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This Contest Coverage brought to you by:
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Promoter Jon Lindsay tossed another of his now familiar NPC USA bashes at
Artemus Ham Hall on the campus of the University of Nevada Las
Vegas on the weekend of July 27-28. And on the women’s side of this monster event
53 contestants from border-to-border made a beeline for the four weight class
titles and the treasured overall crown as the NPC USA champion.
With what anyone would consider the widest variety of
physiques competing in virtually every weight class, judges found themselves in
deep dilemmas with regard to just how to arrive at a consistency in the top
placers of each class. Put simply it was a mixed bag of results, but that fact
also made for what every bodybuilding fan loves - questioning the judging decisions.
With no shortage of buzz, emanating throughout the auditorium and well into the
lobby, the final results fueled more than enough fire to create spirited
chatter as to what the idyllic look of a winning female bodybuilder should be –
an argument that is as old as the sport itself.
FULL WOMENS BODYBUILDING PHOTO GALLERY
The Lightweights
A field of nine contestants presented the first challenge
for judges when no two competitors bared even the slightest resemblance in
their physical comparisons. Physiques ranged from lean and slender to thick,
ripped, and highly defined. What to do?
Florida’s Galina Serdtsev helped the judges
make their final choice a unanimous one for the top spot by combining clean
bodylines, evenly developed muscularity and a distinctively eastern European
stage presence that was classy and at the same time mesmerizing. That
captivating combination proved to be just the ticket for Serdtsev’s claim on
the lightweight crown.
From Orlando,
Florida, Serdtsev’s family roots
trace back to Siberia, a reality that helped
contribute much to her beautifully choreographed and executed posing
routine. Last year at the NPC Nationals
in Miami, the
5-2, 113-pound physician’s assistant made her initial impact on the national
scene with a top five lightweight placing - so her victory here was not a total
surprise.
Fellow Floridian Beth Wachter chased Serdtsev to her win
with a unanimous nod from the judges as the runner-up. From North Palm Beach,
the 115-pound Wachter was highly defined with deep muscle separations. A
veteran competitor, Wachter has been a class winner at both the NPC Florida and
NPC Junior Nationals in the past.
Arizona’s
Tracy Witherspoon used her background in gymnastics and rodeo to lasso the
third place spot as the judges gave the 5-1, 112-pounder a matching trophy to
go with the same third-place position she captured at this event in 2006.
The Results
1-Galina Serdtsev,
Florida 5
2-Beth Wachter,
Florida 10
3-Tracy Witherspoon,
Arizona 15
4-Melinda Williamson,
Texas 20
5-Tricia Travis,
Arizona 26
6-Sharon Garrett,
North Carolina 28
7-Melissa Alvarado,
Arizona 37
8-Connie Everton,
Colorado 38
9-Natalie Barnett,
Kentucky 45
The Middleweights
Texan Jennifer Sedia brought one goal to Las Vegas for this year’s USA. She wanted to improve one place on her
runner-up finish in this same class at last year’s USA. Mission
accomplished. Using a greatly improved
level of general appearance and stage presence to go with her evenly balanced
physique and clean posing routine, Sedia topped the class gaining all 11
judging ballots. In doing so Sedia
became the fourth Texan to win the USA middleweight class following in the
capable footsteps of Dinah Anderson (1983), Vickie Gates (1993), and Tina
Chandler (who won this class in 2006).
Overjoyed with her victory, the best was yet to come for
this 34-year-old environmental specialist from Lubbock.
Running second to Sedia was Arizona dazzler Diana Tinnelle. Like Sedia,
Tinnelle also improved one place from the 2006 event when she placed third in
the MW class. A former figure competitor, Tinelle was exotic and displayed
confidence with a hot, sassy routine.
With more experience in her dieting prep as it applies to bodybuilding,
she is a strong bet as a future national-level winner.
Third went to Californian Kelly Dobbins. Continuing her outstanding comeback efforts
after last competing in 1998 when she won her class at the NPC California, the
5-2, 121-pound gym owner added her showing here to a string of victories that
included the NPC Emerald Cup and NPC California middleweight wins and an
overall victory at the NPC Contra Costa.
Dobbins showed excellent conditioning and nice muscular detail to earn
her placing.
The Results
1-Jennifer Sedia,
Texas 5
2-Diana Tinelle,
Arizona 10
3-Kelly Dobbins, California 15
4-Sally Taylor,
Arizona 20
5-Holly Robey, Nevada 25
6-Heidi Bagwell,
South Carolina 32
7-Rebecca Greaig,
Arizona 32
The Light-Heavyweights
Transplanted Californian Angie Salvagno, who now makes Port St. Lucie,
Florida home, became something
of a rarity with her victory in this year’s light-heavyweight class. Salvagno repeated her win in this class from
2006, and in doing so became only the second competitor in the 25-year history
of the NPC USA to win a weight class in two consecutive years (the other being
Colette Nelson as the HW USA champion in 2001 and ’02).
But Salvagno’s win did come easily. Her margin of victory
was based on a countback of the judges due to her being tied on points with
eventual runner-up Star Blaylock. Both
contestants totaled 10 points each.
Among the 11 judges, four named Salvagno as the winner, while Blaylock
received three nods for the top spot. It
doesn’t get any closer than that. To
Salvagno’s credit she repeated her solid conditioning from a year earlier, and
she needed every bit of that muscle quality to top Blaylock.
From Dallas,
Texas, Star Blaylock gave
Salvagno all she could handle with a beautifully balanced 5-4, 140 pound
physique. Outweighing Salvagno by five pounds, the added size gave Blaylock an
impressive look during comparisons. On the down side, the added weight may have
cost her the title as she lacked enough visible detail in her quad and
hamstrings to challenge Salvagno in the lower body. Blaylock’s stage presence
and first-rate posing routine, however, are destined to carry her to the pro
ranks when she goes the extra mile to cardio herself into ‘total’ shape.
Yet another Texan captured the third-place spot in this
class as San Angelo’s
Karen Choat crept into the top three for the first time at the national
level. As a light-heavyweight last year
Choat (who competed here at 5-3, 137 ¼), bounced upward from an eighth-place
NPC National finish, and a fifth-place NPC USA in 2006, to a well-deserved
finish among the top five. The former
track & field competitor also owned the best calves in 18-contestant field.
As a final note as to just how competitive this class was,
Karen Choat’s final point total was 18 points.
Fourth placer Bev DiRenzo checked in at 19, and fifth-placed Holly
Geerson talied 20!
The Results
1-Angie Salvagno,
Florida 10
2-Star Blaylock,
Texas 10
3-Karen Choat,
Texas 18
4-Beverly DiRenzo,
Florida 19
5-Holly Geerson,
Colorado 20
6-Christine Sabo,
Arizona 27
7-Kimberly Ferrell,
Indiana 38
8-Gina Spengler,
Nevada 39
9-Diana Cook, Florida 46
10-Tina Zampa,
California 50
11-Casey Daugherty,
Florida 53
12-Theresa Hendricks,
Virginia 63
13-Courtney Shar,
Texas 66
14-Roxanne Edwards, New
York 74
15-Akila Pervis, Arizona 75
Non-Placers
Jennifer Benda, California
Diana Feather, California
Julie Williams, Arizona
The Heavyweights
If there was a weight class at this year’s USA that caused
considerable head scratching, consternation, and confusion over the old bugaboo
of judging inconsistency it was the heavyweight class – and as fate would have
it, the largest category with 19 contestants.
Within this muscle-laden group lurked a host of impressively
developed competitors, many of whom were dramatically different in their
overall general appearance.
And no better example of this yoking of opposites existed
than between eventual winner Michele Neil, and runner-up Sheila Bleck. First, Neil packs 145 ½ pounds on her 5-4
frame, while Bleck at 5-7, weighed in at 157 pounds. From Tulsa,
Oklahoma, Neil was shrink-wrapped
from head to toe. The term bodyfat does not exist in her vocabulary. Bleck on
the other hand, while still muscular, possesses a more aesthetic overall look
and is a professional level poser. Side-by-side they were about as different as
could be imagined - both excellent in their own right. And when all was said and done by way of
scores, Neil topped Bleck by two points to win the class. For Bleck, who has
moved to Florida
from Oregon,
she crept ever closer to her goal of reaching the pro ranks after a pair of
third-place finishes at the USA
and Nationals in 2006. Neil has also been on a great run with a recent HW win
at the 2007 NPC Masters Nationals, to go with her runner-up HW finish at last
year’s USA.
It could be said that both are good enough to enter the pro ranks at this
point, but only Neil got the chance to advance in the posedown. If Bleck remains strong mentally and repeats
her efforts in Dallas,
she will be a strong favorite to reach the pros. More on Neil in a minute.
Meanwhile in third place Indiana’s Julia Stamper had a firm grip on
her trophy – and with good reason. Working as a police officer, Stamper can
also qualify as the poster girl for victims of judging inconsistencies. A year
earlier at the NPC Junior Nationals, Stamper found herself dusted to a last
place finish in the heavyweight class – not looking all that different from her
impressive 5-4, 144-pound look at this event. Obviously, she was ecstatic over
her finish, and accepted it gleefully, but the question remains, could her
overall look at the ’06 Junior Nationals really have been so bad as to warrant
finishing last? More fodder for buzz in
the chatrooms, no doubt.
The Results
1-Michele Neil,
Oklahoma
7
2-Sheila Bleck,
Florida 9
3-Julia Stamper, Indiana 11
4-Candy Canary, Oklahoma 22
5-Dianne Solomons, California 23
6-Bettina Kadet, Massachusetts 36
7-Joella Bernard, California
40
8-Kimm Winn, California 41
9-Gerri Deach, Washington 42
10-Gabrielle Nicander,
California 44
11-Bonnie Pappas,
Massachusetts 61
12-Rose Kasallis,
Nevada 62
13-Cindy Johnson,
California
65
14-Guilia Divina, California 67
15-Robyn Mentgen,
Illinois 72
Non-Placers
Tammy Jackson, California
Jody May, Texas
Yamile Marrero,
Florida
Brenda King, Tennessee
They Pose For the Pros
So, four competitors earned the right to posedown for the
single pro card available, and once again the quartet engaging one another in
their effort to win an overall title came down to four markedly different
physiques – each with their own particular qualities. With a range that included the sleek
lightweight lines of Galina Serdstev to Michele ‘Hard as Nails’ Neil. Not to
mention the two-time light-heavyweight
USA winner Angie Salvagno and that middleweight Texan –Jennifer Sedia –
ready to unwittingly play giant killer in the biggest posedown of her
bodybuilding career.
The final decision? Jennifer Sedia - a winner among four
competitors whose most evident traits were their dramatic physical
differences. One observer who gazed at
the foursome as they gathered their breath after the posedown said, “that
middleweight winner has what I would call ‘a quiet quality to her
physique’”. Maybe.
Jennifer Sedia’s mother reveled in the moment. “You know,”
she aid with a wide smile, “Jennifer has wanted to be like Rachel McLish since
she was 13 years old.” Now Jennifer Sedia is the 2007 NPC USA overall
champion. In 1980 Rachel McLish won the first United States Women’s
Bodybuilding Championships – an event that would become today’s NPC USA.
Sedia found it
difficult to speak after her victory, a little like the observer said, “she has
a quiet quality”. But her victory on
this night spoke louder than words.
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