Pandemic pins passion for standout junior wrestler Piper Cadden

Pandemic Pins Passion for Standout Junior Wrestler Piper Cadden

By: Lauren Green

11/7/21

GILBERT, Ariz. — “This whole thing is just a joke to me,” Mindi Cadden jokingly said.

This was the reaction of Piper Cadden’s mother when Piper decided to go to a wrestling camp in eighth grade. 

Piper had only played softball in the previous years of her life, but this decision to try out a new sport was a decision that ultimately changed her future.

Being next door at a neighbors’ Father’s Day celebration is where Piper learned about the sport and eventually made the jump to try it.

It did not disappoint. 

“My neighbor, he’s a wrestling coach,” Piper said. “And I had just played softball, and I’ve been working out with him all summer. And then he mentioned a wrestling camp, a girls wrestling camp, and I went to that and just fell in love with the sport.”

These neighbors were not just ordinary people who liked wrestling — they are highly regarded in the wrestling community with Arizona State Hall of Fame accolades and a very successful club wrestling team in Arizona.

“If you look up on the wall [Desert Financial Arena],” Mindi said, “you’ll see Hall of Fame pictures of him [Eric Larkin] all over the place.”

Larkin was nominated for Best Collegiate Athlete of the Year at the 2003 ESPY Awards.

Piper began practicing with neighbors, Larkin and Mike Douglas, more and more after attending the wrestling camp until they came up with an idea to further their coaching skills.

“They came to us,” Mindi said, “and they said, ‘Hey, we’re gonna start our own school.’”

This wrestling school, or club, is Thorobred Wrestling Club. As of today, they’ve had many accomplished wrestlers come through and win the Arizona state titles, as well as multiple national championships.

With Piper starting this new sport, her mom wanted her to go back to the eighth grade to develop more. This is where Piper really grew her skills as a wrestler before making another big leap to further her career. 

Piper started her wrestling career at Valient College Preparatory — a school consisting of only 25 students, with Piper and her older sister being the only two girls in attendance.

In her first year there, Piper was the only girl on the team. Coming from a family of all girls with five sisters, she oddly seemed to fit in just fine with the guys on her team as they propelled her to become a better athlete.

“I like having the guys on my team because they are stronger, physically than me,” Piper said. “So I get to have more experience and get stronger in some positions and find ways to better myself.”

Primarily a wrestling school, Piper began to flourish at Valient Prep. Although they don’t wrestle in the AIA, Piper was seeing competition from all over the country as most of their tournaments were out of state. 

“She picked things up pretty quick,” said Angel Cejudo, head wrestling coach at Valient Prep. “And you know, being new to the sport, there comes a lot of anxiety and you’re nervous before competition. You never really saw that from her.”

Piper started winning tournaments in Arizona and eventually qualified for the Fargo National Championships — a highly notable tournament.

Her parents didn’t attend.

“We were like, she’s gonna lose, it’s her first year wrestling, she’s a baby,” Mindi said. “she gets seventh. She becomes an All-American.”

With Piper’s early success and passion for this sport, it’s as though nothing could stop her — until a global pandemic crept in.

Once COVID-19 entered, Piper lost out on a year of wrestling, but it was the year after the world shutdown that really affected Piper’s relationship with the sport. When things opened back up her sophomore year, wrestling tournaments were still not back to normal. They would often get shut down if someone tested positive for COVID-19, which occurred often. 

Piper’s sister transferred to Gilbert High School while Piper remained at Valient Prep at the time. At Gilbert, she had the opportunity to make numerous friends, go to football games and attend the homecoming dance — all of the typical high school memories one might make. 

“She [Piper] never had those relationships with people next to us,” Mindi said. “Because everyone she’s with is athletes there [Valient Prep]. It was business and that’s really hard being one of six girls and always being business.”

With the intensity involved at Valient Prep and her club wrestling team, Thorobred Wrestling Club, Piper started to realize the family activities she was missing out on as a 16-year-old. 

“She missed a trip to Havasu with the family,” Mindi said. “And then she was going to miss a trip to California to go to nationals and she was like, ‘It’s not worth it.’” 

Piper ended her national-contending wrestling career.

She then transferred to Gilbert to join her sister in school with no intention to continue wrestling — but her love for the sport remained in the back of her head.

A week before her junior year, Piper’s friend — another neighbor — talked her into checking out a wrestling practice that was going on. 

“She walks out of practice and she’s the only girl in the room again,” Mindi said. “And she has this big smile on her face. She pinned a couple of the boys. You can tell that her love is back.”

Shortly after that practice, Piper wrestled at a tournament with the team and won first place.

She’s the only female wrestler on her team this year, but that’s nothing Piper hasn’t already conquered. Even while missing the first half of the season due to AIA transfer rules, Piper looks to make big strides as a Tiger this year. 

“I think her coming to a public school, I think that kind of restarted the fire,” Gilbert wrestling coach Wyatt Richardson said. “And especially since she’s a junior, she has a chance to become a two-time state champion.”

Will college athletes enter the tech space with new NFT craze?

Will college athletes enter the tech space with new NFT craze?

By: Lauren Green

11/7/21

With athletes now being able to profit off of their name, image, and likeness within the NCAA, many have already cashed in on major endorsement deals, while others have decided to take a different approach through the cryptocurrency realm. 

Within the cryptocurrency space, there’s a new asset on the rise called NFTs — non-fungible tokens. Professional athletes in the NBA, MLB, and NFL have already begun navigating and investing in NFTs.

But what exactly is an NFT?

“It’s one unique digital asset,” Sasa Pesic, a postdoctoral research fellow at Arizona State University’s Blockchain Lab, explained. “It can be, you know, a piece of art, it can be a piece of real estate, whatever — something that cannot basically be multiplied that easily.”

With big names in sports — Stephen Curry, Cam Newton, and Tom Brady — investing in NFTs, there’s been a large surge in popularity and growth of these assets. Curry bought a digital art piece NFT from the Bored Ape Yacht Club — a very upscale and notable community that creates NFTs.

Curry purchased this NFT for $180,000. The picture of a unique cartoon ape dressed in a suit sits as his profile picture and shows a large form of status to his 15.5 million followers. As NFTs continue to gain traction, their value and status keeps rising.

“I’m expecting a boom in the next two years” Pesic said. “That’s what we’ve seen with blockchain trends.”

Unlike purchasing NFTs of caricatures, some athletes are now making NFTs of themselves and with that comes more perks than just owning a jpeg or video file.

“It can be signed memorabilia,” an anonymous community manager at an NFT marketplace company, Bitski, said. “It can be access to private communities and discord. It can be a meet-and-greets.”

With the opportunity of creating your own NIL deal essentially, NFTs are gaining traction for NCAA athletes already.

Carson Strong, successful quarterback for the University of Nevada, Reno, has come out with his own NFT trading card as a collaboration with Candy Digital and listed on Bitski’s website. Strong’s NFT is a collection limited to 100 of these digital cards with a selling price of $250. Strong’s cards are currently sold out.

With the success of Strong’s NFT, it would be hard for his teammates not to take notice.

“I think that if the opportunity presented itself, a lot of people on my team will try to pursue that,” Nevada defensive lineman Amir Johnson said. “Because who doesn’t want to establish or get some deals off themselves and have something they can sign and sell.”

Johnson currently has two NIL deals — one with the sunglasses company Pit Viper and one with chair company Zipchair.

Strong’s influence on his team not only comes from being a leader as quarterback, but from his performance and accomplishments on the field. Strong’s name can be seen in many articles and draft boards for the 2022 NFL Draft. 

Before Strong’s NFT and the surplus of others out right now, there was an NCAA athlete who made the first leap into this niche tech space last year.

Although NIL was not yet established, former Iowa basketball standout Luka Garza created and auctioned off an NFT when his season ended and he was no longer an NCAA athlete. 

Garza was very ahead of the NFT trend and sold his for a whopping $41,141 becoming the first college athlete to do such a thing and likely attracting more to do the same. 

Although Strong’s soldout NFTs and Garza’s hefty payout from his auction are appealing to other college athletes, it’s still seen as a risky outlet — especially if many athletes are simultaneously trying to make a quick buck.

“If enough people do this and they don’t back it up with utility or community-building, then it’s all just a wild, speculative investment,” community manager of Bitski said. “And it’s only worth what people think it’s worth. And so if you look at the statistics on OpenSea (a popular NFT marketplace), the vast majority of NFTs sell for like not much at all.”

Professional athletes have more room to work with in this realm because of their well-established status. The new territory of NFTs and uncertainty that comes with it is what’s stopping the massive surge of other college athletes joining this wave. 

“If you try to put a product out and it’s a terrible product or it falls apart, or it’s faulty, then you don’t want your name tied to things like that,” Johnson said. “So I just think definitely people want to make sure their quality is what their name is.”

The NBA and MLB have already capitalized off of NFTs by creating their own marketplace platforms where NFTs can be purchased — NBA Top Shot serves the NBA community while the MLB launched a partnership with an already established NFT marketplace, Candy Digital.

With large partnerships in place with professional sports teams, a partnership with the NCAA could be very likely in the future as more and more college athletes enter this uncharted territory.

“It’s just that the intersection of cryptocurrency digital ownership as NFTs and then like real money and sports fever are all kind of mashing together right now,” community manager of Bitski said. “And you can say that’s great for the athletes.”

Tigers Ace in the Classroom and on the Court

Tigers Ace in the Classroom and on the Court

By: Lauren Green

10/3/21

A silent room fills with whispers, pages flipping in textbooks, and the clacking of keyboards.

High schoolers quizzing each other on test questions and helping each other on homework sounds like an ordinary school environment, but rather than a classroom, these students are in a locker room and are athletes on one of the top-ranked volleyball teams in Arizona.

No. 14 Gilbert isn’t just striving for goals of a state championship this year, but for academic endeavors as well. A couple of seniors are attempting to win the AIA Scholar Athlete award with their noteworthy grades.

Senior outside hitter Cameron Arnett, and one of the top students on the team, knows the strength and academic potential of herself and her teammates this year.

“This year, especially, we have a lot of people that we know who work really hard academically as well as on the court,” Arnett said. “And we looked at people on the team, and they do well academically, so we thought, well, let’s go for it this year.”

Senior defensive specialist Brooke Hesse leads the academic charge for her team. Hesse is currently second in her graduating class maintaining a 4.75 GPA with the potential of becoming valedictorian.

Next to Hesse, is Arnett who’s sitting sixth in her class, and senior setter Sutton Dana; two notable seniors who’re making their academic mark for the Tigers.

The academic successes of these seniors can be seen as an influence throughout the entire team.

No volleyball player for the Tigers is below a 4.15 GPA with seven players recording a GPA no lower than 4.5. This culture of academia did not come out of thin air — it existed when Hesse, Dana, and Arnett entered their freshman year at Gilbert.

This trio of seniors and other teammates also played in junior high together and came into high school with similar outlooks of life and goals they wanted to achieve.

“We did come into a program full of other academically advanced people,” Hesse said. “So I think that we had influence ahead of us and we just were hoping to do the same to those that were coming after us.”

The seniors wanted to continue this culture with the underclassman with not only their example in the classroom but with their guidance too.

“From the beginning, we start holding them to a standard,” Dana said. “It’s not like you have to do this but it’s like, this is what you’re aiming for, this is what we need as a program is for you to perform like this.”

Within Gilbert’s volleyball program, you can see the accountability that the team shares with each other.

This intensive culture is not achievable without a support system. Family, a familiar theme for Gilbert volleyball, is one of the main influences that aid their success.

Hesse’s parents are both teachers too — an external factor that influences Hesse academically at home. Her father, Joe Hesse, is also the head coach of the team.

Dana’s older sister’s academic achievements compel her to succeed academically, and Arnett’s younger siblings are both Tigers on the JV and freshman teams.

“I think just having sisters throughout the program, and I know a bunch of the seniors also have sisters in the program, it’s really helped to communicate to the younger class,” Arnett said.

Not only does this contagious culture continue to grow through the team’s academia, but it also impacts the Tigers when they step on the court.

“We aren’t the ones to slack off in class or not turn in assignments, you know we’re the ones who get things done,” Arnett said. “And I think the same, it goes right on the volleyball court. We’re the ones who are making those extra points and going defensively for those extended rallies that we can win those extra points.”

Teachers at Gilbert are also aware of the team’s scholarly values. Many of Gilbert’s volleyball players have been taught by Wes Hayward, an honors math teacher and beach volleyball coach at Gilbert.

“I think they’re the example,” Hayward said. “I think they work hard on the court. They work hard in the classroom. They have a strong work ethic. They’ve got a great determination to accomplish things a lot people can’t.”

Hayward believes that these girls can visualize their goals and see what they want in their lives.

“They can look forward and anticipate the future,” Hayward said. “They see that college is important. They know grades are important and because they have that vision, they work hard to accomplish it.”

Whether it’s studying for tests or stepping on the court to play for each other, the friendship and bonds that are made through these experiences are what will stick with this team the most.

“It’s something that we take for granted because we have had each other as friends for so long,” Hesse said. “And there’s some people who never find that group of people that are their people.”

Although these seniors won’t be playing for the Tigers next fall, the culture they helped build will still be at Gilbert for generations to come.

Welcome to the Poole Party

Welcome to the Poole Party

Why Jordan Poole could be this year’s Most Improved Player

By: Lauren Green

10/24/21

Jordan Poole, a 6-foot-4 Michigan product drafted by the Golden State Warriors in 2019, has been turning heads in the NBA. With his preseason performances and his season opener in the Staples Center against the Los Angeles Lakers, the 28th pick in the draft could win this year’s Most Improved Player.

Many Warriors fans and basketball nerds who’ve been keeping up with Poole the last few months know that there’s been a strong foundation built for the guard to perform well this year, but not everyone is completely sold on him yet, even with his fast rise to MIP rankings on betting sites.

After this year’s preseason ended, Poole launched into the rankings as the most popular bet for the award. Poole currently has the highest betting handle and most tickets placed within the online sportsbook BetMGM for MIP just from his preseason run. During the Warriors’ 5-0 preseason sweep, Poole’s rep was further established not only on the court with his teammates, but in the eyes of the fans, too. While playing around 22 minutes per game, Poole averaged about 22 points, 3.4 rebounds and three assists. Poole was not only effective offensively with these numbers, but also in ways you wouldn’t see from looking at a stat sheet.

He was quick to score off transition plays, created great spacing on the floor, and navigated the Warriors’ noted style of play of great ball movement. Not only did he execute in these ways, but he looked confident while doing it.
Whether it was finishing at the basket with great touch and a big presence of LeBron James near the basket, or driving the ball with assurance and finishing with a powerful dunk, Poole executed and carried himself like a true Warrior.

Poole looked like a big missing offensive piece that the Warriors’ have needed in their backcourt, especially with Klay Thompson’s extended absence.

These preseason stats and performances are usually taken with a grain of salt but for players like Poole, it’s an accurate representation of what potential lies ahead during the regular season. Only two games into the regular season, Poole’s preseason expectations have shown to be true, despite a quieter performance against the Los Angeles Clippers, which is not uncommon for a young 22-year-old player on the rise.

Poole’s offensive efficiency during the season opener against the Lakers is where a lot of his potential was displayed. It wasn’t about the 20 points Poole scored to help defeat the Lakers, 121-114, but how he adjusted his game to get those points.

Poole started with an off night but was still able to notch those 20 points, three assists, and two rebounds late in the game to help secure the win. This charge from Poole occurred mostly in the third quarter. He also helped lead this push for Golden State while Stephen Curry rested more in the fourth quarter. Poole was 4 of 11 from beyond the arc.

Poole’s stat line wasn’t the most important element for that game, but more of a supplement to show how the young guard struggled early on, readjusted, and found his groove on one of the biggest stages in basketball — the Staples Center.

Poole was a small product of the Santa Cruz Warriors — Golden State’s G League affiliate. He played in 11 games during his G League stint where he averaged 22.4 points and around 33 minutes of play during the 2020-2021 season. The growth he had in the G League translated immensely into his play in the NBA and is something worth noting as his role is a key piece to the Warriors winning this season.

The difference between Poole and other candidates for MIP is that Poole is filling in offensively for a huge role for the Warriors that will last a few months before Thompson returns. Michael Porter Jr., forward for the Denver Nuggets, is another leading candidate for this award.

Although the Nuggets are awaiting their star, Jamal Murray, to return from injury as well, Porter Jr. supplements Murray and last season’s MVP Nikola Jokić, in different ways than Poole’s role will be for the Warriors.

Some of Poole’s edge is that he played in the G League for 11 games last year to develop — something Porter Jr. did not have to do. Porter Jr. should produce very well for the Nuggets this year, something the Nuggets believe, too, with his new contract extension, but if Poole lives up to his expectations this season, his accolades and G League history should be enough to justify him winning MIP.

When Thompson makes his return in a few months, Poole’s role will evolve as Warriors coach Steve Kerr will make adjustments to their rotation, but whatever rotation that might be, Poole will complement Stephen Curry and Thompson in a tremendous way.

Even when Poole has his off nights, which he will, he is in great care and leadership with the likes of Curry, Thompson, Draymond Green, and Andre Iguodala. It’s undeniable that Poole fits like a glove for the Warriors in this new generation occurring in Golden State under the guidance of these veterans.

Whether he’s pulling up deep from 30 feet out in a very Warriors-esque way or helping maintain a game when Curry or Thompson are resting on the sidelines, Poole’s role will evolve with the same goal in mind — to help the Warriors make it out of the West as NBA Championship contenders.