Thursday, March 21, 2019

MARCH MADNESS & BALL SPORTS

Dateline Kauai:  When we arrived last week, we discovered "our" beach had been invaded by a huge number of very fit people -- very tall bikini-ed females and very 6-pack ab'ed males here for the 25th Annual Dino Beach Volleyball Tourney.  Dino, being short for dinosaur, because it's sort of a swan song event for "older" players who may have been pros, or at least very good players, at one point (Who knew?  Professional volleyball?), but who now play for fun with younger, currently pro and semi-pro stars of the sport.  Teams have to be a mix of ages, adding up to 80 years or over as I understand it.  I might have the math wrong, but you get the idea.  It's all in good fun.  There was a very mellow vibe of players, family, friends, and fans from across the U.S. gathered 'round each of the four "courts" cheering their favorite team on.  Tents with commercial logos were set up to sell stuff, vintage rock music was played, laughter and applause erupted on a regular schedule.  It was festive.

A couple days later we went on a hike along the water's edge at Shipwreck Beach and then up the cliffs towering above the water where one part of the trail skirts a championship golf course.  Another type of ball sport.  It got me thinking....

First, Disclaimer:  I am a sports fan.  I've spent most of my life cheering for a home team (Cubs, Sox, Bears, Bulls, Mariners, Sonics, Seahawks, Sounders) and for my athlete husband (even when still dating back in the day) and for my athletic sons.   So I am not here as an anti-sports prude.  I love sports.  I'm a great spectator and fan.

That said, most ball sports are rather silly when you get right down to it.  As I walked along the golf course the other day, I made a mental list of the ball-centric games I'm most familiar with, listing "silliness" from least to most:

10.  Croquet -- A sentimental choice for sure, but still a classic. My grandparents back yard; summer Sundays; all ages can play; colorful balls.  Wickets!!!  Slightly upper crust British origins that make one feel fancy.  No special clothing required -- suits to dresses to shorts to bikinis.  What's not to like?  Nothing silly about it!  Right?

9.  Baseball -- Ahhh....the Boys of Summer.  It is the most childlike of games.  You choose up teams, then put one of them in various positions in the "field" and give them a mitt to catch the ball so they don't hurt their hands.  The other team lines up and takes turns hitting a ball with a bat and then has to run to across 3 bases before reaching "home" back where they stood to bat in the first place.  The other team can stop this progress by catching  the hit ball and stepping on a base before the runner gets there and then the runner has to sit down and eat some sunflower seeds.  The big thrill is when a hitter hits the ball so far and so fast that no one can catch it and it's a "homer" and he gets to run all the way around while people go wild cheering and ordering more beer and eating another hotdog.  But there is also a lot of "down time" since it's actually very hard to hit that ball, so a lot of time the batter swings and misses or hits it a little bit, but it doesn't count, and during these times you can take a nap and not miss a thing.  Hub once pitched a no-hittter, which I am obligated to note here.  I have spent a lot of time at baseball games, from Little League to Mariner's season ticket holder, so while I admit to the silliness of it, I do love it.  Also, Ernie Banks. Also, Ken Griffey Jr.

8.  Football -- Legalized gladiators.  Big, handsome, athletic, charismatic players.  Game day is a party, state fair, march, rally, concert all rolled into one.  Rabid fans, perky cheerleaders, brats and beer.  One team has the ball and tries to get it past the goal line of the other team.  The other team tries to stop that from happening by knocking opponents to the ground.  War analogies are not off the mark.  It's rough and violent and players sometimes get seriously hurt.  Plus, the rules.  There are so many rules in this game that they have to stop after every play to sort out who broke a rule that time.  Sometimes many rules are broken at once and each team get a penalty.  It's a lot of go, stop, go, stop, stand around and wait, then go again before stopping again.  For some reason, it's the most popular sport in America, especially for those who drive big, rugged pick-up trucks.  Shamefully, I like it too.

7.  Basketball -- Hoop. Net. Ball.  Pretty easy concept. Back and forth, back and forth, trying to put the ball in the basket more times than the other team.  Rules are easy to understand though and it's played  indoors in winter, so it's cozy and warm.  The players are super tall people in great athletic condition, so sort of an exotic breed to me of the 5'3" don't-like-to-run persuasion.  Plus, two words:  Michael Jordan.  I was a super fan back in the day.  When he retired from basketball, so did I, so my fandom is dated, but I hear there are still good players in the game.  And every spring the college championship is determined with elimination tournaments called March Madness.  You pick a bracket of teams to bet on or something, which is a sport within a sport, so there's that silliness too.

6.  Soccer -- Son-Two, a huge fan, will hate me for this, but I still don't get it even after many tries.  I am obviously deficient in some appreciation gene, because I know "futball" is the most popular sport in the world.  Still, it's just lots of guys running up and down a field (in colorful outfits, granted) constantly kicking that ball around and occasional bouncing it off their heads but unable to touch it with their hands, which would make things oh so much easier!  During all this running, the time ticks away -- but not really because just when you think the game (OK, match) is blessedly over, you discover that "stoppage time" has been seemingly arbitrarily added on and they keep going!  Sometimes a player takes a dramatic dive to the ground and writhes in agony for awhile and you think they will need to be carted off the field of play, but no, suddenly they just jump up and keep going, which begs the question about acting classes being part of training.  Also, the game can end in a Nil-Nil (0-0) tie and you wonder why you were there.  For the singing I think.

5. Volleyball/Beach Volleyball -- PTSD for me on this one, since it was one of the Girls PE games we were forced to play in high school and at which I sucked (as I did at all of the games, but this one was particularly cruel).  There are servers and spikers and more than one person on a side has to touch the ball, either bouncing it up with their wrists or their fingertips (How many finger sprains?  Countless!) and then everyone switches sides and someone calls out the score so you actually have to keep track of that in your head and sometimes people are so into it they actually fall down trying to get to the ball, which, what?, who cares???  (Part of my sucking was not caring.)  Wearing a swimsuit is an advantage over the Girls PE outfit we had to wear that was something out of the 19th century, but I still see no point to the game, either indoors or out.

4.  Racketball/Squash -- Something to do at the Y.  After work.  With the guys.  Instead of civilized classes like Zumba or Yoga.

3.  Rugby -- Just an excuse for playing in the mud and getting in a scrum, which I believe has homoerotic overtones, but I could be wrong.  Still...all that pushing and shoving and touching! Plus, where's your helmet???

2. Ping Pong -- Are  you over 14 years old?  STOP PLAYING THIS GAME!  Come up out of your parents' Rec Room and get a life!

1.  Golf -- Seriously goofy game.  It's very expensive to buy all the equipment and "green fees" (admission to the course) can cost an arm and leg.  It takes half a day to play.  You grab a big club and whack a teensy ball that seems to fly off into the ether, never to be seen again until you hop in a little motorized cart to go off in search of it.  It could be anywhere -- in the weeds, the sand, the water, occasionally on the grass.  Then you whack it again and again trying to get it first near and then into a little hole in the ground.  Puhleeze.  You must have a lot of time to kill.  I understand there is drinking to be done when it's over.  (19th hole - cute.)  I say just admit to wanting to gulp an Arnold Palmer without actually having to play one of his courses.

At least, that's the view from here...©








4 comments:

  1. I do not understand how people get so involved in sports. They bore me to death. I understand the games---that's not it---I just prefer when I spend time doing something for leisure that I have something concrete to show for the time. Handcrafts.

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    1. I know several people who don't like sports. I've always had fun cheering for the home team and enjoying the camaraderie of family and friends enjoying a game together. I know everyone has a different idea of how best to use leisure time. You are much more productive than I, I'm sure! It especially feels like a waste of time when we lose. LOL

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  2. Your rankings and observations work for me. I was a baseball fan as a kid. My dad had played semi-pro and my mom's brother was just a fanatic. I attended as many of our Class C team games as I could -- at the ball park I could still get the under-12 admission at 14 -- and even followed the majors, but there were only 16 teams then. I cheered the Mariners during the "Miracle Season" but that's about it, though I can still fill out a scorecard. The other half was convinced that if I just watched enough football I would learn to understand and enjoy it. He never understood that wasn't something I wished to do. It's ideal now. Our neighbors are big Seahawks fans, so I just listen for the cheers, then check my phone for the score. It's possible my inability to play games where I had to hit moving objects was because of the lazy eye and lack of binocler vision; but I also sucked at golf and bowling where the target stood still. Watching basketball on TV seems a pointless exercise, though I did enjoy the half-dozen or so Jazz games with John Stockton and The Karl Malone I saw on the court when we lived in Utah.

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    1. Bowling! I forgot about bowling! I was actually on a league one time for the company I worked for when just out of high school. What a hoot that was! My highest game ever was 187 in a tournament and I won a trophy! It's funny because I was playing hungover from a party the night before and just went up and tossed the ball randomly so I could sit down again with head in hands. I guess being "loose" and not trying too hard was the key. LOL

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