Learning What Team
Really Means
© Mariah Burton Nelson
Newsweek, July 19, 1999
What's going on here? Over 90,000 people
flocked to the final game of the Women's World
Cup. The Women's National Basketball Association
averaged almost 11,000 fans per game last year,
and that's up 12 percent this season. Even the
Women's Pro Softball League recently got better
TV ratings than a (men's) Major League Soccer
game shown during the same time slot. How come
American sports fans' fascination with female
athletes has shifted from skirted skaters
(Dorothy Hamill, Michelle Kwan) and tiny teenage
tumblers (Mary Lou Retton, Kerri Strug) to rough,
muscular women in their 20s and 30s who grunt,
grimace and heave each other aside with their
hips? Are we simply wild over their athletic
brilliance? Or does the popularity of women's
team sports tell us something deeper about how
female athletes and fans are redefining
themselves, what they really want and who they
might become?
One obvious reason for our adoration is that
American women are the best team athletes in the
world. They rock. They rule. What's not to love?
They're good sports, too, apparently unpolluted
by the violence and greed that plague men's
sports. Then there's the role-model thing:
"Little girls need big girls to look up
to," said basketball star Teresa Edwards.
But there's something else underlying all the
hype and hoopla. I know I learned about more than
hook shots and rebounds when I played basketball
at Stanford back in the late '70s and later as a
professional, here and in Europe. Now, as
millions of girls grow up playing team sports,
they, too, are discovering how to embrace victory
unapologetically and other essential life
lessons. Older women watching the Mia Hamm
generation sense this, and want to get in on the
action. Here's some of what team-sport athletes
know:
They know who their teammates really are. Most
women are good at friendships, but how many have
teammates who don't just sympathize, but help us
achieve success? A friend might say, "I
don't want to start a business with you because
it might hurt our relationship.'' A teammate
says, "Of course I'll do it with you: we
share the same vision and passion, so we'll be
successful.''
They know how to compete. Nonathletes tend to
avoid competition and believe friends shouldn't
compete, according to a survey in my book
"Embracing Victory.'' Athletes don't see
competition as divisive; they use it to connect.
They play hard in practice, knowing their best
efforts help teammates improve. They shake hands
with opponents, grateful for the challenge.
They know how to lead. One day when I was 12,
the girls on the playground circled around me,
asking, "Can we play softball? Can I
pitch?'' I wondered: ''Why are they asking me?''
But I decided: "If people are going to look
up to me, I ought to become the sort of person
who's worth looking up to." Later, as
captain and leading scorer at Stanford, I tried
to bring hope and enthusiasm to the team each
day. That's how people become leaders: they
practice.
They know how to bond. When I speak to women's
business groups, the complaint I hear most often
is, "The women in my office don't support
each other." Girls who learn to compete only
over beauty and boyfriends grow up to be women
who don't bond in the workplace, don't share
information, don't mentor. Team athletes support
other women. "Walking side by side over many
miles of tough terrain, it brings you
closer," says soccer's Michelle Akers.
"It's a shared vision of who we are."
They know how to take risks. When we needed to
score, my teammates used to pass me the
balleven though I sometimes dribbled off my
foot instead. Athletes don't always succeed, but
they're willing to take public risks, which
inspires women whose fears of looking foolish
keep them safely seated on the sidelines.
They know how to ask for help. In basketball,
athletes on defense need to yell
"HELP!" Such public pleas are humbling,
and debunk the Superwoman myth. We really don't
have to be the perfect worker, mother, partner,
friend. We can and must ask for helpin
life, as in sports.
They know how to forgive themselves. When
girls start playing sports, they say "I'm
sorry" a lot. But eventually they stop
apologizing and focus on their next achievement.
How appealing to those of us who torture
ourselves with self-recriminations!
They know that women are strong, successful
and free. With their high-fives, hugs and
aggressive, competitive play, female team
athletes represent who many of us want to be, or
want our daughters to be. By pursuing victory in
a context of friendship, support, respect and
celebration, team-sport athletes are redefining
what it means to be an athlete, and what it means
to be female. No wonder we love them. They show
us our future: female bonding, and female
excellence, at its best.
Want to read
more on this subject? Check out We Are
All Athletes
To contact
Mariah about her presentations, call 703/276-8323
or write to her at Mariah@MariahBurtonNelson.com
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