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Edge of Sports
By Dave Zirin

In High School, I was a 5' 10" inch center for the fearsome Friends
Seminary Quakers in New York City. It wasn't pretty, but I lived for it
and didn't care if the opposing center could spit on my head. I just loved
sports. My walls were shrines to Magic Johnson, Lawrence Taylor, and Keith
Hernandez. Every stat, every record, and every rule existed only to be
memorized. Weekends were for playing ball until sunset.

But somewhere along the way, I got a life. 'Operation Desert Storm', and
the L.A. Riots burned across my TV screen. As the world seemed to turn
upside down, sports began to seem meaningless at best, and at worst,
against any concept of social justice. This became jarringly clear during
the 1991 Gulf War when I saw "my team's" mascot thrash a person in an Arab
suit at half court while the jumbo-tron encouraged chants of U-S-A.
Limping away from the arena, I concluded, that sports were part of the
problem, and cheering blindly was like going to see 'Rambo' to admire the
special effects while ignoring the Vietnamese villagers Stallone was
stamping out like bugs.

Then in 1996, a basketball player named Mahmoud Abdul Rauf refused to
stand for the National Anthem. Rauf believed the flag to be "a symbol of
oppression and tyranny," and was willing to suffer the consequences. His
courage was stunning, but even more shocking was the howling cries for his
head. When Rauf was suspended, some news reports resembled lynch mobs. But
others likened him to Muhammad Ali, whose title was stripped for being a
draft resistor during the Viet Nam war.

This was a history I barely knew. As Rauf began to buckle under the
tremendous pressure of right wing bombast, it became clear that our side
needed a history of the resistance in US pro sports. To aid this effort, I
started writing a column called Edge of Sports, and just completed my
first book "What's My Name, Fool? Sports and Resistance in the United
States."

When some friends back home heard what I was writing, a Friar's Club Roast
seemed to spontaneously generate. These guys seemed to magically morph
into a gaggle of Henny Youngmans in baggy jeans. "Pro Sports and radical
politics?" one budding Borscht Belter smirked. "That will make a helluva
pamphlet!" Or "What's your next book, Dick Cheney's Diet Tips? John
Ashcroft's Favorite Black History Moments?"

Everyone had a jibe. But my buddies are like Shaquille O'Neal's free
throws: simply way off. The history of how social struggles have exploded
onto the playing field is vibrant, thrilling and very real. More
importantly, it's a tradition that arms us with the ability to challenge
the dominant ideas in that swoosh adorned ivory tower . The problem is
that its political teeth have been so thoroughly extracted that the most
compelling parts of our history, the parts that have the most to show and
teach us today, reside forgotten on the ESPN cutting room floor.

For example, we may know that baseball was segregated until 1947. But we
don't know the story of Lester "Red" Rodney, the sports editor of the
Communist Party's newspaper the Daily Worker. Rodney ran his 1930s sports
page as an organizing center to fight for baseball's integration. This
campaign garnered over a million signatures, collected at ballparks around
the country. ["Red" Rodney is still with us at age 95, and interviewing
him for this book was an experience I will never forget].

We may know that Jackie Robinson was the first player to integrate
baseball. But we know him only as a kind of quiet suffering black saint,
who did it "the right way," under the paternal eye of Dodgers General
Manager Branch Rickey. We don't know him as the person who thought, "'To
hell with Mr. Rickey's noble experiment. To hell with the image of the
patient black freak I was supposed to create.' I could throw down my bat,
stride over to the dugout, grab one of those white sons of bitches, and
smash his teeth in with my despised black fist. Then I could walk away
from it all."

We may know that the great boxing champ Muhammad Ali refused to fight in
Viet Nam. But we don't know he consciously stood with the National
Liberation Front in Vietnam, - the resistance - saying, "The real enemy of
my people is here. I will not disgrace my religion, my people or myself by
becoming a tool to enslave those who are fighting for their own justice
freedom, and equality."

We may know about the famed Black Power Salute, of Tommie Smith and John
Carlos at the 1968 Olympics. But we don't know that they wore beads to
protest lynching, went without shoes to protest poverty, or that John
Carlos wore his shirt open because as he said to me, "I was representing
shift workers, blue-collar people, and the underdogs. The people whose
contributions to society are so important, but don't get recognized."

We may know about Billie Jean King's "Battle of the Sexes" tennis match
against Bobby Riggs at the Astrodome. But we don't know how intertwined
that tennis match was with the fight for Title IX, one of the enduring
victories of the women's liberation movement of which King was proudly a
part. We also don't know that King was far more than a symbol. She also
started a union for women's tennis players to fight for equal pay.

We need to know this history because it is a living history - which is
precisely what makes it so threatening. As Carlos said to me, "So much is
the same as it was in 1968. Look at Mississippi or Alabama. It hasn't
changed from back in the day. Look at the city of Memphis and you still
see blight up and down. You can still see the despair. It's alive"

He's right. But it's also alive anytime athletes today attempt to use
their platform to speak on social issues or draw inspiration from
struggles in the street. It's alive when NBA Most Valuable Player Steve
Nash says, "The war in Iraq is based on oil," while wearing a t- shirt
that reads "No War! Shoot For Peace." It's alive when then-Toronto Blue
Jays slugger Carlos Delgado made clear that he wouldn't stand on the steps
during the seventh inning stretch to God Bless America because the war in
Iraq is "murder based on lies". It's alive every time when the NBA's Etan
Thomas shows up at anti-death penalty events to read his slam poetry;
poetry that calls out the racism of the system in utterly stark terms. And
it's alive when the US Congress feared calling Barry Bonds to testify on
steroids for concern that he would say to them what he has been saying to
reporters, namely "Why is steroids cheating but making a shirt in Korea
for 50 cents and selling it here for $150 isn't?"

Knowing this history positions us to support and embrace athletes who go
out on a political limb, risking their careers for principle. This method
allows us not only to engage and embrace the Etan Thomases, Carlos
Delgados, and other 21st century Athletic Rebels but also the fans that
thrill to their exploits.

My friends believe that having a "some kind of theory" or analysis drains
the life out of sports. The opposite is in fact the case. By confronting
the messages pumped out through our play, we can dissect what we like,
what we dislike, and begin to challenge sports - and our society - to
change.

When warplanes fly overhead we can ask how many physical education classes
are cut to pay for each Blue Angel.

When college athletes are pilloried for taking under- the-table payoffs,
we can ask whose blood, sweat, and tears paid for the brand spanking new
enormo-dome that grace their campuses.

When insanely sexist commercials trade on women's oppression for the high
cause of selling beer, we can make clear that this has no place in sports.

When the announcers on Fox become as aghast as a Southern belle when a
touchdown dancer gets raunchy, we can ask why a network that pays Bill
O'Reilly millions and promotes shows like Who's Your Daddy? and The
Littlest Groom has the right to be the purity police.

When our cities are soaked by sleazy stadium deals, we can stand up as
sports fans and say, "Hey, we love baseball, but I'm not going to give a
billionaire a $350 million present for the privilege of watching it."

By speaking out for the political soul of the sports we love, we do more
than just build a fighting left that stands for social justice. We also
begin to impose our own ideas on the world of sports - a counter morality
to compete with the rank hypocrisy of the pro leagues. These are ideas
that can embrace and cheer competition. That can appreciate the artistic
talents of athletes and the strategy of coaches and players alike. That
can thrill to seeing Barry Bonds swinging a bat, or Michael Vick shredding
a defense, or Mia Hamm kicking a soccer ball. But unlike the mainstream
sports jabber, it's a morality that recognizes male and female athletes -
and all women - as human beings with minds as well as bodies.

It also needs to understand that the incentive of athletes to speak out
for social justice lies not in their individual brilliance but in our
ability to build a struggle outside the arena and in the streets. If we
want more Muhammad Alis, more John Carlos', and more Billie Jean Kings -
if we want to see a gay male athlete have the courage to risk his neck by
coming out - then we need to build a broader movement for social justice
outside the arena, so our "heroes" will also have people to look up to.

In that fight we need every drop of history, experience, and tradition we
can get our hands on. As Tommie Smith himself said about his famed Black
Power salute, "It's not something I can lay on my shelf and forget about.
My heart and soul are still on that team, and I still believe in
everything we were trying to fight for in 1968. [It] has not been resolved
and will be part of our future."

___

Dave Zirin's new book "What's My Name Fool? Sports and Resistance in the
United Statesis now in stpres.. You can receive his column Edge of Sports,
every week by e- mailing [EMAIL PROTECTED] Contact him at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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