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Lillie Mae
Weight: 140 pounds
Hometown: Moody, Texas
The first impression fans have of Lillie Mae is deceiving. Yes, the powerfully built Texan is down-to-earth, easy-going, quiet and unassuming. But when this young wrestler is pushed, she pushes back. Hard.
"I have no problem putting people in their place," she says. "Where I come from, we don't tolerate a lot of big talk unless you can back it up with action. Just because I'm new to wrestling doesn't mean you can walk all over me."
Since starting her wrestling career in 2008, Lillie Mae has worked for some of the top wrestling federations in the Lone Star State and visited the rough and tumble rings of LLF in Monterrey, Mexico, where the battles are particularly intense. Her home base is the New School Federation near Waco, where she was recruited to train by Ray the Voice.
"I am very lucky to have trained with such great talent," Lillie Mae explains. "Not many people get opportunities like this, but I am forever grateful to everyone who helped me along the way. I hope one day I can help someone like these people have helped me."
Lillie Mae more than holds her own against women with years of experience because she has trained with and frequently been required to wrestle tough male grapplers. This makes her a particularly dangerous because she often has had to overcome taller, heavier and stronger foes.
Along the way, she has developed a devastating finishing maneuver. The "Biscuit Press" sounds funny, but it's a reverse layout DDT that leaves opponents stunned and defenseless in the center of the squared circle. Once Lillie Mae has delivered the "Biscuit Press," few wrestlers of either sex are strong enough to rise from the canvas.
"I know I still have a lot to learn, but let me tell you something," says Lillie Mae defiantly. "I'm coming to Magnificent Ladies Wrestling for one reason and one reason only. I'm coming there to win. I'm serving notice right now, to the other women in MLW and female wrestlers around the world, that I am a force to be reckoned with."
Opponents who lock up with Lillie Mae One of the nastiest insults in Texas is to say someone is "all hat and no cattle." People don't say that about Lillie Mae. . .at least not within earshot.
You can see more of Lillie online at MySpace.
Credit: Jeff Borden

