The blaze of summer sun kept me homebound this weekend,
locked up in the cool of earthwarming, home-cooling air. And whilst I waited
for some late night West Coast baseball, I had nothing better to do during the
day than flip between soccer and golf.
I watch soccer on occasional whims, and golf exactly four
times a year (I won’t bother mentioning which four). By the end of Sunday, I
came to some conclusions as to where my preferences lie.
*
While the rest of the world has married soccer (or football,
as they’ll have it), the U.S. has maintained its steadfast bachelorhood towards
it, preferring to occasionally flirt with the notion of hooliganism but always
opting for further conquests of tantalizing athletic strange. There’s always
time to settle down.
What I mean is, we get into soccer when there are high
chauvinistic stakes, when chants of U-S-A get to be our vuvuzela counterparts.
Otherwise, we stick to our four major team sports and sprinkle in some NASCAR
here and there. That is not to say there aren’t rabid soccer fans in the
States, and I don’t mean to discount them, but if they’d look beyond their
suburban-East Coast, private school surroundings, they may notice that the rest
of the country only cares if national pride is on the line. We don’t, for the
most part, own any of those fancy scarves.
That said, I initially figured there’d be little to entice
me into watching any of the UEFA European Championships.
*
Meanwhile, the U.S. Open was taking place on the West Coast
on a seemingly 45º angle. Even before the match started, players’ danders were
collectively up about the difficulty of the Olympic Clubs’ course. It was too
fast. It was falling into Lake Merced. It was haunted. Okay, I made the last
one up (but the fog was very Scooby
Doo-esque).
But golf is, by all accounts, an international game with
international players and an international following. And given that it was a
major, I was in for the long haul.
*
In the matches at Euro 2012, I quickly found my favorites. I
am one of those sad customers who need a rooting interest if I’m to watch a
good bit of soccer, so why not stick to chauvinism’s close kin: pride in
ancestral nationalities.
I’m a mutt of Northern European descent, so I narrowed my
options to two: England and Netherlands (I would have taken Ireland, but boy
did they get spanked early).
Nonetheless, I don't mean to belabor my viewer experience vis-à-vis my rooting interests. Instead, it’s more
what I witnessed of the attendants of the matches in host countries Poland and
Ukraine.
Enthusiasm about soccer is not noteworthy outside of the
U.S. It’s a given, in fact. Every crowd member’s dress corresponds to their
team’s colors. Some don face paint. Many have flags. (Still, nothing new or
surprising, but these are the facts.) Most notable is their tendency to not
shut up throughout the entirety of the two 45 minute halves. They live the
agony and ecstasy that is, as Mitt Romney would say, sport with every second of action on the pitch.
*
In San Francisco, the amateurs and card carriers 3-putted
their ways into or out of contention while courtesies were bestowed upon each
equally. Minimally, there are golf claps. For former champs, there are hoots
and hollers. For the golf celebs, there are the requisite shouts of get in
the hole for every fucking swing (which are
criminally annoying, especially on par 5 tee shots). And, of course, the
players oblige with doffed caps and…well, it pretty much ends there.
Otherwise, the players are thrown by the slightest gallery* movement; they have the hearing of snow
owls—stopping mid backswing because of the noise of a camera shutter 200 yards
away; they can feel the breeze kick up from 4mph to 4.5mph and have to start
their routine over…from the beginning.
Further, they actually have someone toting their shit for
them from hole to hole. The visuals on this are terrible. I’ve never been a
caddie, but I’ve known caddies. Caddies are kids with shitty summer jobs who
schlep golf clubs (which cost more than what the caddies will make all summer) for
assholes who get to take 4-hour lunch breaks on a Tuesday.
Now, I know that professional caddies are paid well, and they know their golf. They serve a real purpose. As I said, the visuals are terrible, especially when you see the leaderboard complete with the flags of player origins.
Now, I know that professional caddies are paid well, and they know their golf. They serve a real purpose. As I said, the visuals are terrible, especially when you see the leaderboard complete with the flags of player origins.
*
Portugal v. Denmark was as amazing as Netherlands v. Germany
was disappointing. Outside of 5 minutes of play in the 2nd half, the
Netherlands looked sleepy—not tired—they actually looked like they needed a
team nap. Sweden v. Ukraine was interesting, though I missed the beginning and
thought the bright yellow of the Ukraine squad was the familiar yellow of
Sweden. I was surprised by there being a Swede named Shevchenko. Then I
realized my mistake.
I missed Greece v. Russia but was delighted by the results
(the Greeks could use some good news for a change). The French, sadly, took it
to their hosts 2-0. Poland v. Russia, in what was a battle between the two most
depressing national anthems (so many minor chords!), finished without a winner,
though team members of both countries, in unison with their respective fans,
sang every oppressive sounding word of the aforementioned anthems. Meanwhile, a
three-way battle raged outside the Warsaw stadium between Russian fans and
Polish fans, and those same fans versus the Polish police**.
I admittedly didn't watch (and couldn’t have watched had I
wanted to) all the matches. But in each—so far, anyway—fan fervor is ceaseless
and unbridled and unquestionably genuine.
*
The flags of the leaderboard read, with few exceptions, like
a who’s who in Imperialist subjugators and subjugates: England, Northern
Ireland, Republic of Ireland, Republic of South Africa, USA, and Australia.
Sprinkled in the mix was a Swede, German, Korean, and Belgian, representing branches
from a tree not rooted in British Imperialism. But this got me thinking about
how foreign (pun alert!) it is to see athletes from places like RSA, Northern
Ireland, or even Fiji (which, by the way, where the hell has Vijay Singh
been?). And it’s not just one or two people from these places, the leaderboards
of every PGA event are peppered with golfers from these countries. These
countries are well represented amongst
the list of major winners. And that’s why the caddies are an ugly reminder.
That’s why I’ll always feel a disconnect from professional golfers. They are not like me. Most (Vijay Singh a notable exception) have
lived highly privileged lives, attending golf academies, receiving new clubs at
Christmas the way the rest of us receive a new pair of Levi’s, and they have
other people do the heavy lifting. They can’t tolerate the slightest
discomfort, turning peevish if someone in their periphery decides to scratch
his nose at the wrong time.
I should note that, with full awareness, I don’t personally
know any professional golfers. In fact, many seem like decent guys. But the
spectacle that is a professional golf tournament is too often too off-putting
for me to tolerate.
And then there’s Tiger Woods…
*
Not too long after the Euro 2012 tournament concludes, the
London Olympics will begin. The grand marshal of the acceptable chauvinism
parade, the Olympics represents a time when national pride is the point (all that nonsense about sportsmanship and
tests of one’s self can go to hell; I want gold, and I want my
country to win it). With the U.S. men’s
soccer team unceremoniously sitting this one out (way to go, boys!), I’ll be
forced once again to find rooting interests within my Northern European lineage
in order to enjoy some Americanless soccer. I likely won’t watch all the games,
but I’ll watch some. And though I’ll watch sans scarf, jersey and face paint,
I’ll watch willingly, dreaming of the day the U.S. men’s team truly arrives on
the world pitch.
*
I’ll forego the tiresome psychoanalysis of Tiger Woods. In
fact, I won’t even comment on his U.S. Open play. I am one of those fair-weather fans who is more likely to
tune in on a Sunday if Tiger is within striking distance. He’s the exemplar of
golfing excellence for my generation. I appreciate that. My issue with Tiger
has nothing to do with his poor weekend play at the Olympic Club. My real issue
with Tiger goes back to the beginning of April at the Master’s.
The Augusta National Golf Club, as has been thoroughly
reported, still does not allow women to be members. With its quaint Southern
beauty (each of the 18 holes taking the name of flowering tree), Augusta’s
Masters Tournament is the belle of the ball when it comes to the four majors.
They admitted black members for the first time in 1990. Yes, that is correct.
1990.
Tiger, as has been pointed out, had a black father who
firmly nudged his son into the game of golf. His influence on Tiger is not a
matter for debate. And though Tiger’s childhood environment was not in league
with that of most black athletes, there is the undeniable fact that Tiger is not like most of his competitors. Tiger has done a
remarkable job of making his race a non-issue on the PGA tour. Even with the
occasional taunts—like those of former Masters champ, Fuzzy Zoeller—Woods has
been steadfast in making the game his only focus (the last couple of years
being a particular—and at times, albatross-like—burden on him for reasons that
have been too enthusiastically covered by sports and mainstream media alike).
Yet, Tiger’s race is
part of his identity. He can’t simply hide behind the legacy of Jim Dent. Most
people wouldn’t even know who that is. Dent’s best finish in a major was 34th
at the PGA Championship. Jim Dent was not a threat to white dominance in the
game of golf. In fact, he couldn’t even play in his hometown’s major tournament
for most of his life***.
*
A new breed of hate has reared its ugly head in European
football circles. Modest efforts to curb it can be seen in the Unite Against
Racism signs along the midfield boards at
Euro 2012. Hard economic times have been blamed for what many pass off as a
mere pointed hooligany. I’m not sure what to make of it or what this says about
the bubbling fires that always appear to be just under Europe’s surface. At
least officials with some say have decided to act, if only in token gestures.
Planting the seed of the correct message, to say the least, is better than
burying your head in the sand trap.
*
Tiger has mostly (I say mostly because I’m sure there are
still off-color comments made in clubhouses and galleries across the
country…most assuredly in Augusta) removed the race debate from the game, and
with the persistent successes of Japanese, Korean, and Spanish players, the
diversity issue—as far as ethnicity—only further continues to be laid to rest.
Tiger could, should he choose, take one badly needed and completely justified
stand against Augusta National and boycott one year’s play at the Masters
unless women are permitted membership.
This is not a call for women to be a part of the Masters
Tournament (Michelle Wie stay away…as far as I know, you’re still not very good
at golf). But the exclusivity of Augusta National reeks so poorly of the old
aristocratic South that I can’t help but hate the Masters more and more each
year. And when I start thinking about the old South, I start thinking about
oppression, which hearkens back to America’s sullied years; which calls to mind
apartheid in South Africa; which suggests the ugliness of the clashes of the
Irish Republican Army and Ulster Defence Force; then British rule over Fiji;
exiles to Australia (only to then adversely affect the aborigines); and so on
and so on.
Besides, in the rehabilitation of Tiger’s image—most notably
in the eyes of women—this would do his legacy as much good as winning another
major. But he refuses to be a lightning rod for any criticism, even if that
criticism is rooted in horribly archaic worldviews.
Regrettably, none of the other golfers care to take on the
issue either. Just like the balls they strike, they’re looking for the path of
least resistance.
*
Sometimes you have to consider the company you keep, and in
terms of golf and soccer, if I’m to grab a couple of drinks in the clubhouse
bar or the neighborhood pub, you can keep your Fresca. I’ll have me a pint of
ale.
I may be the stereotypical American who prefers hockey,
baseball, football and basketball, but there’s a certain ethos in soccer that I
learn to respect more each year.
Golf remains a game for a different tax bracket.
*And what pretension that
golfers have galleries, not crowds or audiences or fans, as though the spectators are
attending a museum of moving sport.
** Good god, there is bad
blood in that part of the world. There were even some German fans injured
and/or arrested. This riot was just a quick French surrender away from being
the biggest WWII reenactment ever.
*** Jim Dent was born in
Augusta, Georgia.
-Kyle Wills
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