m. I passed out in the stands. Thank gawd
nobody noticed. I came back to, scarfed down another liter of fluid
and came around.
My 62-kilo match came up at about 3:30. Against Noel. The guy I have
spent two years teaching how to counter every one of my moves. The
guy who knows what I have better than anyone else.
There is nothing harder than wrestling someone you practice with all
of the time. You can't fake him into anything.
They blew the whistle. Noel was rigid beyond belief; he always
tenses when he wrestles me. I kept telling him to relax. He says
thank you, tries to relax ... then tenses right back up again.
I was dizzy as crap. I was not sure I could last through even one
period much less three. My usual strategy is to try to drive
directly to a pinning combination and finish the match quickly or
die trying, but I could not get any of my usual moves on Noel. None
of them. I tried smacking his head around, shooting for the angle
... nothing was there.
So it was time for Plan B: use one of the traditional moves I coach
others all of the time. Problem: he is covered with sweat on his
bony arms. I cannot get a grip with my hands and I can't get in
close enough to pinch him with my arms.
Worse, I am really fading.
I push him off the mat. One point for me. Will that be enough?
I
push him to the edge again. But this time I go to Plan C: get him in
a bear hug.
I never use a bear hug. It's a BAD percentage move for me. It
requires me to get control from the front (worst attack position),
then do a full torque through my artificial hips with the weight of
both of our bodies. I have virtually no strength or control where i
need it most. But his singlet is the only place I can get any grip.
I get it and I manage to nail him on his back out of bounds. Three
more points. It's 4-0.
Noel head butts me. For the second time. The first time he gave
himself a tiny prick that just dripped one drop of blood and was no
problem. This time he opened up my eyebrow and the sweat would not
let my blood stop flowing.
Plus now I am stunned and I am having trouble standing up. They send
me to the corner and I tell Johnny very quietly as we wait for the
medic, "I am in serious trouble."
The medic says he can't stop the bleeding and he can't put a bandage
on it that will stick. They're going to stop the match.
I now have every gawdam excuse in the book to leave the match and
end my career with a gawdam honorable exit. If it were any other
match, I would have.
I tell them they have to stop the bleeding. The official, thank
goodness, takes a look and tells them to put on "new skin" (a kind
of furniture lacquer) and wrap the bandage around my head with tape.
The medic gets ready to apply the gunk and tells me this is going to
hurt. I ask Johnny, "Like, pain has ever stopped me?"
They put it on and wrap the tape tightly around my head, over and
over again. It feels like my head is going to split.
I go out and bull Noel off the mat once more. Up 5-0. One more point
and I will win the period by technical superiority. But I still have
no legs and know I can't afford the energy the point would cost. So
I double check the score and the time (30 seconds) ... and I let
Noel take me down for a point. I rest on my belly and enjoy a good
breather.
End of the period. One more to win.
Whatever little I had the first period is now completely gone. I
have no idea what I'm running on. I just keep walking into Noel,
looking for openings, but with no strength to force my arms in. I
lean on him and am able to barely get him to step off the mat before
I do. One point.
I walk around with him a little bit, acting like I am trying
something but really just wondering when the clock will buzz. I
sense the ref is getting ready to tell me to get with it, so I make
one final charge. I get my arms around for one last bear hug and
wrench with everything I have.
Nothing. He barely moves ... but just enough. We tumble to the mat
and he lands on his belly. My strategy worked, but not well enough.
I got one point but not the three I was looking for. I try faking
that I am trying to turn him, but I move so slowly they put us back
on our feet.
Thirty seconds from disaster or glory. Tank on empty. I take the
biggest gamble of the day and bait him to go for my leg one more
time, I get to my belly and grab the mat for dear life. He almost
turns me ... but he can't. We go back on our feet and the clock runs
out.
5-1. 2-1. I win. Gold medal. Game, match, career.
Stopped to kiss the mat on my way
out.
Done.
Photo by Patsy Lynch for Gay Games VII
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