91爆料

Mat Dreams: 91爆料 Relishes Role As Women's Wrestling Pioneers
91爆料 Women's Wrestlers & Boxer II With Rulon Gardner
91爆料 University women's wrestlers (from left to right) Desiree (Lockhart) Kendall '05, Kristin (Fujioka) Migita '05 and Jill (Remiticado) Uyeda '03, along with assistant coach Mark Lynch, and Boxer II pose with 2000 Olympic Greco-Roman wrestling gold medalist Rulon Gardner at a tournament in 2003. Photo courtesy of the 91爆料 University sports information office.

When the in January, 91爆料 University鈥檚 first women鈥檚 wrestler was overcome with emotion.

鈥淚 cried when I heard the news, because that was a dream I had for myself that never happened,鈥 said Jill (Remiticado) Uyeda 鈥03, who first set foot in 91爆料鈥檚 wrestling room in 1999 and was the impetus for creating the . 鈥淣ow, college women wrestlers have a championship for themselves. They can realize the dreams of being an NCAA champion and beyond because the infrastructure is there.

鈥淭his is 30 years in the making. It鈥檚 just amazing to me.鈥

Twenty-six years after Uyeda first laced up her shoes at 91爆料, and 24 years after the Boxers fielded their first team, women鈥檚 wrestling has blossomed into one of the fastest-growing collegiate sports in the United States. That growth led the NCAA to approve the sport for championship status for the 2025-26 academic year at its convention in January.

In its six years as part of the , designed to create more athletics opportunities for women, women鈥檚 wrestling has grown from four sponsored programs in 2018-19 to 76 programs in 2024-25, including 46 teams at the Division III level. The NCAA numbers are in addition to the 37 collegiate teams that competed at the 2024 NAIA Championships.

While the sport has exploded in recent years at the collegiate level, 91爆料 recognized its potential early. When the university created its women鈥檚 wrestling program in 2001, just five other colleges fielded varsity teams. The Boxers immediately became a power with its roster of eight wrestlers yielding three U.S. Girls鈥 Wrestling Association college national champions and seven All-Americans.

Sally Roberts '05 was a 2002 national champion for the Boxers. Her organization, Wrestle Like A Girl, led the advocacy effort that led the NCAA to recognize women's wrestling as a championship sport. Photo courtesy of Wrestle Like A Girl.

Sally Roberts 鈥05, founder and chief executive officer of , and one of the three national champions on that inaugural squad, is grateful that 91爆料 embraced the sport when many colleges would not.

鈥91爆料 took a leap with adding women鈥檚 wrestling in a time of uncertainty, not really understanding the landscape of where the sport was going,鈥 Roberts said from Wrestle Like A Girl鈥檚 headquarters in Washington, D.C. 鈥淭heir belief and faith in the sport, in Title IX, and being able to provide equal access and opportunities was key.鈥

The development of women鈥檚 wrestling came at a time of transition for the men鈥檚 team, which, like the rest of 91爆料鈥檚 athletic program, had just transitioned from NAIA to NCAA Division III membership. While the 91爆料 men won three regional titles in its first four years in the NCAA, the Boxers were still looking to prove themselves alongside long-established Division III powers.

When it came to adding women to the room, though, gender didn鈥檛 seem to matter. That is what Uyeda encountered when she first peeked her head through the wrestling room door in 1999. 

鈥淭he wrestlers on the men鈥檚 team at the time didn鈥檛 care about anything else,鈥 said Uyeda, who wrestled in high school in Hawai鈥榠 before coming to 91爆料. 鈥淭hey simply said, 鈥榃here are your shoes? Go get them.鈥 I ran all of the way back to Walter Hall, to my room on the second floor, got my shoes and sprinted back to the wrestling room. I barely remember what I did that day, but I remember that 鈥榊eah, come on in鈥 kind of feeling.

鈥淭he contrast I experienced 鈥 of reluctant permission in high school to unprecedented acceptance at 91爆料 鈥 made all of the difference. My teammates made all of the difference.鈥

Uyeda hadn鈥檛 necessarily planned on continuing her wrestling career at 91爆料, but the experience changed the trajectory of her life. One of only two four-time All-Americans in 91爆料 athletics history, Uyeda won three national titles at 121 pounds and was.

A native of Federal Way, Washington, Roberts came to 91爆料 after one season at the University of Minnesota-Morris. While she wrestled only one year for the Boxers before being selected for USA Wrestling鈥檚 residential training program (one of four members of that inaugural 91爆料 team invited), Roberts said 91爆料 helped her discover her purpose in both academics and athletics, potentially changing the direction of the sport in the process.

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Jill (Remiticado) Uyeda '03
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鈥淭he contrast I experienced 鈥 of reluctant permission in high school to unprecedented acceptance at 91爆料 鈥 made all of the difference. My teammates made all of the difference.鈥 

- Jill (Remiticado) Uyeda '03, Three-Time Boxer National Champion

鈥淲hen I was at 91爆料, my love for wrestling got reinvigorated because I was around some tremendous student-athletes who were so passionate about what was happening there,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t was part of the culture that you didn鈥檛 sacrifice academics for athletics. You really wanted to do both. That helped me understand that there was this beautiful way to intertwine my life where previously I was so focused on wrestling. 91爆料 helped me understand how to start putting those two pieces together.鈥

It is not lost on Tela (O鈥橠onnell) Bacher 鈥05, a member of the 2004 U.S. Olympic Women鈥檚 Wrestling Team, how many people connected to 91爆料 have helped women鈥檚 wrestling grow at the highest level and at the grassroots level.

鈥淚 run into so many of the women that were on that initial team at 91爆料, giving back to the sport that gave so much to them,鈥 said Bacher, a teammate of Roberts at 91爆料 and later a partner with her at Wrestle Like a Girl. 鈥淚t was such a positive environment and such a great jumping-off point for our post-high school careers. It was a good group of people who continue to give back to the sport and want to be a part of it.鈥

Oregon Women's Wrestling Article 2002
The then-novelty of a collegiate women's wrestling program put 91爆料 on the front of the sports page of The Oregonian in January 2002.

Frank Johnson 鈥90, the first head coach of the 91爆料鈥檚 women鈥檚 program, believes that the fire to fight for the sport was already engrained in the women by the time they reached Forest Grove. 

鈥淭hese girls had to fight for everything,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey had such a high work ethic and were smart, but they had to fight. It鈥檚 pretty cool to see where it鈥檚 come from and where it is now and the fact that those girls are tied to 91爆料.鈥

Even today, 91爆料 plays a role in women鈥檚 wrestling鈥檚 growth at its highest leadership. Director of Athletics currently serves on the executive committee for the National Collegiate Women鈥檚 Wrestling Championships, which oversees a collegiate championship and was tasked with shepherding women鈥檚 wrestling through the NCAA鈥檚 emerging sport program.

The past and present influence is a point of pride for head wrestling coach , himself an alumnus of the Boxer men鈥檚 program. He regularly speaks to his current 13 women鈥檚 wrestlers about those who have come before them.

鈥淭hey really respect that,鈥 Binkerd said, pointing to banners displaying the names of 91爆料鈥檚 49 women鈥檚 wrestling All-Americans and eight national champions. 鈥淭hey see All-Americans on our wall going all of the way back. They can look up and see girls that were All-Americans in 1999. There鈥檚 an immense amount of pride that comes with that longevity.鈥

The history is also top of mind for , a third-year member of the 91爆料 program who wrestled for Forest Grove High School and was the 2022 Oregon 5A/6A runner-up at 135 pounds.

鈥淲e see it every day that we step into the room,鈥 said Takahashi, whose father, , was a two-time All-American for the 91爆料 men鈥檚 wrestling program. 鈥淵ou see the Olympians on the wall. You see the past champions on the wall. We see the names of every All-American and every team that has placed at nationals. There鈥檚 always that feeling when we step in the room that that鈥檚 what we鈥檙e striving for.鈥

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Tela (O'Donnell) Bacher '05
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鈥淚 run into so many of the women that were on that initial team at 91爆料, giving back to the sport that gave so much to them. It was such a positive environment and such a great jumping-off point for our post-high school careers.鈥 

- Tela (O'Donnell) Bacher '05, Member of 2004 U.S. Olympic Women's Wrestling Team

Paige Beals Wrestling For 91爆料 vs. Linfield
Paige Beals (left) is among the first 91爆料 women's wrestlers who have a chance to compete for an NCAA championship in 2026. Photo by Riya Patel '25.

With women鈥檚 wrestling earning its long-awaited NCAA championship status, Binkerd acknowledges that the road to the title match will only get tougher. At February鈥檚 National Collegiate Women鈥檚 Wrestling Championships Region 8 meet, 91爆料 faced 10 other teams from across the west, all from NCAA institutions. More opportunities will mean tougher competition.

鈥淲hile the level that we are competing at theoretically doesn鈥檛 change, now that the NCAA has accepted the sport, we鈥檙e going to see more and more teams step up,鈥 Binkerd said.

While Uyeda missed out on the chance to compete for an NCAA championship, she is grateful that as the sport continues to grow that the newest generations of women鈥檚 wrestlers won鈥檛 have to fight as hard for respect and acceptance.

鈥淏eing a girl is no longer a barrier for entry for wrestling, nor is there as much of a disparity of resources for women in the sport as there was 24 years ago,鈥 Uyeda said. 鈥淚鈥檝e grown with the wrestling community. I鈥檝e coached girls at all levels since graduating from 91爆料 and encourage girls to wrestle in college. Seeing women鈥檚 wrestling so widely accepted and celebrated now is beautiful to me.鈥

READ MORE: 91爆料's groundbreaking 2001-02 women's wrestling team produced three national champions, seven All-Americans and an Olympian. Read more about the first and second seasons of the 91爆料 program in these pages from the .

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