At 14, Holly, her team’s starting point guard, was the youngest player on the court and easily the smallest — all of 5 feet 2 inches in her Nike high-tops. She was also the only girl.
Holly began playing basketball when she was 4. She would sprint onto the court during timeouts at her older sister Heidi’s Catholic Youth Organization games.
As a seventh grader last year, she played on the New York School for the Deaf girls’ team, but when several players switched to cheerleading this season, the team folded. With a student enrollment of 170, kindergarten through high school, such a turn can doom a sports team. Holly wanted no part of cheerleading, so she joined the boys’ team.
“She was the kind of kid who would sleep with her ball,” her mother, Debbie Marschke, said.
But Holly is not some novelty. Her coach, Vanessa Arp, said she never considered subbing for Holly, even for a minute, even if she was struggling with her shot.
“Who would bring the ball up?” Arp, who is also deaf, said through a sign-language interpreter.
“Holly can control the team and control the game,” Arp said. “Her teammates respect her as a player and a person.”
As she brought up the ball against St. Luke’s, Holly raised her right hand to call a play, wiggling her thumb and pinkie like a surfer’s hang loose sign.
Communication among the deaf squad is not the issue. St. Luke’s, like all of the N.Y.S.D’s junior varsity opponents this season, was a hearing team. But shooting over the St. Luke’s players was like hoisting a shot from the floor of the Grand Canyon, and rebounds were something of a pipe dream. St. Luke’s Coach Noel Thomas left his top players in Connecticut, in the interest of sportsmanship, but there was still little the N.Y.S.D. squad could do.
St. Luke’s was ahead at halftime, 24-9. Holly showed crisp ball-handling, and her defense was steely. But none of her high-arcing shots had found the net.
Arp’s halftime talk was a flurry of signing and animated body language: “Use the body. Play with heart. Keeping fighting until the end.”
Thomas noted Holly’s slick passing and hard-nosed defense and said a better shot would make her a force. To him, she was not a female opponent or a deaf opponent. She was simply an opponent.
“I don’t look at her as a female,” Thomas said. “She’s just No. 34.”
As far as Holly’s parents can tell, their daughter has been deaf since birth. In 2001, Debbie, a special education teaching assistant, received a breast cancer diagnosis. Four months later, Heidi was hospitalized with Lyme disease. Four months after that, the family discovered Holly was deaf.
“It was quite a horrible time,” Debbie said. “It was just kind of numbing.”
Holly, who lives in Irvington, N.Y., attended middle school in Rye Brook, with hearing children until she was 12, but her parents said she grew increasingly self-conscious as she approached her teens.
“Some kids are great about it,” said Holly’s father, Jim Marschke, a foreman in the
Irvington water department, of her former classmates. “Some aren’t.”
Holly’s school is hardly a basketball powerhouse, but Holly is more relaxed among her peers now. She loves texting, the wrestling star John Cena and the ABC Family program “Switched at Birth,” which has a deaf teen girl as a main character. And, of course, she loves basketball. On weekends, Holly plays on a C.Y.O. girls team, which competes in the county’s top division.
“I’m never going to give up on basketball,” Holly said, with her mother serving as her sign-language interpreter. “I want to be famous.”
If the school can find enough players, it will bring back a girls basketball team next season. If not, Holly will continue playing with the boys. Holly, who averaged 14 points a game last year, is scoring 6.9 points on the boys’ team this season.
Her 3-point shot is a staple of her games. Holly likes to go for 3-pointers in the C.Y.O. league, even though it awards only 2 points from that distance. Last year, when Jeremy Lin’s heroics held New York in thrall, spectators saw her rainbow 3s and called her Holly Lin.
“Holly can stand out like a star,” said Kathy McMahon, who has coached her since first grade. “When she’s hot, she can be outstanding.”
But against St. Luke’s, she was cold. As the second half started, a drum beat in the distance. The cheerleading squad, featuring some of Holly’s former teammates, was practicing across the hall ahead of a basketball tournament and cheerleading competition the school later hosted.
Heidi, 17, stood up, waved for Holly’s attention as she ran down the court then signed to her that she should not be afraid to drive against the bigger boys.
Next time up the court, Holly did just that, slicing through the lane like a rabbit through the forest, banking an underhand layup around a flat-footed defender. Heidi smiled. Their parents, in matching yellow N.Y.S.D. hoodies, cheered, which meant standing and waving their hands toward Holly.
Another drive earned Holly a foul, and she made one of two free throws. But when the clock wound down, St. Luke’s prevailed, 47-27. Holly’s statistics were not going to spark a new wave of Linsanity: 3 points, 2 assists and 2 rebounds. She was 0 for 5 from 3-point range. But she played all 32 minutes, with just one turnover.
After the game, Holly helped clean up tape and empty bottles, threw on sweats and swapped her game sneakers for old-school Adidas with fluorescent yellow laces. She said she needed to practice her outside shot but thought the team grew from the day’s stiff challenge.
“I was a little bit nervous when I saw them,” she said. “But I felt strong going in for layups.”
Going over the score sheet, Arp said Holly was the team’s leader.
“Holly listens,” Arp said. “That’s her biggest plus.”
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남자으로 구성된 팀에서 뛰는 제일 작고 가장 어린 여자 선수
첫댓글 정말 멋있는 내용이네요~ 좋은 게시물 감사합니다. 스크랩합니다^^
와우 멋지네요. 잘보고 갑니다. ^^*
잘 보고 갑니다