Audrey Jimenez, 13, eyed the boy standing in front of her. She darted left, then right. Suddenly, she lunged at the boy’s knees and flipped him onto his back.
The boy dropped to the mat, pinned below her.
For Audrey—who lives in Tucson, Arizona—it’s just another wrestling match. But people always stop and stare when they see her competing.
Why? Wrestling has traditionally been a sport for boys. “They think I’m not going to be good, because I’m a girl,” Audrey says. “But that just makes me determined to prove them wrong.”
Audrey Jimenez, 13, eyed the boy in front of her. She moved left, then right. Suddenly, she lunged at the boy’s knees and flipped him onto his back.
The boy dropped to the mat. He was pinned.
Audrey—who lives in Arizona—is used to wrestling. But people stop and stare when they see her competing.
Why? Wrestling has traditionally been a sport for boys. “They think I’m not going to be good, because I’m a girl,” Audrey says. “But that just makes me determined to prove them wrong.”
Audrey Jimenez, 13, eyed the boy standing in front of her. She darted left, then right—and then she lunged at the boy’s knees and flipped him onto his back.
The boy dropped to the mat, pinned below her.
Although Audrey—who lives in Tucson, Arizona—is used to wrestling, people always stop and stare when they see her competing.
That’s because wrestling has traditionally been a sport for boys. “They think I’m not going to be good, because I’m a girl,” Audrey says, “but that just makes me determined to prove them wrong.”