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Bad Sports: Football,
O.J. Simpson, and Wife-Beating
© Mariah Burton Nelson
New York Times, June 22, 1994 O.J.
Simpson was a product of his culture - a football
culture that taught him to equate masculinity
with violence and with dominance over women. MBN
O.J. Simpson is not
alone.
Baseball star Darryl Strawberry has admitted
beating his wife and pointing a gun in her face.
Basketball star Moses Malone was accused by his
wife of physical and verbal brutality including
death threats. He insisted he never hit her or
threatened to kill her but admitted having
moved her out of the way.
Golfer John Daly was arrested at his home after
allegedly hurling his wife against a wall,
pulling her hair, and trashing the house. He
pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor harassment charge
and was placed on two years probation with
the stipulation that he complete domestic
violence treatment program.
Juanita Leonard testified in divorce court in
1991 that boxer Sugar Ray Leonard, her former
husband, often punched her with his fists, threw
her around, and harassed her physically and
mentally in front of the children. He
threatened to kill himself with a gun, she said.
He threw lamps and broke mirrors. Ray Leonard
denied none of this. At a press conference, he
admitted having struck his wife with his fists.
Yet he justified the behavior by saying that he
and Juanita fought, argued, and
grabbed each other, but that
that was in our house, between us.
Alabama mens basketball coach Wimp
Sanderson resigned in 1992 after Nancy Watts
filed a sex discrimination complaint against him.
Watts, his longtime secretary and mistress,
alleged that Sanderson hit her as part of an
ongoing pattern of physical and sexual abuse, and
was awarded $275,000 in a settlement. Sanderson
claimed in court documents that Watts received
her black eye by colliding with his outstretched
hand.
Spectators also get into the swing of things.
Boston Celtics fans have hung banners in the
arena claiming they like to beat rival teams
almost as much as we like to beat our
wives.
Im going to go home and beat up my
wife, Penn State football coach Joe Paterno
once said at a press conference after his team
lost to the University of Texas. Later he
defended the statement as just part of the
sports culture, locker room talk, harmless, a
joke that did not mean anything.
What is this sports culture?
Legal scholar Catharine MacKinnon writes in
Feminism Unmodified: Athletics to men is a
form of combat. It is a sphere in which one
asserts oneself against an object, a person, or a
standard. It is a form of coming against and
subduing someone who is on the other side,
vanquishing enemies....Physicality for men has
meant male dominance; it has meant force,
coercion, and the ability to subdue and subject
the natural world, one central part of which has
been us [women].
Whether hockey fights, football tackles, or
baseball brawls, intentionally hurtful acts are
portrayed as natural - for men. Sports violence
is considered appropriate. It is considered
masculine. Our concept of violence is
inextricably interwoven with our concept of
expected, condoned male behavior. Boys are given
boxing gloves as toys, while girls and women who
attempt to join wrestling, boxing, or football
teams are often ridiculed, sexually harassed, or
simply barred from participation.
The women male players hear about are the
cunts and pussies of
locker room humor; the short-skirted
cheerleaders; the university
hostesses who escort the men around
campus during the recruiting process. The locker
room is not a place to brag about your
wifes professional or personal
accomplishments. It is a place where men discuss
womens body parts in graphic sexual terms,
where they brag about scoring, and,
if Joe Paterno is to be believed, where they
frequently joke about beating women.
In The Hundred Yard Lie Rick Telander writes,
In my years in the locker room I have heard
so much degrading talk of women by male athletes
- particularly the use of women as objects to be
conquered and dominated...that I feel certain the
macho attitudes promoted by coaches contribute
(perhaps unwittingly) to the athletes
problems in relating to women.
Ohio State sociologist Timothy Jon Curry recently
employed researchers to record mens
locker-room conversations over a several-month
period. He offers this as a typical example of an
exchange between two athletes:
I just saw the biggest set of Ta-tas in the
training room!
How big were they?
Bigger than my mouth.
Sexist comments, like racist comments, can get
men fired in some circles. But not in sports. In
the manly sports world, sexism is a badge of
honor, a common ground, a familiar language.
Curry found that talk of women-as-objects took
the form of loud performances for other men. Talk
about ongoing relationships with women, on the
other hand, took place only in hushed tones,
often behind rows of lockers, and was subject to
ridicule. This ridicule tells the athlete
that he is getting too close to femaleness,
because he is taking relatedness seriously,
writes Curry. Real men do not
do that.
A former college football star who asked not to
be named says of Currys research,
Thats right on target. We never
talked about respecting women. This man,
who later signed with the Philadelphia Eagles,
recalls college teammates making such sexual
boasts as, She didnt want to do
anything, but I held the bitchs head
down. His college teammates hosted
pig parties. The man who brought the
ugliest date would win a trophy. This football
star says he learned to respect women from his
mother and three athletic sisters, and did not
attend the parties. But he would laugh at his
teammates jokes, an act he now regrets.
I remember the first time they showed the
trophy, in the locker room, he says.
I was a 17-year-old freshman in a room full
of upper-class men. It was boisterous, raunchy,
there was screaming and yelling. I laughed along.
Men are extremely cliquish. I didnt want to
be left out.
Phoenix Cardinals quarterback Timm Rosenbach quit
pro football after the 1992 season, leaving
behind a $1.05 million annual salary. I
thought I was turning into an animal, he
told Ira Berkow of the New York Times. You
go through a week getting yourself up for the
game by hating the other team, the other players.
Youre so mean and hateful, you want to kill
somebody. Footballs so aggressive. Things
get done by force. Then you come home,
youre supposed to turn it off? Oh,
heres your lovin' Daddy. Its
not that easy. It was like I was an idiot. I felt
programmed. I had become a machine.
O.J. Simpson was not insane, a defense that some
lawyers are speculating might serve him well in
contesting the double murder charges that face
him. But he was programmed. He was, like all of
us, a product of his culture - in his case, a
male-dominated American culture but also, more
critically, a football culture that taught him to
equate masculinity with violence and with
dominance over women.
He was the product of a culture that, to this
day, reveres football players regardless of their
off-field behavior. Even after he pleaded no
contest to beating his wife on New Years
Day, 1989, Simpson continued to work for Hertz,
and to be described by fans and in the media as a
great guy and an American
hero. This past week, he was also described
as a loving father, though he reportedly spent
virtually no time with his grieving children
until their mothers funeral, instead
secluding himself with his friends and lawyers.
When, after learning of his imminent arrest, he
fled and was chased by police along the Los
Angeles highways, commuters stopped their cars to
wave to him, and to chant, Go, O.J.,
Go! They acted as if nothing - not
wife-beating, not alleged murder, nothing at all
- mattered except a football players
ability to do exactly as he pleases.
Which is exactly what football heroes will
continue to do until we, as a society, stop
worshiping them, and stop training male athletes
to hate women.
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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