Ralph Valladares
Ralph Valladares (July 31, 1936 – November 13, 1998), often known as Ralphie Valladares, was a roller derby skater and coach.
Personal information | |
---|---|
Nickname(s) | The Guatemalan Flyer Little Ralphie The Living Legend |
Nationality | Guatemalan |
Born | July 31, 1936 |
Died | November 13, 1998 62) | (aged
Height | 5 ft 3 in (1.60 m) |
Sport | |
Sport | Roller derby |
Team | Los Angeles Braves Miami Westerners Los Angeles Thunderbirds |
Born in Guatemala, Valladares moved to Los Angeles with his family when he was twelve years old. He hoped to become a jockey, but his weight reached 115 pounds (52 kg), and he turned his attention to roller skating.[1] He joined the roller derby at the age of seventeen,[2] initially skating for the Los Angeles Braves.[1] He soon moved to the Miami Westerners and,[3] despite being the shortest male skater, he immediately became regarded as a star, leading the scoring.[4]
Valladares joined the rival Roller Games on its inception, in 1960, becoming a founder member of the Los Angeles Thunderbirds team.[5] He spent the next thirty years with the organization, and was involved in coaching, and also in setting up events in Japan and Australia.[6] He retired from skating in 1987,[5] but returned for the RollerGames television show.[6]
Valladares kept the same skates through the majority of his career. He noted that he once ran over them with his own car, and they also survived being frozen under 2 feet (0.61 m) of ice, following the evacuation of a venue in which he was competing.[5]
Outside roller derby, Valladares appeared as a shipping clerk in a 1980s television commercial for IBM.[5] He had previous acting experience as a skater in the Kansas City Bomber movie.[1] He married fellow roller derby skater Gloria "Honey" Sanchez twice, on both occasions on March 17. The couple had a daughter, Gina, who also skated with the Roller Games.[7]
Both of Valladares' marriages ended in divorce, although the couple remained close and spent much time together until Valladares' death.[8] He died in 1998 at home in Pico Rivera, California,[9] having suffered with liver cancer for some time.[8]
In 2004, Valladares was posthumously inducted into the Roller Derby Hall of Fame.[10] [11]
References
- Lorette Behrens, "Ralph Valladares", Derby Memoirs
- "Roller Derby Action Scheduled on Ventura County Fair Track", Press-Courier, August 16, 1987
- "Westerners Nab Third Victory", Miami News, January 21, 1955
- "Roller Derby Returns Here", Miami News, January 13, 1955
- Tom Johnson, "These Skates Have Been Through Hell", Milwaukee Sentinel, October 24, 1986
- Andre Mouchard, "After a decade of dormancy, roller derby is poised to attempt one more comeback", Orange County Register, November 30, 1998
- Robert Rogers, "Derby brings back the '70s", San Bernardino County Sun, October 19, 2007
- "Cheap Seats", Spokesman-Review, November 19, 1998
- "Obituaries: Ralphie Valladares; Starred With Roller Derby's T-Birds", Los Angeles Times, November 15, 1998
- "Events and Inductees", Roller Derby Hall of Fame
- Personally Ralphie was a very sweet down to earth man who was a loyal friend with an extremely good reputation. He had a keen quick sense of humor & was there for his friends. Never to be forgotten, Ralphie was a rare Soul, not to be replaced.