Gotta love it! So what if the Americans go a bit bananas over basketball this time of year. What’s not to love about basketball ? I am the biggest fan overseas, though I never fill in the NCAA brackets and rarely know who is rated in the Top 20. I have so many favorites; I always pick a winner. I love the Big Ten, naturlich. I love the overdog, like UConn, and the underdog, like Butler. I love all colors! The red and white of Illinois State, the purple and gold of University Wisconsin- Stevens Point (my daughter’s old team,) the orange and blue of Macalester (my son’s team.)
UWSP women made it to the NCAA Elite Eight. ISU Redbirds got knocked out in the N.I.T. semi finals. I joined the millions checking game results on Internet as soon as my feet hit the floor every morning. And if I burn the midnight oil, I can hook up to the game’s live stats or on-line video (seven hour time difference in Switzerland.)
Every year is filled with drama - broken hearted losers who sacrificed just as much as the ecstatic victors. Everyone anticipates beating the odds, knowing on any given day a Cinderella team can upset the shoo in. That is what makes the Big Dance so exciting.
The way I see it everyone is a winner. In 2010 men follow women’s college ball and boys request female hoop stars’ autographs. Families, friends, neighborhoods, cities and states support female athletes in packed arenas. Today little girls grow up dreaming of starring in their own Final Four.
Yet only yesterday society forbid females’ presence on any playing field. The full court game was considered too strenuous until my former ISU coach, Jill Hutchinson’s, dissertation proved a woman’s heart would not explode by playing 5-on-5 basketball, leading to the official rule change in 1970. Girls never got off the bench, until 1972, when Title IX passed requiring equal opportunity - regardless of race or gender - in publicly funded schools. So what if it took another decade until funding caught up. It’s showtime baby!
We have come a long way from a day when women were relegated to sideline because medical professionals maintained playing sports could cause a girl to collapse in the vapors. Every March along with the players of the day, I applaud the pioneers, coaches like Jill Hutchinson, Vivian Stringer, Pat Summitt, who fought so hard for the rights female college athletes enjoy today.
I have a 54-year-old buddy still kickin’ butts 3 on 3 in Boston, a sister making lay ups in Minneapolis, a daughter shooting hoops between her hospital rounds, a niece in college racing across hills in Wisconsin and a niece in high school playing, get this, tackle rugby.
So go purple, go gold, go, red, white, and blue! Go Pointers, go Redbirds, go Scotts. Go fans. Place your bets. Fill your brackets. I’ll put my money down on a sure thing. Everytime. Women. No one should go home feeling defeated. Win or lose today, women will reign on center court again tomorrow. Go girl! Bring it on. March Madness 2011! Gotta love it !
Showing posts with label basketball. Show all posts
Showing posts with label basketball. Show all posts
Saturday, April 10, 2010
Monday, January 18, 2010
Supporting the Team Long Distance
I am hung over from the midnight match, manning 2 computers
to watch my son’s 3 o’clock college
game live on-line at 10 pm Euro time.
Squinting at a stop/start video picture, the size of a deck of cards, on
one screen while scrolling down another tracking “delayed” live stats, is
almost more frustrating than no game connection at all.
After leading, Nic’s team lost in the last second. I shout, swear and slap the desk. Why
stay up all night to follow a losing team during a losing season especially when
my son plays only minutes? Because
I feel honored that he suited up even just to sit the bench. He offered me a chance to be a part of
sport USA, which I sacrificed when I moved abroad.
Ironically, I left States in
pursuit of a better life, at least for a female basketballer out of a job. When my pro team folded, I flew to
Paris where I was so lost I might as well have been blindfolded. After two years in Germany, a car
accident ended my career. Now, a never
day goes by without throbbing between my shoulder blades, in my low back, and
at the base of my skull due to a broken spine. Though it’s been 3 decades since I last drove the baseline,
no physical pain compares to my heartache every time I see a hoop.
Fate played a nasty trick. I gave
up my family and homeland in pursuit of the right
to play basketball, but that privilege disintegrated when my body failed
me. I forfeited my own right, as
well as, those of my children.
Whereas Americans relive their athletic exploits through their offspring,
I bore my children abroad where sports never mattered the same way. Even though Nic and Nat, son and
daughter of a semi pro volley ball and a pro b-ball player, inherited our
athletic prowess, raised in France and Switzerland, they never had the same opportunities
as American kids who learned how to give-and-go in kindergarten.
To send them back to the States to play college is a long
shot; yet they rise to the challenge.
Guilty of imposing my goals, I rationalize that being part of a team in
the competitive American atmosphere will make them better prepared for the
reality of the work world. But
will it? Or am I merely trying to
resurrect my old dream and play again by standing on their strong, young legs?
Had I been able to play a few more seasons in Europe, and enjoy
club ball into middle age, would I feel less frustrated? My interrupted final season, like
unfinished business, haunts me with a loss so profound nothing fills it, not
coaching, teaching, writing, nor even marriage and motherhood. Now with my body racked by pain, I lay
in bed, staring at the pine ceiling of my Swiss home, praying, « Help me
find another purpose. » From
as far back as I can remember, I lived to run, jump and play; the rest was just
background music for my own “break” dance. Each day, like a mantra, I repeat « Focus on what you can
do, not on what you cannot!»
Just Do It!
So I stumble, fight to stand and cheer long distance, «Go
team!» Real players never lose;
they learn. And then step back on
the court.
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