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Better Than The Boys

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Gabriella Farrell is unlike any young lady you’ve ever met. Growing up in Levittown, the now Massapequa resident played for the Levittown Red Devils. When she grew bored of cheerleading at the age of 9, she found a new sport: fooGirlPower_051816Btball. Not many girls dream of running a football down the field, but for Farrell, it was more fun than anything else.
“Being a cheerleader for my brother’s football team, I remember always being so jealous of how much fun the boys had while I was on the sidelines cheering,” said Farrell. “Once I told my parents that I wanted to play football, my mom announced it to all of the team parents proudly. My dad became a coach my first year and made the transition from cheerleading to football easier for me. He’s always been my number one supporter, just as much my mom.”

The now 19-year-old and her brother are one year apart, so during her first year of football, they played on the same team, a welcome comfort for the new girl playing with the boys.

“He never treated me differently from our teammates, even when the other boys on my team treated me differently. My brother always went really hard on me during hitting drills because I was the smallest one on my team and a girl, so other boys would often take it easy on me,” said Farrell, adding that the boys were under the mentality that they couldn’t hit her because she was a girl. “It just made the struggle of being a girl and a football player a little harder, but that never stopped me.”

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Gabriella Farrell

From a young age, Farrell knew that being a girl didn’t make her any less capable of being a football player, but knew she had to prove it so others could see for themselves that she was their equal.

“My brother definitely made me a better football player so I’ve always been grateful to have him on my team my first year,” she said.

In 2008, Farrell moved to Massapequa Park where she tried out and made the boys football team at Berner Middle School, but it wasn’t an easy road.

“Being raised in Levittown and growing up in that town, it was not only well-known but accepted, even respected, that I played football for many years,” said Farrell, who felt like an outcast for doing what she loved when she arrived in Massapequa. “It had been six years since a girl tried out for the boys’ football team in Massapequa and I had to wait to get cleared by the board of education before even being allowed to try out.”

She eventually made Berner’s football team and was proud of herself for doing so, but said the season was very difficult for her.
“I never really felt like part of the team so it was very uncomfoGirlPower_051816Frtable for me,” she said. “I didn’t try out the following year because I was very discouraged in my new school.”
Looking back on the experience, Farrell realizes that it was the most adversity she had ever faced and overcome.

“Most girls my age, younger, or even older than me thought it was awesome I played football growing up,” said Farrell, who graduated and then tried out and made the New York Sharks Professional Women’s Football team, under the Independent Women’s Football League (IWFL).

In her first year, she was a First Team All Star for the 2015 Eastern All Star team as well as Defensive MVP and Linebacker of the Year for the Sharks. Farrell was invited to attend the 2016 World Women’s Tackle Football Games (WWTFG), held at the New Orleans Saints Training Facility. More than 200 women from around the world attended and were coached by NFL coaches for the week, including Dr. Jen Welter of the Arizona Cardinals, the first female coach in the NFL, who serves as Farrell’s role model.

“She is an inspiration to me for paving the way, standing for and fighting for all women football players and every young girl, giving them the opGirlPower_051816Gportunity and fair chance to play football,” said Farrell of Welter. “I have never felt more touched by or been surrounded by so many amazing and positive people at once.”

If you are a young girl in Farrell’s situation, she has a message for you.

“Don’t listen to anyone that doesn’t believe you can…prove them wrong,” she said. “Set goals so big you have to grow into the person that can achieve them. Make being uncomfortable your comfort zone, because that’s how growth happens and how you reach your dreams.”

Farrell is currently halfway through her second season with the Sharks with a record of 5-0. To see more of Farrell and her New York Sharks, visit www.nysharksfootball.com.