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Nets fire coach Steve Nash after poor start, more controversy

NEW YORK — Steve Nash is out as Brooklyn Nets coach after a disappointing start and more controversy surrounding Kyrie Irving.

The Nets announced Tuesday that they had parted ways with the Hall of Fame point guard, a day after they beat Indiana to improve to 2-5.

Nash made it to this season after Kevin Durant said he wanted him out this summer, but not much longer. The Nets have been another mess, with bad play on the court and bad headlines off it.

The biggest — again — was created by Irving, who posted a link to an antisemitic work on his Twitter page last week, drawing criticism from Nets owner Joe Tsai.

“Since becoming head coach, Steve was faced with a number of unprecedented challenges, and we are sincerely grateful for his leadership, patience and humility throughout his tenure,” general manager Sean Marks said in a statement.

“Personally, this was an immensely difficult decision; however, after much deliberation and evaluation of how the season has begun, we agreed that a change is necessary at this time.”

The Nets may move quickly to replace Nash. A person with knowledge of the matter said the Nets were in discussions with suspended Boston coach Ime Udoka — a former Brooklyn assistant who is not with the Celtics this season because he was found to have violated team rules by having a relationship with a female staffer within the organization. The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because those talks were not revealed publicly.

ESPN first reported the talks between Udoka and the Nets. The Nets said a decision on the team’s next coach would be made in the near future.

Nash led the Nets to a 92-62 record and the playoffs in both full seasons, his first as an NBA coach. But they lost Irving and James Harden to injuries during their second-round loss to Milwaukee in 2021, then were a first-round flop last season after trading Harden during the middle of the season.

Much of the Nets’ problems during the latter season were caused by Irving being unavailable for most of their home games because he refused to get vaccinated for the coronavirus, as mandated at the time in New York City.

Nash handled it all as best as possible, but apparently not good enough for his best player. Durant said he wanted to be traded this summer if the Nets didn’t fire Marks and Nash, but Tsai stood by them and Durant eventually pulled back his request.

Nash downplayed that before this season began, saying he didn’t believe the reports were entirely true and that they had quickly talked through their issues.

But things started poorly this season and Nash gave some his hardest criticism of the team during his tenure after their loss to Indiana on Saturday night, calling their defensive effort a “disaster” and saying he didn’t see desire or will.

“We have to look deep, deep inside ourselves and what we want to do, what we want to accomplish,” Nash said. “Do we want to give up on this because it’s been difficult early, or do we want to stay the course and start to build something?”

Much of that was ignored because the focus was on Irving’s combative news conference defending his tweet, and the Nets beat the Pacers in the rematch Monday to end a four-game skid.

But Nash’s tenure ended anyway a day later, hours before Brooklyn is set to host the Bulls (6:30 p.m., TNT). Jacque Vaughn will serve as acting head coach against Chicago.

Tsai alluded to the constant turbulence around the team in his statement thanking Nash.

“My admiration and respect for him grew over time as he brought hard work and positive attitude to our organization every day, even in periods of exceptional storm surrounding the team,” Tsai said.

Nash thanked the Tsai family and Marks for giving him the opportunity, calling the job “an amazing experience with many challenges that I’m incredibly grateful for.”

Marks chose his former teammate as coach in 2020 despite no experience in the job, citing Nash’s ability to be a connector of personalities as a player. Nash was a two-time MVP with the Phoenix Suns who ended his 18-year career third on the NBA’s list with 10,335 assists.

But his schemes were criticized as the Nets struggled defensively throughout his tenure and often didn’t show the ball-moving style of play on offense that his Suns teams did, instead relying on Durant, Irving or Harden to isolate.

Beyond the player changes, Nash also had to adapt to changes on his bench. Mike D’Antoni, the two-time NBA Coach of the Year, stepped down as his assistant after one season, and Udoka left to become coach of the Celtics.

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GM Ryan Poles: Bears ‘couldn’t find common ground’ with Roquan Smith

Bears general manager Ryan Poles said part of him was “bummed” about the outcome, but said trading linebacker Roquan Smith was a result of the two sides being close to agreement on a contract extension before the season began.

“We came up short and couldn’t find common ground,” he said Tuesday afternoon.

The Bears and Smith, he said, had a “difference in value.” Poles admitted that Smith not having an agent made negotiations more difficult for the Bears.

He eventually decided that he’d rather have the draft capital from the Ravens instead. Monday, Poles agreed to trade Smith to the Ravens for their 2023 second-round pick, 2023 fifth-round pick and veteran linebacker A.J. Klein. The Bears are paying all but $575,000 of Smith’s remaining contract, which expires at the end of the season.

Smith wanted around $100 million over five years, the contract given the Colts’ Shaquille Leonard. He “held in” during training camp and issued a public trade demand, accusing Poles of failing to negotiate in good faith.

He said it was “highly unlikely” the Bears wouldn’t have been able to agree to a new deal with Smith. The two sides did not negotiate during the season, he said, but instead gave their last and final offers in August.

The Bears could have kept Smith on the franchise tag for the next two years and paid him about $38 million total. Poles decided against it, though.

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GM Ryan Poles: Bears ‘couldn’t find common ground’ with Roquan Smith

Bears general manager Ryan Poles said part of him was “bummed” about the outcome, but said trading linebacker Roquan Smith was a result of the two sides being close to agreement on a contract extension before the season began.

“We came up short and couldn’t find common ground,” he said Tuesday afternoon.

The Bears and Smith, he said, had a “difference in value.” Poles admitted that Smith not having an agent made negotiations more difficult for the Bears.

He eventually decided that he’d rather have the draft capital from the Ravens instead. Monday, Poles agreed to trade Smith to the Ravens for their 2023 second-round pick, 2023 fifth-round pick and veteran linebacker A.J. Klein. The Bears are paying all but $575,000 of Smith’s remaining contract, which expires at the end of the season.

Smith wanted around $100 million over five years, the contract given the Colts’ Shaquille Leonard. He “held in” during training camp and issued a public trade demand, accusing Poles of failing to negotiate in good faith.

He said it was “highly unlikely” the Bears wouldn’t have been able to agree to a new deal with Smith. The two sides did not negotiate during the season, he said, but instead gave their last and final offers in August.

The Bears could have kept Smith on the franchise tag for the next two years and paid him about $38 million total. Poles decided against it, though.

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Bears trade for Steelers WR Chase Claypool, give up 2nd-round pick

The Bears are finally bringing in some proven wide receiver help for quarterback Justin Fields.

They acquired Steelers standout Chase Claypool for a second-round pick hours before the 3 p.m. trade deadline Tuesday. The Bears are trading their second-rounder, not the one they acquired from the Ravens on the same day for Roquan Smith.

“I thought it was important to add another impact player for our offense to go along with the guys that we currently have in the receivers room right now,” general manager Ryan Poles said Tuesday afternoon. “I like the way Justin is trending, and I think adding another big body who’s physical, explosive, great leaping ability, can stretch the field –but also is violent with the ball in his hand as well as a blocker, I think that enhances everyone around him.”

Claypool fell out of favor with the Steelers after they drafted him in the second round out of Notre Dame in 2020, but should provide an instant boost to the Bears. He has 32 catches for 311 yards and a touchdown this season. Darnell Mooney is the Bears’ leading receiver at 364 yards, but no one else has more than 165.

Claypool, 24, was a force in his first two seasons: In 31 games, he caught 121 passes for 1,733 yards and 11 touchdowns, plus he ran 24 times for 112 yards and two touchdowns.

Poles said last offseason that he wanted to give Fields help at receiver, then did so on the cheap, signing Byron Pringle, Equanimeous St. Brown and Dante Pettis to one-year deals and trading a future seventh-round pick to the Patriots for N’Keal Harry in July. Claypool represents by far his biggest investment at the position, and at just the right time — the Bears believe that their pass game is beginning to make steady improvements to go with the league’s best rushing attack.

“As a quarterback– and you all know where I come from, you can never have enough weapons and guys that help your quarterback gain confidence,” Poles said, referencing the Chiefs, “I know a lot of the guys are starting to make plays for us. Adding another receiver is going to allow him to continue to grow and gain that confidence.”

Claypool has 1 1/2 years left on his contract. Given the trade capital the Bears gave up, they could look to extend his deal this offseason. That might make more sense for the Bears than trying to sign free agents from an underwhelming class in March.

Poles admitted the weak class played a part in him giving up a prime draft pick for Claypool.

“That’s part of my job– and part of my crew upstairs– is, you have to do a little bit of forecasting and looking down the road,” he said. “I just didn’t feel completely comfortable with that. Not to say that there’s not good players there. I just didn’t feel comfortable with not maybe being a little bit more aggressive at this point.”

With Mitch Trubisky and Kenny Pickett throwing him the ball this year, Claypool has been the league’s No. 82 receiver, per Pro Football Focus. His and speed will be unique in the Bears’ locker room.

At 6-4, 238 pounds, Claypool has reached the seventh-fastest speed in a game this season, running 21.46 miles per hour on a 12-yard carry in Week 1. That’s faster than any Bears player, though Fields is ranked 10th.

Since 2020, Claypool has ranks fifth in the league in both routes run and targets on go routes. He’s caught 20 balls on go balls, which ranks eighth, and ranks in the top 20 in receiving yards and touchdowns on such plays.

The Bears have been the biggest player at the trade deadline this year, dealing defensive end Robert Quinn to the Eagles and Smith to the Ravens.

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Bears trade for Steelers WR Chase Claypool, give up 2nd-round pick

The Bears are finally bringing in some proven wide receiver help for quarterback Justin Fields.

They acquired Steelers standout Chase Claypool for a second-round pick hours before the 3 p.m. trade deadline Tuesday. The Bears are trading their second-rounder, not the one they acquired from the Ravens on the same day for Roquan Smith.

“I thought it was important to add another impact player for our offense to go along with the guys that we currently have in the receivers room right now,” general manager Ryan Poles said Tuesday afternoon. “I like the way Justin is trending, and I think adding another big body who’s physical, explosive, great leaping ability, can stretch the field –but also is violent with the ball in his hand as well as a blocker, I think that enhances everyone around him.”

Claypool fell out of favor with the Steelers after they drafted him in the second round out of Notre Dame in 2020, but should provide an instant boost to the Bears. He has 32 catches for 311 yards and a touchdown this season. Darnell Mooney is the Bears’ leading receiver at 364 yards, but no one else has more than 165.

Claypool, 24, was a force in his first two seasons: In 31 games, he caught 121 passes for 1,733 yards and 11 touchdowns, plus he ran 24 times for 112 yards and two touchdowns.

Poles said last offseason that he wanted to give Fields help at receiver, then did so on the cheap, signing Byron Pringle, Equanimeous St. Brown and Dante Pettis to one-year deals and trading a future seventh-round pick to the Patriots for N’Keal Harry in July. Claypool represents by far his biggest investment at the position, and at just the right time — the Bears believe that their pass game is beginning to make steady improvements to go with the league’s best rushing attack.

“As a quarterback– and you all know where I come from, you can never have enough weapons and guys that help your quarterback gain confidence,” Poles said, referencing the Chiefs, “I know a lot of the guys are starting to make plays for us. Adding another receiver is going to allow him to continue to grow and gain that confidence.”

Claypool has 1 1/2 years left on his contract. Given the trade capital the Bears gave up, they could look to extend his deal this offseason. That might make more sense for the Bears than trying to sign free agents from an underwhelming class in March.

Poles admitted the weak class played a part in him giving up a prime draft pick for Claypool.

“That’s part of my job– and part of my crew upstairs– is, you have to do a little bit of forecasting and looking down the road,” he said. “I just didn’t feel completely comfortable with that. Not to say that there’s not good players there. I just didn’t feel comfortable with not maybe being a little bit more aggressive at this point.”

With Mitch Trubisky and Kenny Pickett throwing him the ball this year, Claypool has been the league’s No. 82 receiver, per Pro Football Focus. His and speed will be unique in the Bears’ locker room.

At 6-4, 238 pounds, Claypool has reached the seventh-fastest speed in a game this season, running 21.46 miles per hour on a 12-yard carry in Week 1. That’s faster than any Bears player, though Fields is ranked 10th.

Since 2020, Claypool has ranks fifth in the league in both routes run and targets on go routes. He’s caught 20 balls on go balls, which ranks eighth, and ranks in the top 20 in receiving yards and touchdowns on such plays.

The Bears have been the biggest player at the trade deadline this year, dealing defensive end Robert Quinn to the Eagles and Smith to the Ravens.

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Chicago Bulls at Brooklyn Nets: 1 Best Bet

The Chicago Bulls travel to Brooklyn as betting underdogs to face the Nets following the departure of Head Coach Steve Nash.

Our 3-4 Chicago Bulls head to the east coast for the first night of a back-to-back against the 2-5 Brooklyn Nets. Looking to bounce back from two consecutive losses, the Bulls will have to wade through a bizarre situation when they play the Nets tonight.

Today’s news aside, Brooklyn has already become a lightning rod for the media, and I won’t dive into the current narratives and backlash surrounding Kyrie Irving, but given the 2-5 record, it is tough to deny that the ongoing situation is not a distraction.

Factor in today’s news of Steve Nash’s departure, along with news of Ime Udoka potentially moving from his suspension in Boston to this head coaching vacancy, and you have a massively uncertain situation.

I do have some faith in the Bulls tonight on the spread or moneyline, but you just don’t know how this Nets team will respond to the coaching change. While everything going on here is incredibly distracting, certain teams respond better to coaching changes than others. Nonetheless, I’ve got a best bet today that is looking to get us back in the win column and get us to a nice 6-2 start to the season! Best of luck and GO BULLS!!

2022 Bulls Best Bet Record: 5-2

Zach LaVine Over 23.5 Points (Sportsbook odds may vary)

The Chicago Bulls enter Tuesday’s game with a handful of injury designations to note, including the pick of the day, Zach LaVine. In his case, reports indicate that he is probable to play tonight and may sit tomorrow, as the team continues to tread lightly in his progression from his knee injury. It appears they will continue to split his time when back-to-backs arrive on the schedule.

Beyond LaVine, the Bulls list Andre Drummond out, with Coby White and Ayo Dosunmu listed as questionable. Ben Simmons and Seth Curry have been ruled out for Brooklyn. According to reports, Ayo Dosunmu returned to practice Monday, giving some optimism that he may suit up.

Regardless of the injury designations, and the circus that is surrounding Brooklyn, this Chicago Bulls squad should see plenty of scoring opportunities against a bad Nets defensive unit. Entering tonight’s game, Brooklyn ranks 25th in effective shooting percentage and 29th in defensive efficiency. An absent Ben Simmons also removes an element of their defensive size and length that might have otherwise caused issues for the Bulls.

Brooklyn’s defense has been especially susceptible to opposing star players, and in most cases their opposing team’s top two scorers. Through seven games, the leading individual scorer in each game for Brooklyn’s opposition has an average of 35.6 points per game scored, with four of their seven games having seen an opposing player score at least 37 points. Brandon Ingram’s 28 points on opening night is the only case of a Brooklyn opposing player posting an individual team high below 30 points.

Demar Derozan currently stands as the Chicago Bulls leading scorer at 25.9 points per game, but that number dips to 19.75 over four games with LaVine in the lineup. If the trend continues with LaVine seeing equal opportunities, or even a higher volume of opportunities than Demar within games in which they both play, you can expect this to be a huge night for LaVine, and potentially his first 30 point night of the season.

This isn’t to suggest that Derozan can’t also have a great night, as I mentioned Brooklyn has given up a ton of points to not only one big point scorer in every game, but has seen a few games with two monster performances.

Last Monday, in Brooklyn’s 134-124 loss to Memphis both Ja Morant and Desmond Bane tallied 38 points each. LaVine and Derozan obviously have their differences to those two, but you could absolutely convince me that the Bulls duo could both be in for a huge night.

The biggest difference to that duo, and why I like LaVine to have a better night than Derozan, is the three point defense of Brooklyn. The Nets rank 27th in three point percentage, and with Derozan’s lack of volume, you would feel better that Zach might be a better candidate to pour in some threes to pace this Chicago offense.

Give me a 30-point outing from LaVine and a Bulls win to boot! Let’s see some red and GO BULLS!!

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BREAKING: Chicago Bears cut leading preseason wide receiver

The Chicago Bears cut a wide receiver Tuesday

The Chicago Bears wide receiver room has been busy Tuesday. Hours before the trade deadline, reports came out the Bears traded with the Pittsburgh Steelers for wide receiver Chase Claypool. The move made the Bears a little heavy at the position on their roster. So they had to make a cut.

According to a statement by the Bears, the team waived wide receiver, Isaiah Coulter.

#Bears roster move:
We have waived WR Isaiah Coulter.

Coulter was elevated from the Bears’ practice squad before their Week 7 game against the New England Patriots. He received the promotion after Ihmir Smith-Marsette was released. Coulter didn’t see any offensive snaps for the Bears against the Patriots or Dallas Cowboys.

Coulter was productive in the Bears’ 2022 preseason. He was the Bears leading wide receiver with eight receptions for 112 yards. That success did not translate to the regular season. Coulter was drafted by the Houston Texans in the fifth round of the 2020 draft.

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Follow us on Twitter at @chicitysports23 for more great content. We appreciate you taking time to read our articles. To interact more with our community and keep up to date on the latest in Chicago sports news, JOIN OUR FREE FACEBOOK GROUP by CLICKING HERE

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White Sox, Rick Hahn find their new skipper in Pedro Grifol. Excitement? It’ll have to wait

There are splashy hires, and then there are those that happen without causing a discernible ripple. It doesn’t make them bad. It doesn’t make them good. It definitely doesn’t stop some in the peanut gallery from rendering instant, if clueless, verdicts.

“Good hire,” some White Sox enthusiasts already are saying about new manager Pedro Grifol.

Sure. Maybe?

“Who?” is another, undoubtedly more honest reaction others are having.

Grifol’s is a name few of us really know because, up until now, there has been no reason for us to know it. For the last three seasons, he was bench coach for the losing Royals, who finished in fourth place twice and, in 2022, at the bottom of the Sox’ subpar division. Before that, he served the Royals in various capacities — catching is his specialty — and was on the staff of a World Series-winning squad in 2015.

Grifol, 52, never played in the major leagues, not that it’s a terrible thing. Rob Thomson, managing the Phillies in the World Series right now, never did, either, nor did Brian Snitker, Joe Maddon, Earl Weaver and many others. Salvador Perez, the Royals’ terrific catcher, has spoken highly of Grifol’s defensive tutelage, hopefully a more relevant detail considering the Sox still have Yasmani Grandal making All-Star money while foundering behind the plate.

However it shakes out, this one will be worn — flatteringly or not — by Sox general manager Rick Hahn, who knows a thing or two about losing himself. Seven of the last 10 Sox teams have been losers. The arrow was up in 2020 and 2021 before a deeply unsatisfying .500 campaign in 2022 that felt like the worst one of them all.

If we’re giving Hahn a pass for Tony La Russa — Jerry Reinsdorf’s pal — then it’s only fair to view Grifol as the litmus test for Hahn, the driver of this move. Hahn went outside the Sox family for Grifol, on its own a welcome, necessary move to many. But Bruce Bochy, a three-time World Series winner with the Giants, would’ve been a heck of a splash; instead, the Rangers got him. Ozzie Guillen, of course, would’ve had the baseball world buzzing like crazy. Astros coach Joe Espada, Braves coach Ron Washington or even longtime Guardians coach Sandy Alomar Jr. would’ve played bigger from the jump, if it means anything.

At the end of a demoralizing season, Hahn said he’d be seeking a manager with “recent experience in the dugout with an organization that has contended for championships.” The last five Royals teams were 282-426 (.398), for those of you scoring at home.

Hahn also wanted, “ideally, someone who is an excellent communicator, who understands the way the game has grown and evolved in the last decade or so, but at the same time respects old-school sensibilities.” Perhaps this is Grifol’s wheelhouse, though good luck finding any new manager who isn’t initially described in these very same, somewhat vague terms.

After many years with Grifol in the fold, the Royals hired a different bench coach, the Rays’ Matt Quatraro, as manager. It’s not damning to Grifol, but it’s an interesting note to be remembered.

With team leader Jose Abreu potentially gone, it could be especially important for Grifol to have a special knack for connecting with players. Will Luis Robert, Yoan Moncada, Eloy Jimenez and other members of the core — still expected to contend for postseason berths — thrive on his watch? Will the Sox play harder, smarter and more alertly for Grifol than they often seemed to for La Russa? Will the construction of the roster begin to make sense again? What will Hahn get done in the trade market this offseason? The last question might have more to do with Grifol’s success or failure than whatever he brings as puller of the strings.

Once upon a time, the Cubs replaced rock-star Maddon with David Ross, who was actually green and not a “grandpa.” The Blackhawks replaced coaching giant Joel Quenneville with no-name Jeremy Colliton. The Bulls replaced irreplaceable Phil Jackson with Tim Floyd, a college coach. The Bears replaced franchise icon Mike Ditka with Dave Wannstedt, who’d never led his own team.

What does that history have to do with Grifol, who, at last check, lacked La Russa’s Hall of Fame credentials? Nothing, really. Splashes don’t endure. We’ll see if Grifol does.

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‘Existing without question’

“I was just bawling because I didn’t have the right parts to play,” Kaiser said.

Kaiser is trans, but she wasn’t out when she saw her first derby game. However, she still wanted to get involved and joined her local men’s derby team, where she skated from 2011-2014. 

Kaiser said she was a good skater, but despite earning the respect of her male coaches and teammates, she felt like she was missing something.

She offered to help her local women’s team prepare for the playoffs and soon started practicing with them.

“Everybody else there was very green and hadn’t played before,” Kaiser said. “So I was getting some really nice compliments from the trainers.”

Once the draft for the next season rolled around, however, Kaiser’s name was the only one missing from the roster. 

She later found out that she was excluded for “being too tall,” but at that moment she felt like she needed to train harder—to “become unquestionable,” she said. “I felt like I was unintentionally gaslit by everyone.”

This was the beginning of Kaiser’s entry into the derby world, but she had a long road ahead of her.

A slow evolution

Roller derby has not always been seen as an inclusive space. 

Kaiser said 2014 was “a different time” in the derby world. According to her, skaters were still required to have hormone levels “within acceptable female ranges.” Kaiser said that hormone regulations in women’s derby were a deciding factor when she began hormone replacement therapy. 

The Women’s Flat Track Derby Association changed its policy in 2015 to read: “An individual who identifies as a trans woman, intersex woman, and/or gender expansive may skate with a WFTDA charter team if women’s flat track roller derby is the version and composition of roller derby with which they most closely identify.”

Alice Amell, a trans woman who skates for WFTDA member the Windy City Rollers as Tricky Pixie, bought her first skates the day she learned roller derby existed in 2016. 

“I came out as a woman a year earlier. I wasn’t sure what teams would accept me. I hadn’t even heard of roller derby,” Amell said. “And then just out of nowhere, I was watching some documentary and one of the people mentioned that she plays roller derby and that in roller derby they don’t care if you’re gay or trans or whatever—they just accept you.”

Bat Hit Crazy and Bunny Sanders.Courtesy Alex Anteau

Meeting the moment

For many participants, the intentionally accepting climate in roller derby is an important refuge.

“School’s hard enough, but having a place [trans kids] can go to where they’re accepted without question is incredibly validating,” said Molly Rix, derby name Estra Gen, a trans woman skater with Chicago-Style Roller Derby (formerly known as Chicago Outfit, also a WFTDA member).

Rix was seeking LGBTQ+ community when she joined the team in March. Since then, she said she’s developed an active social life and has even formed a band with some of her teammates. On bad days, derby helps her cope.

Rix’s experience is a reflection of how inclusive sports can go a long way to help trans players’ mental health at a time when gender inclusivity in sports is facing renewed political backlash.

In 2022 alone, 18 states introduced bills banning transgender youth from participating in sports that align with their gender identity, according to the Freedom for All Americans legislation tracker. 

Research from the Trevor Project showed that in 2021, trans youth experienced significantly higher rates of depression and anxiety than their cisgender counterparts. Though, according to the organization, “LGBTQ youth who live in a community that is accepting of LGBTQ people reported significantly lower rates of attempting suicide than those who do not.”

According to the John W. Brick Foundation’s Move Your Mental Health Report, 89 percent of studies examining the relationship between mental health and exercise showed that physical activity improves mental health outcomes.

“I’ll be in a bad mood or something like that, or I’ll have something on my mind,” Rix said. “And then after two hours at derby practice, I’m sweaty and I’m not even thinking about it anymore—it’s great for stress relief and movement really helps. . . . Having those spaces to just exist without question is invaluable.”

Transformation on the track

“I will say [trans inclusion] has gotten a lot better in recent years,” Kaiser said. 

Where Amell and Rix found an outlet to express their femininity, a nonbinary Chicago-Style Roller Derby team member who skates under the name Bunny Sanders (and preferred to be identified by derby name only) is also able to express their androgyny. 

“Changing my derby name and playing with my gender . . . finding out putting on different outfits and hats gives me gender euphoria, and accepting that and not judging myself for it . . . here is the first place that I could try all that kind of stuff out,” Sanders said. 

“Roller derby in and of itself is an accepting and inclusive environment,” Sanders added, describing how the sport has evolved around gender inclusivity even in the last few years. 

The team has been working to update their own bylaws to be gender inclusive, though Sanders says there is still room for improvement.

Skaters from the Chicago-Style Roller Derby team gather during practice. Courtesy Alex Anteau

Current challenges 

According to Grey Noone, a nonbinary skater and one of Kaiser’s former teammates, in their experience, roller derby has been a predominantly white sport with limited racial, economic, and cultural diversity.

“Trans rights are an issue we need to hop on, but if people can’t afford to have a sports life, if they don’t have the time and resources, then their [economic class] is keeping them from roller derby even more than their trans status,” Noone said.

While Kaiser stayed involved with the administration of the Chicago derby leagues and helped shape WFTDA’s gender inclusion policy, she said that challenges and trauma that resulted from lack of acceptance sparked her return to playing on a coed Men’s Roller Derby Association team.

“[At first I thought] I need to play women’s to validate my gender, and through the process of getting discriminated against for my gender, I kind of validated my own gender,” Kaiser said. “I became a lot more confident in where I belong. . . . I got to the point where I don’t want to play women’s derby. I want to play derby.”

However, according to Amell, Kaiser’s work paved the road for future trans skaters in the women’s division.

“By the time I joined, there was no question of whether I was going to be allowed to play,” Amell said.

“You can look however you want when you show up to practice, and no one’s gonna judge you for that,” Rix said. “You know [it’s] going to be a safer space for you to be yourself. I’m wearing a skort right now and I would never wear that anywhere else.”

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‘Existing without question’Alex Anteauon November 1, 2022 at 6:46 pm

“I was just bawling because I didn’t have the right parts to play,” Kaiser said.

Kaiser is trans, but she wasn’t out when she saw her first derby game. However, she still wanted to get involved and joined her local men’s derby team, where she skated from 2011-2014. 

Kaiser said she was a good skater, but despite earning the respect of her male coaches and teammates, she felt like she was missing something.

She offered to help her local women’s team prepare for the playoffs and soon started practicing with them.

“Everybody else there was very green and hadn’t played before,” Kaiser said. “So I was getting some really nice compliments from the trainers.”

Once the draft for the next season rolled around, however, Kaiser’s name was the only one missing from the roster. 

She later found out that she was excluded for “being too tall,” but at that moment she felt like she needed to train harder—to “become unquestionable,” she said. “I felt like I was unintentionally gaslit by everyone.”

This was the beginning of Kaiser’s entry into the derby world, but she had a long road ahead of her.

A slow evolution

Roller derby has not always been seen as an inclusive space. 

Kaiser said 2014 was “a different time” in the derby world. According to her, skaters were still required to have hormone levels “within acceptable female ranges.” Kaiser said that hormone regulations in women’s derby were a deciding factor when she began hormone replacement therapy. 

The Women’s Flat Track Derby Association changed its policy in 2015 to read: “An individual who identifies as a trans woman, intersex woman, and/or gender expansive may skate with a WFTDA charter team if women’s flat track roller derby is the version and composition of roller derby with which they most closely identify.”

Alice Amell, a trans woman who skates for WFTDA member the Windy City Rollers as Tricky Pixie, bought her first skates the day she learned roller derby existed in 2016. 

“I came out as a woman a year earlier. I wasn’t sure what teams would accept me. I hadn’t even heard of roller derby,” Amell said. “And then just out of nowhere, I was watching some documentary and one of the people mentioned that she plays roller derby and that in roller derby they don’t care if you’re gay or trans or whatever—they just accept you.”

Bat Hit Crazy and Bunny Sanders.Courtesy Alex Anteau

Meeting the moment

For many participants, the intentionally accepting climate in roller derby is an important refuge.

“School’s hard enough, but having a place [trans kids] can go to where they’re accepted without question is incredibly validating,” said Molly Rix, derby name Estra Gen, a trans woman skater with Chicago-Style Roller Derby (formerly known as Chicago Outfit, also a WFTDA member).

Rix was seeking LGBTQ+ community when she joined the team in March. Since then, she said she’s developed an active social life and has even formed a band with some of her teammates. On bad days, derby helps her cope.

Rix’s experience is a reflection of how inclusive sports can go a long way to help trans players’ mental health at a time when gender inclusivity in sports is facing renewed political backlash.

In 2022 alone, 18 states introduced bills banning transgender youth from participating in sports that align with their gender identity, according to the Freedom for All Americans legislation tracker. 

Research from the Trevor Project showed that in 2021, trans youth experienced significantly higher rates of depression and anxiety than their cisgender counterparts. Though, according to the organization, “LGBTQ youth who live in a community that is accepting of LGBTQ people reported significantly lower rates of attempting suicide than those who do not.”

According to the John W. Brick Foundation’s Move Your Mental Health Report, 89 percent of studies examining the relationship between mental health and exercise showed that physical activity improves mental health outcomes.

“I’ll be in a bad mood or something like that, or I’ll have something on my mind,” Rix said. “And then after two hours at derby practice, I’m sweaty and I’m not even thinking about it anymore—it’s great for stress relief and movement really helps. . . . Having those spaces to just exist without question is invaluable.”

Transformation on the track

“I will say [trans inclusion] has gotten a lot better in recent years,” Kaiser said. 

Where Amell and Rix found an outlet to express their femininity, a nonbinary Chicago-Style Roller Derby team member who skates under the name Bunny Sanders (and preferred to be identified by derby name only) is also able to express their androgyny. 

“Changing my derby name and playing with my gender . . . finding out putting on different outfits and hats gives me gender euphoria, and accepting that and not judging myself for it . . . here is the first place that I could try all that kind of stuff out,” Sanders said. 

“Roller derby in and of itself is an accepting and inclusive environment,” Sanders added, describing how the sport has evolved around gender inclusivity even in the last few years. 

The team has been working to update their own bylaws to be gender inclusive, though Sanders says there is still room for improvement.

Skaters from the Chicago-Style Roller Derby team gather during practice. Courtesy Alex Anteau

Current challenges 

According to Grey Noone, a nonbinary skater and one of Kaiser’s former teammates, in their experience, roller derby has been a predominantly white sport with limited racial, economic, and cultural diversity.

“Trans rights are an issue we need to hop on, but if people can’t afford to have a sports life, if they don’t have the time and resources, then their [economic class] is keeping them from roller derby even more than their trans status,” Noone said.

While Kaiser stayed involved with the administration of the Chicago derby leagues and helped shape WFTDA’s gender inclusion policy, she said that challenges and trauma that resulted from lack of acceptance sparked her return to playing on a coed Men’s Roller Derby Association team.

“[At first I thought] I need to play women’s to validate my gender, and through the process of getting discriminated against for my gender, I kind of validated my own gender,” Kaiser said. “I became a lot more confident in where I belong. . . . I got to the point where I don’t want to play women’s derby. I want to play derby.”

However, according to Amell, Kaiser’s work paved the road for future trans skaters in the women’s division.

“By the time I joined, there was no question of whether I was going to be allowed to play,” Amell said.

“You can look however you want when you show up to practice, and no one’s gonna judge you for that,” Rix said. “You know [it’s] going to be a safer space for you to be yourself. I’m wearing a skort right now and I would never wear that anywhere else.”

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‘Existing without question’Alex Anteauon November 1, 2022 at 6:46 pm Read More »