Jim Fitzpatrick (born April 15, 1959) is an American author, photographer, portrait artist and former athlete in the sport of roller derby. Fitzpatrick, born and raised in San Francisco, California, skated for the San Francisco Bay Bombers, of the International Roller Skating League (IRSL) Roller Derby, the 1977–1987 revival of the sport. Following a number of shoulder separation injuries, he became a league referee.
In 1979 one of Fitzpatrick's photographs, which he took of pro wrestler Don Muraco fighting with Dean Ho at the Cow Palace for Roy Shires' wrestling promotion, was published in Wrestling World Magazine in the Special 1979 Edition. Ring Announcer and writer, Allan Bolte wrote the article entitled "Don Muraco: The Man Fans Love the Hate" which contained Jim's photo that appears on page 47.
In 1980 he skated in an altered version of Roller Derby which combined Roller Derby rules with those of Roller Ball called Roller Superball. This series was held in Luna Park Arena in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
In 1987, he performed Roller Derby stunt skating in an MTV-aired music video for the song "Love Is Not a Game" by McAuley Schenker Group.
He returned to skating in 1993, competing on Team USA in the Roller Game World Cup, held in Tokyo, Japan. Roller Game (created in Japan), inspired by Roller Derby, was a male-only, full-contact, legit sport in which the athletes wore hockey pads and rules were strictly enforced. If one fought, they were ejected from the game. Other rule changes helped simplify the game. Only one team was on offense at a time and only one jammer (potential scorer) was used. Sets were used instead of the traditional periods. The best three out of five sets determined the winner of the game.
In 2005, Calvello contributed many rare photos and clippings from her personal collection to the book Roller Derby Classics…and more! by Jim Fitzpatrick, self-published via Trafford Publishing. She also wrote the foreword to the book. [1]
He is currently the ARSD (American Roller Skating Derby) trainer and the General Manager of the San Francisco Bay Bombers. On October 13, 2007, the Bombers won the ARSD Championships at Kezar Pavilion and Jim was voted 2007 General Manager of the Year.
In 2008 he published his third book, "When I Shot Good & Bad Guys (Who wrestled at the Cow Palace)", through Arena Publishing, Inc. (Standard Copyright License). It's a photo book consisting of wrestling photos taken by Jim during the late 1970s while he worked as the staff photographer for former wrestling promoter Roy Shire's Big Time Wrestling.
On Thanksgiving Day in 2008 the SF Bay Bombers returned to KOFY TV20 - Cable 13 with a one-hour special. Dan Ferrari, Jim Fitzpatrick and Brad Wagner were listed as the Executive Producers for the show. On March 14, 2009 the SF Bay Bombers first game aired and was the highest rated show that day for the age group of 18 to 34 (refer to article below in external links). Ferrari, Fitzpatrick and Wagner are the Executive Producers for the games which will initially air once a month, leading up to a weekly showing.
Jim came in number 2 on the Top 10 Males' list for Movers and Shakers in the July edition of XR News (Roller Skating Magazine). (refer to the link below.)
On Sept 12, 2009 the San Francisco Bay Bombers won the 2008-2009 ARSD Championships at the Cow Palace arena. Fitzpatrick was voted 2008-2009 General Manager of the Year along with Georgia Hase.
Jim appears in the 2009 Roller Derby documentary, "Rolling Thunder" which is part of "The Roller Derby Chronicles", a three-disc DVD retrospective of the golden years of Roller Derby, by Video Service Corp. He was interviewed regarding his involvement in the SF Bay Bombers resurgence.
Jim was interviewed on an episode of ABC7's Emmy award-winning public affairs show, "Beyond the Headlines" by the host, Cheryl Jennings. The program aired in November 2010.
On February 5, 2011 Jim held his first art exhibition at the LC Gallery located in the Westfield Mall in Downtown San Francisco.
On March 19, 2011 the San Francisco Bay Bombers won the 2010-2011 ARSD Championships at Kezar Pavilion in San Francisco. Fitzpatrick was voted 2010-2011 General Manager of the Year.
In April 2011 Fitzpatrick became one of a growing number of former professional athlete who joined the Butkus Foundations' Steroid Education campaign, "I Play Clean". The non profit campaign, founded by NFL Hall of Famer Dick Butkus, focuses on tackling the issue of steroids among high school athletes.
On April 7, 2012 Fitzpatrick held his second art exhibition. It was held at ManCave Memorabilia in San Mateo, CA. Jim displayed some of his works of boxing legend Mike Tyson. Tyson was also on hand, making a scheduled autograph appearance. It was their second time meeting and Fitzpatrick presented Tyson with a portrait he had drawn of Tyson and his family.
In March 2013 Fitzpatrick was one of several artists included in the ebook "Best of Activism in Art - I" by Sarah S. Vati. Along with his biography, several of Jim's drawings were included in the book ( ISBN 9781301850259).
On May 15 Jim was one of 60 artists featured in Art Tour International's ATIM's Top 60 Contemporary Artist of 2014. He also received honorable mention for one of his works.
In 2015 he was again selected as one of 60 artists featured in Art Tour International's ATIM's Top 60 Contemporary Artist of 2015 and later in the year, on Oct, 15, 2015, Jim was interviewed for a segment, via Italy, of ATIM's "Heart 2 Art" series by Viviana Puello, the Art Director of Art Tour International Magazine.
Jim was interviewed for TV by Mark Baker of "Game On" regarding his team's long time woman's captain, Lali O and Roller Derby. The show, which aired on Nov 19th, 2015, is a bi-weekly, Comcast Hometown Network program that's aired in the San Francisco Bay Area and focuses on female athletes.
On April 30, 2016 in Pacifica, CA Jim made his debut in Gold Rush Pro Wrestling as Mr. Goldsworth, a butler for pro wrestler Alexander G. Bernard.
On September 12, 2016 some of Jim's old pro wrestling Super 8mm footage he had shot at the Cow Palace during Roy Shire's Big Time Wrestling shows in the late '70's was published (with credits) in a WWE video, "I Did It My Way: The Pat Patterson Story" (WWE Hall of Famer)! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lp03sbfWhjY
Jim is mentioned twice in the autobiography (on page 82 and page 208 regarding his efforts to revive the traditional sport of Roller Derby), "The Last 'True' Roller Derby A Memoir". written by former professional skater Larry Smith.
On Oct 20, 2016 Jim was selected as one of 60 artists featured in Art Tour International's ATIM's Top 60 Masters of Contemporary Art 2017.
In November 2016 some of Jim's wrestling photos, taken back in the late 1970s at the famed Cow Palace, along with an interview with him are included in Rock Rims' book "When It Was Big Time: A One Hundred Year History Of Northern California Professional Wrestling" http://whenitwasbigtime.blogspot.com/
Jim appeared in the Fox Business Channel's hit TV show "Strange Inheritance", episode 23 entitled "Roller Derby Queen". The episode was about the Roller Derby inheritance left to him by Roller Derby icon and close friend Ann Calvello. Jerry Seltzer who ran the original Roller Derby league and is the son of Leo Seltzer, the founder of Roller Derby, also appears and is interviewed in show along with former skating legend, Judy Arnold.
Jim is sited in a chapter entitle "Skate Fast and hit Hard San Francisco Bay Bombers and Bay Area Roller Derby" in the 2017 book "San Francisco Bay Area Sports: Golden Gate Athletics, Recreation, and Community (Sports Culture and Society)" (Paperback)by Liberti, Rita, Smith, Maureen *
Jim was once again selected as one of the artists featured by Art Tour International in their ATIM's Top 60 Masters of Contemporary Art 2018.
One of Jim's portraits of actress Lucy Liu appears in Shan Peck's [2] art book "Stars Of The Silver Screen" released on October 15, 2018. Publisher: Independently published (October 15, 2018) [3]
Jim was again selected as one of the artists featured by Art Tour International in their ATIM's Top 60 Masters of Contemporary Art 2019. https://www.arttourinternational.com/jim-fitzpatrick-2-2/
On June 21, 2019 Jim received a special Certificate of Recognition from Congresswoman Jackie Speier for his being selected by ArtTour International earlier in the year and for his efforts to use his art to support others faced with chronic pain. https://www.arttourinternational.com/jim-fitzpatrick-2/
Fitzpatrick was quoted in a Sonoma Index-Tribune article by publisher Emily Charrier on the recent passing of former Roller Derby owner Jerry Seltzer. [4]
Fitzpatrick was interviewed by the New York Times for information on Jerry Seltzer's time with Roller Derby and his life outside the sport. The article was published on July 16, 2019. https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/16/sports/jerry-seltzer-dead.html
In 2021, Fitzpatrick published Ad-Lib To The Blow Off!: The True Story of Professional Roller Derby, the Outlaw Leagues, the Chicago Mob's Involvement and More! With Barnes&Noble Press. Bill Hill, a former skater, wrote the foreword. On 5/24/21 Dave Meltzer wrote about the book in the Wrestling Observer. [5]
Language: English ISBN 1728816270 ISBN 978-1728816272
Fitzpatrick is married and has two children, and still resides in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Oakland Arena is an indoor arena located in Oakland, California, United States. From its opening in 1966 until 1996, it was known as the Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum Arena. After a major renovation completed in 1997, the arena was renamed The Arena in Oakland until 2005 and Oracle Arena from 2006 to 2019. It is often referred to as the Oakland Coliseum Arena as it is part of the Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum Complex with the adjacent RingCentral Coliseum. Oakland Arena seats 19,596 fans for basketball.
The Cow Palace is an indoor arena located in Daly City, California, situated on the city's northern border with neighboring San Francisco. Because the border passes through the property, a portion of the upper parking lot is in San Francisco.
Roller derby is a roller skating contact sport played by two teams of fifteen members. Roller derby is played by approximately 1,250 amateur leagues worldwide, mostly in the United States.
Ann Theresa Calvello was an American athlete and notable personality in the sport of roller derby.
Kezar Pavilion, located adjacent to Kezar Stadium, is an indoor arena in the southeast corner of Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, California, United States (US). Built in 1924, the Pavilion seats 4,000 people and is owned and operated by the City of San Francisco. The San Francisco Rumble, of the American Basketball Association, and the Academy of Art Urban Knights, an NCAA Division II school, call Kezar Pavilion their home court.
Tim Patten is a former roller derby athlete now a self-published author having seven books under his name.
Joan Weston or Joanie Weston, known as the "Blonde Bomber", "Blonde Amazon", "Golden Girl", and "Roller Derby Queen", was an American athlete and was the most famous personality in the original Roller Derby.
Roller Games was the name of a sports entertainment spectacle created in the early 1960s in Los Angeles, California as a rival to the Jerry Seltzer-owned Roller Derby league, which had enjoyed a monopoly on the sport of roller derby — and its name — since its inception in 1935. Roller Games provided a mostly televised, increasingly theatrical version of the sport. Roller Games and its flagship team, the Los Angeles Thunderbirds (T-Birds) has endured several boom and bust cycles, including a roller derby attendance record in 1972, a major reorganization in 1975, appearances on ESPN in 1986, a TV series called RollerGames in 1989–1990, and a small number of untelevised exhibition matches in 1987, 1988, 1990, 1993, and the early and mid-2000s.
Gerald Edwin "Jerry" Seltzer was the second and final owner of the original Roller Derby league. The league and the sport of roller derby were created in 1935 in Chicago by Leo Seltzer, Jerry's father. Jerry assumed ownership of the league in 1959 and ran it until its demise in 1973.
Roller Game was a variation of the sport of roller derby that was played in Japan by the Roller Game League, established in 1990. Roller Game was played on either a flat or banked track, and on either traditional (quad) roller skates or inline skates. Although its name is similar to that of the relatively theatrical Roller Games, Roller Game was, according to its promotional videos, inspired more by the original Roller Derby—it is a full-contact athletic competition with strictly enforced rules and no staged fighting.
RollerJam is an American television series featuring roller derby that aired on The Nashville Network from 1999 to 2001. It was the first attempt to bring roller derby to TV since RollerGames.
Leo A. Seltzer is generally credited as the creator of the sport of roller derby, and was the founder and head of the original Roller Derby league from 1935 until his son Jerry Seltzer took over the business in 1958.
The history of roller derby traces the evolution of roller skating races into a unique sport which underwent several boom-and-bust cycles throughout the 20th century. Although it was a form of sports entertainment for much of its existence, a grassroots, early 21st century revival spearheaded by women has restored an emphasis on athleticism.
The National Roller Derby League (NRDL), also once promoted as Roller Derby 2000, Roller Blazing Derby League and Roller Derby USA, is a professional roller derby league. The NRDL consists of teams that train and compete on banked tracks in the coastal cities of Southern California. The NRDL is incorporated in the State of California under the name Roller Derby Inc..
The American Roller Skating Derby (ARSD) was a professional roller derby league. As of 2012, the ARSD consisted of six teams: the San Francisco Bay Bombers, the Los Angeles Firebirds, the Chicago Pioneers, the Brooklyn Red Devils, the Eastern Chiefs and the Orlando Thunder. Most trained and competed in the East Bay area, but one team, the Firebirds, was based in Escondido, near San Diego.
Charlie O'Connell was a roller derby skater, considered the premier male star of his sport. He was inducted into the Roller Derby Hall of Fame in 1967, after his first retirement.
Bay Area Derby, formerly B.ay A.rea D.erby Girls, is a women's flat-track roller derby league based in the San Francisco Bay Area. Bay Area Derby (BAD) was founded in 2004 and is a founding member of the Women's Flat Track Derby Association (WFTDA). BAD is a skater-owned and -operated 501(c)(3) non-profit league. The league is composed of four teams for intra-league play, and an all-star travel team that competes nationally. As of 2016, BAD was ranked in the top 20 overall in WFTDA.
Denise Grimes, known as Ivanna S. Pankin, is a roller derby skater and organizer.
Annis "Big Red" Jensen was an American roller derby skater. In 1954, she was the first women's captain of the San Francisco Bay Bombers in the IRDL professional roller derby league. At the time of retirement in 1969, she was the oldest active skater in league history.
Darlene Anderson is an American roller derby skater. Anderson became the first African American woman to play professional roller derby when she was chosen as the first pick for the Brooklyn Red Devils in 1957.
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