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The team photos from the past 15 years include more and more ponytailed girls over time, until you get to last year's picture, which has so many they can barely be contained in the margins of the frame.
In fact, all of the walls in the office, which sits just off a cozy mat room on this converted high school campus at Hogan Middle School, are a hanging history of the country's largest girls' school wrestling program. There are the citations from the mayor's office, newspaper clippings from the team's visit to the California State Assembly, homemade photo collages from team trips.
Just outside the office door sits a collection of trophies and a large U. Guiducci, the founder and coach of the program, is sitting at his desk for a moment, taking a quick breather. He has already ushered a practice gym full of nearly girls, jockeying for warm-up space on the mats, into two different gyms for competition. He's running the Northern California girls' wrestling championships, supervising volunteers and referees, checking on the snack bar, and shouting instructions at his wrestlers as he dashes past their mats on his way to putting out the next fire.
Her sisters, Clarissa and Jennifer, have come over from their spots at two different scorer's tables to coach their sister from the corner of the mat. The older Carino sisters came back on this sunny Sunday morning to help out with the meet. Their mother, Christina, is taking photos for the team.
Guiducci will tell you it's the only way he can run the program -- by getting help to coach nearly 90 middle school girls in a sport that Christina Carino admits she didn't think was appropriate for her daughters at first. Kent Bailo, director of the U. Girls' Wrestling Association, is in town for the meet.