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Age: 35

Day job: Information technology manager

Traczyk fell into cheerleading like this: One day at James Madison University, all of the campus clubs had promotional booths. Behind the cheerleading table, young men were tossing girls into the air, and as Traczyk paused to watch, the coach caught his eye and sent a couple of the prettier girls over to ask whether he was interested.

"I was in awe," Traczyk recalls.

This is Traczyk's fifth year cheering for the Ravens. In addition to being in shape, he says, cheerleaders must have a pretty strong backbone. If anyone questions cheerleading's status as a sport, he'll respond by saying, "Sure. if it was any easier, it would be called football."

"My guy friends always give me a hard time ... and then they see me on the field with all of the girls," Traczyk says, laughing. "And then suddenly I have the best job in the NFL."
Kenneth K. Lam, Baltimore Sun
Age: 35 Day job: Information technology manager Traczyk fell into cheerleading like this: One day at James Madison University, all of the campus clubs had promotional booths. Behind the cheerleading table, young men were tossing girls into the air, and as Traczyk paused to watch, the coach caught his eye and sent a couple of the prettier girls over to ask whether he was interested. “I was in awe,” Traczyk recalls. This is Traczyk’s fifth year cheering for the Ravens. In addition to being in shape, he says, cheerleaders must have a pretty strong backbone. If anyone questions cheerleading’s status as a sport, he’ll respond by saying, “Sure. if it was any easier, it would be called football.” “My guy friends always give me a hard time … and then they see me on the field with all of the girls,” Traczyk says, laughing. “And then suddenly I have the best job in the NFL.”
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Funny how they’re almost always — always — cut out of pictures. You might see a couple of their thick fingers, perhaps a taped wrist. But the shot is inevitably one of a petite cheerleader sailing through the air. How did she get there, hovering in the stadium air?

Thank the discreet human trampoline otherwise known as the team’s male cheerleaders — the 21 hardy men who not only enable those gravity-defying acrobatics but provide Baltimore’s team bragging rights as the only one in the NFL with a coed cheering squad.

No other hometown fans get to witness those flips, those throws — those nail-bitingly wobbly pyramids. Baltimore gets a sideline show no other team can provide. The Tennessee Titans also featured male “yell leaders,” as they called them, for a while, but dropped them in 2004, reportedly worrying about stunt liability.

“It’s hands-down more exciting,” Tina Galdieri, director of Ravens cheerleading, says of what the men allow the team to do. “It”s almost like Cirque du Soleil.”