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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Thursday, December 13, 2007

Belle on wheels

How do you keep fit? Visit our discussion board to share health tips, diet secrets and physical activities that help you stay in shape.

By Zenaida Serrano
Advertiser Staff Writer

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Coach and captain Natalie Hancock, center, hangs out with her Honolulu Derby Girls at Marine Corps Base Hawai'i's roller-hockey rink. Hancock is 31 years old.

JOAQUIN SIOPACK | The Honolulu Advertiser

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JOIN, LEARN MORE

Interested in joining the Honolulu Derby Girls? The team is for women only, but men are welcome to help out as referees, announcers and in other roles.

For details, reach team captain Natalie Hancock at 224-6006 or write to

honoluluderbygirls@yahoo.com.

To learn more about roller derby, visit the Women's Flat Track Derby Association Web site at www.wftda.com.

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Natalie Hancock

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MEET NATALIE

Name: Natalie Hancock

Age: 31

Profession: Army wife of Richard, 34, and mother of sons Kaleb, 10, and Elijah, 5. Hancock is also the captain and coach of Honolulu Derby Girls, a roller derby league.

Home: Wheeler Army Airfield

Height: 5-feet-4

Weight: 130 pounds

Stays in shape by: Roller skating and doing cardio and floor exercises

Workout habits: Skating at least 3 to 4 miles twice a week and coaching roller derby twice a week. In between, Hancock uses her home treadmill and also does a lot of cardio, stretches and sit-ups.

When and why she started working out: Athletic since she was a child, Hancock said it's important for her to continue to take the best care of her health for her two sons. "I want to be sure and be a role model so they know how important exercise is."

Her good foods/bad foods: Hancock loves fresh, raw vegetables, especially asparagus and broccoli. She eats a lot of big salads, brown rice and fish. Her bad foods? "Anything salty and crunchy: sea salt and vinegar chips, Cool Ranch Doritos, and salsa and chips."

Her biggest motivator: "There are so many days I don't feel like working out or skating. I think of how I need to be healthy so I can be energetic and healthy for my boys. My ladies on the roller derby team, they depend on me to motivate them. That alone gives me all the motivation I need."

What saves her sanity: "This one is so easy — roller skating."

Her next challenge: "A huge one. This roller derby league is so new, my biggest goal is to make sure all these girls are ready and excited about our first competition (which Hancock hopes will be in the next few months at the Kane'ohe Marine Corps base hockey rink). We have so much work to do — I know if I put my all into it, so will my ladies."

Advice for those in the same boat: "Roller derby is an intense sport. It requires a lot of time and dedication. But no matter what, you always need to have fun and remember you are skating because you love it. If at any time it isn't fun anymore, take a step back and check the situation. Roller derby is all about ladies getting together, staying in shape and having an amazing time doing it."

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When Natalie Hancock wants to wind down or work out, she reaches for one thing.

Her quad roller skates. Yes, the old-school, four-wheeled kind.

She spends "any and all free time on my skates," said the Wheeler Army Airfield resident, 31.

Hancock is in the process of recruiting women to join a new roller derby league, the Honolulu Derby Girls, of which she is team captain and coach.

"I love the game and learning everything there is to know about it to make my team the best they can be," she said.

The Honolulu league follows the official rules of the Women's Flat Track Derby Association. In a nutshell, the sport involves a 60-minute bout between two teams of five players each — a jammer (the player who scores points), three blockers and a pivot (the defense).

Basically, scores are earned each time a jammer passes an opposing blocker or pivot. To impede a jammer, the defense can block using certain body parts. The women play on a cemented flat track, so full protective gear is required. And quad roller skates are a must — no inline skates are allowed.

Hancock started roller skating when she was 10 years old. At 12, she was on a speed-skating team and won many trophies at several competitions.

So it's no wonder she found the urge to start a roller derby league — the only one in the state, she said.

"Then within our league, we will break up and make separate teams," Hancock said.

Founded in mid-October, the league will probably hold its first competition in about eight weeks.

In Hancock's eyes, there's no better workout.

"Physically, it is a lot of work," she said.

Roller derby is a full-contact sport. When skaters are blocked, they cannot be hit above the shoulders, on the back of the torso or booty, and on or below the knee.

"But (anywhere) else, it's a free-for-all," she said.

"It is a lot of work on your legs because you're taking a lot of knee falls," Hancock added.

During practices — held twice a week at the Marine Corps Base Hawai'i hockey rink — players have to practice falling on their knees and coming back up, she said.

"You can't even practice with us unless you have your full (protective) gear," she said.

All players are required to wear knee pads, elbow pads, wrist guards, a mouth guard and helmet.

"You're falling down, you're getting hit, but you're so padded and protected that ... you get right back up and you just keep going," she said.

Being in good physical shape is important to participate in roller derby, Hancock said.

"But you know what? We have (players of) all shapes and all sizes," she said. ... "We have positions for everybody."

The league has more than a dozen dedicated members, and Hancock encourages anyone interested to join.

"We're actually just a small family," Hancock said. Roller derby is for "the kind of girl who just really is looking for some close friendships, meeting some awesome girls and having a good time."

Reach Zenaida Serrano at zserrano@honoluluadvertiser.com.

Make a difference. Donate to The Advertiser Christmas Fund.


Correction: Coach and captain Natalie Hancock is not a Honolulu Derby Girls league founder. The team expects to participate in an event in the next few months, rather than in eight weeks. A photo caption in a previous version of this story was inaccurate.