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Where I Was When
Billie Jean King Beat Bobby Riggs
© Mariah Burton NelsonBillie Jean was on my side.
She understood everything.
MBN
When Billie beat Bobby, on September 20, 1973, I was
seventeen. My family had recently moved to
Phoenix from Pennsylvania, where I had competed
in swimming, field hockey, basketball, and
lacrosse. In Phoenix my high school only offered
volleyball and tennis for girls. I joined both
teams but felt bitterly disappointed that there
was no girls' basketball. So I asked the boys'
coach, the astronomy teacher, if I could try out
for the boys team.
He laughed in my face. "Your breasts
would get in the way," he said.
I was shocked but tried to ignore the comment.
"I'm good," I explained, rising up to
my full six-foot-one-inch height to look him in
the eye. "I played varsity starting in tenth
grade in my old school. Give me a chance."
"Your breasts could get injured, hit with
an elbow." He stepped closer to me as if to
demonstrate with his own elbow.
I stepped back. "I just want to try
out," I persisted.
"Only if I can personally bind your
breasts," he replied, eyes twinkling with
glee.
Students didn't sue teachers in those days. I
don't think I even told my parents. My mother is
a pioneering physician and a swimmer and a
feminist but we didn't have the vocabulary then
to talk about sexual harassment and sexual
exploitation and even regular old discrimination
against female athletes. She didn't quite
"get" how important basketball was; how
could she? There were no college scholarships for
women then, no pro league beckoning. And Dad said
he didn't want his daughter to be a
"jock." Which was like saying he didn't
want his daughter to be tall. Too late, Dad!
I played intramural ball with the boys
instead, and was scouted by my gym teacher, who
recruited me to play on her AAU team, the Phoenix
Dusters, where I was welcomed and embraced by my
teammates, all of whom were in their twenties or
thirties. Our theme song was Helen Reddy's
"I am Woman." It was our only cassette,
and we played it over and over in the car on long
road trips in the southwest. We were women. Hear
us roar.
Still, as a teenage feminist, I was lonely
- and angry. Our history textbook devoted
just two pages to women -- the suffrage movement
-- and I made that my senior project, creating
papier-mâché images of Susan B. Anthony and
Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Frances Willard that I
suspended from a coat-hanger mobile. I hung it in
my classroom, where in the breeze the women made
swooping, threatening motions at the history
teacher, whom I hated because of his sexual
overtures toward lots of girls, including me.
The summer before the match, I followed the
hype carefully, thrilled at Billie Jean's bold
statements about equal rights for women. Then, a
month or so before the Battle of the Sexes, the
Virginia Slims tour came to Phoenix and my tennis
team was asked to serve as ball girls. How
exciting! But -- too tall to run inconspicuously
along the net, I declined. I did, however,
brazenly follow Billie Jean into the women's
restroom, which was doubling as a players' locker
room, to ask for her autograph. Bless her:
Preparing for her match, dressed only in bra and
undies, she granted my request. That evening,
after the crowd had dispersed, I climbed a
chain-link fence to dislodge, then steal a huge
plastic "You've come a long way, Baby"
banner featuring that skinny cigarette-smoking
flapper from the roaring twenties. I knew the
"baby" part was demeaning and of course
I also knew that theft was morally and legally
wrong but at that point in my life I felt an
overwhelming need literally to grab any visible
symbols of feminism I could find. The banner
covered one wall of my bedroom for years.
More than 28,000 people witnessed the Battle
of the Sexes at the Houston Astrodome. More than
48 million watched on television. I was one of
television-watchers, alone in our den, sitting in
my father's Lazy-Boy but without the footrest
extended, rocking forward the whole time, knowing
that something very important was happening for
women, and for me. My siblings were in college; I
don't know where my parents or Phoenix Duster
teammates were; I did have a few new schoolmates
who were athletes but somehow I ended up alone
there, and lonely. Luckily Billie spoke to me and
for me. With her relentless groundstrokes she
expressed all my anger and determination and
pursuit of fairness. When she won in straight
sets, 6-4, 6-3, 6-3, I leapt out of the chair and
cheered, yelling at the television in a way that
I never have before or since. I was no longer
alone. Billie Jean was on my side. She understood
everything. She was on my team, and we had won.
Mariah
Burton Nelson is an author, athlete, and
professional speaker who uses sports stories to
show people how to lead and succeed with courage,
compassion, commitment, and confidence. For
reprint permission contact the author;
information below.
To contact
Mariah about her presentations, call 703/276-8323
or write to her at Mariah@MariahBurtonNelson.com
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