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CL teen Roeser shows ‘unheard of’ strength

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That was the fall of her sophomore year. Roeser had started working out at Davis with some other track and field girls – Prairie Ridge’s Jessica Ayers and Crystal Lake Central’s Holly Dowell and Sami Staples. Two other Davis clients, Cary-Grove’s Carly Loeffel (Notre Dame) and Prairie Ridge’s Sam Nirva (Saint Joseph’s College), already were competing in the heptathlon.

Roeser since has given up track, even though her father Rich is an assistant coach with Prairie Ridge’s girls, working with sprinters and hurdlers, which were Paige’s events.

“When she notified my wife and I she wasn’t going to run, it was sad,” Rich Roeser said. “Strongman has been a great experience for her. As a parent, that’s an exciting thing to watch. It’s a different sport. I miss her dearly [in track]. I ran in high school and I miss having her here. She’s done some phenomenal things in a short period of time.”

Rich Roeser loves watching how older competitors – and in Paige’s case they all are older – have grown to respect her ability.

Zambon noticed right away that Roeser was smitten by strongman. He is amazed at how Roeser, a 111-pound hurdler who “could barely pick up a [45-pound] bar when she came in here” has become a 136-pound beast of a competitor.

At the Arnold competition, Zambon said Roeser was the only one in her weight class to lift a 550-pound frame, in which competitors step into, then lift by their sides. She also beat some of the top-five competitors in the wheelbarrow load, in which competitors take a keg and two sandbags, walking various distances, and load them into wheelbarrows to push across the finish line.

“I don’t think a top-three finish at nationals is out of the question,” Zambon said. “She’ll be a national title-holder by [age] 20. She’s 100 percent committed and enjoying every second of it.”

Roeser, who as a high schooler cannot yet accept prize money, trains four or five times a week with Zambon. Each strongman may have different lifts, but the same elements, so they will work hard on technique until the St. Louis event in May.


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