Long time coming - new games, new sport
Brad Alan Lewis
Sydney - At the sound of the opening whistle, the American team,
led by captain Julie Swail, swam furiously from the U.S. side of the
pool. Charging from the other side of the pool was the team from the
Netherlands, led by Karin Kuipers.
The near-capacity crowd cheered wildly as Julie reached the ball first
and flipped it neatly back to her teammate, Maureen O’Toole. The game was
under way, the battle engaged, and an important milestone in Olympic
competition was now complete.
Here’s Olympic trivia: in which sports do men and women compete
together as equals? Clue: they compete together in only two sports - one
of the sports is very obvious ... equestrian. In fact, women riders often
take the gold over men in equestrian.
For the most part in the Olympics, men and women compete separately.
Usually they have the same events, separated only by gender. For example,
men and women runners compete in the marathon, but in separate events.
Interestingly, gender testing, which has been a part of the Games
since 1976, has been dropped from the Olympics as of this year. The
reason given is somewhat curious, since all medal winners must provide a
carefully monitored urine test after their event to check for illegal
drug use.
And I mean CAREFULLY monitored - the technician monitoring the test
will be able to see if the athlete is actually a man posing as a woman.
The previous test, a chromosome-count test, had some technical
limitations that occasionally gave incomplete or flawed results.
When it comes to making constructive changes, the International
Olympic Committee often takes a while to get up to speed. The IOC’s
treatment of women is a good example. For example, until 1972 the longest running event in which women were allowed to compete was the 800 meters.
A better example is water polo, which has been in the games since 1900,
but contested only by men.
On Saturday, Sept. 16, 2000, at 4 in the afternoon, a new chapter in
Olympic history began: the first women’s water polo match. Except for a
slightly smaller playing field, the women’s game is exactly the same as
the men’s - same exact rules, same 35-second clock.
The U.S. women’s team had the difficult task of taking on the favored
team from the Netherlands.
The U.S. coach, Guy Baker, had assembled a true team - no superstars,
just 13 dedicated women who have trained four to seven hours a day at the
Olympic Training Center in Los Alamitos.
The youngest player, Ericka Lorenz, is only 19; the oldest, Maureen
O’Toole, is 39. Her daughter, Kelly, was in the stands cheering her on,
as was Maureen’s mother. In fact, every U.S. athlete had at least one
close relative in the stands - and they all came to cheer with sheer
Olympic fervor - signs and banners waving - foot stomping and clapping.
Their cheers caused the stands to shake and rumble as the U.S. scored the
first goal, then the second, then the third, all within the first
seven-minute quarter.
Cheering with abandon was Julie Swail’s mother, Judy. Not only is she
rightly proud of her daughter, she is excited that women’s water polo has
finally arrived at the Games.
“It’s been a long time coming,” she said. “The Australia team
threatened a lawsuit which was instrumental in finally getting women’s
water polo in the Games.”
Not only has Judy, a resident of Huntington Beach, seen much of the
world while following her daughter to competitions, she has become an
expert on the game. “It’s tactical, but it can also be quite brutal. They
have their share of black eyes and scratched faces. And, just like in the
men’s game, a lot of action goes on under water.”
Once the Games are over, Judy’s daughter, Julie Swail, won’t have much
time to rest. She has been hired to coach the newly-inaugurated women’s
polo team at UC Irvine.
The team from the Netherlands scored late in the first quarter, then
again early in the second quarter. The U.S. team managed to stay ahead -
just ahead - until the last quarter, when the U.S. scored two goals in
quick succession, putting the game away. Final: USA 6, Nederlands 4.
Veteran Newport Harbor High water polo coach Bill Barnett, a former
men’s national head coach, who is assisting the U.S. men’s team, was
poolside cheering for the U.S. women.
Afterward he reflected on this new addition to the Olympic competitive
roster. “The level of play has come up every year. I thought the play
tonight was excellent. I thought the U.S. women dominated the game from
the start to the finish and played excellent defense.”
How does he compare the men’s and women’s game?
“I think the girls are more entertaining to watch because they do more
tactically different things, rather than just pound the ball to set. Men
just throw to set, throw to set, throw to set.”
It’s a long way until the gold medal game. The U.S. will play all five
opposing teams in round-robin format in order to qualify for the
semifinals, which will be held next Friday. The finals will be Saturday,
Sept. 23.
This first victory certainly gets the U.S. team off to a good start
towards the gold.
Here’s the answer to my earlier question: the second sport in which
men and women compete as equals: Sailing. Men and women compete as equals
in several of the classes, including Tornado and Soling.
Brad Alan Lewis is a product of Corona del Mar High and a gold medal
winner in rowing at the 1984 Games in Los Angeles.
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