With the Olympic Games on our doorstep this year, myself and
Anna bid for a number of tickets to various Olympic events. Twenty-three in total – and we were
successful in only three. No doubt LOCOG
were looking to create a fair system for ticket allocation but they only
succeeded in creating an arbitrary one, whereby some people got everything and
others got nothing. I suppose in some
respects we were fortunate and we had the opportunity to be part of the Games,
unlike several others who would have loved to have been able to attend three
events.
We didn’t manage to secure tickets for some of what we’d
really have liked to see – such as athletics, swimming, diving and judo. But we did find our way into watching fencing
and table tennis – the former delighted Anna as, in a former life, she was a
fencer – as well as beach volleyball.
Ah, beach volleyball.
It’s something I’ve watched courtesy of the BBC’s televised Olympic
coverage since its inauguration at the Barcelona Games but for which I’ve never
developed a real interest. What I have
gained over the years is a respect for the game and its athletes – if not
necessarily the way that it is presented and packaged – in addition to a disdain
for those taking cheap shots at the sport, who claim it should not be a part of
the Olympics or who underestimate the technical quality of Olympic beach
volleyball.
Beach volleyball is often perceived as something of a
sideshow to the principal Olympic events.
Like synchronised swimming before, it has to be laughed at before most
people take it seriously. At best many
consider it light-hearted popular entertainment but others can be notably more
hostile - including The Times’ Giles
Coren who wrote such a horrifically judgemental piece on Monday, completely ridiculing
the sport while displaying his ignorance in the process, that I feel compelled
to make a defence of beach volleyball here.
It is quite amazing that two people can be watching the same
sporting event and come away with such differing appreciations. While, as I’ve indicated previously, the
culture surrounding beach volleyball is not exactly my cup of tea, I am able to
look beyond it and recognise the finer points of the game for what they
are. Unfortunately, Coren lacks this
ability and seems to have made his mind up even before he’d had any chance to
witness the serving, spiking, blocking and digging on offer. “The field of sand [resembled] a bull ring”,
he opined, simply for poetic effect. “But
there would be no blood today, unless one of the girls broke a nail.” Hmm, no prejudice there then. The kind of pathetic sexist jokes that even The Sun
refuses to print are fair game when writing about beach volleyball it seems –
an indication of how far in the credibility stakes the game has yet to come.
Prejudices aside, Coren enters into some more detailed
objections to the game as an Olympic sport.
“This isn’t sport, it’s a saucy seaside postcard” he explains. “It is a fun holiday game that has slipped
into the Olympics by a back door marked ‘sex’.
There’s no skill to speak of, no variation of pace, no subtlety to the
game. You can only score with a smash or
a fake smash-dink, or if your opponents fall over in the sand.”
Let’s take the references to sex and saucy postcards first. Clearly Coren was unfortunate not to watch either the USA or the Australians’ talented women’s teams in action because their “veterans” (i.e. all clearly over 30) are far from sex symbols. And, of course, objecting to a sport simply on the basis of how players are attired or their physical attractiveness is no objection at all – unless the logic is extended to the likes of tennis, where Maria Sharapova’s style is far more seductive to my eye than beach volleyball’s double Olympic Gold Medalist Misty May-Treanor. Admittedly there is a “fun” culture surrounding the game, but then this is beach volleyball. Perhaps Coren has never been to a beach before?
Let’s take the references to sex and saucy postcards first. Clearly Coren was unfortunate not to watch either the USA or the Australians’ talented women’s teams in action because their “veterans” (i.e. all clearly over 30) are far from sex symbols. And, of course, objecting to a sport simply on the basis of how players are attired or their physical attractiveness is no objection at all – unless the logic is extended to the likes of tennis, where Maria Sharapova’s style is far more seductive to my eye than beach volleyball’s double Olympic Gold Medalist Misty May-Treanor. Admittedly there is a “fun” culture surrounding the game, but then this is beach volleyball. Perhaps Coren has never been to a beach before?
Coren makes the point that the presence of “sex countries”
such as “Brazil, Sweden and Romania” mean that their women are perceived as “suntanned,
sexually liberal from a young age and principally employed in the sex industry”. Quite honestly, I’d guess he was the only
person in the crowd making such an assessment.
Most were simply appreciating the drama. As Coren will know, like other Olympic sports entry
to the beach volleyball competition is subject to qualification, not
assumptions about liberal morality, and his argument is bogus. Accepted, beach volleyball oozes sex appeal – but it is not fundamentally
about sex any more than is women’s
tennis. Or men’s rugby for that matter (why should sex appeal be exclusively aimed towards heterosexual males?).
The bikini-clad “entertainers” who came on to dance during
intervals were not only dreadful (they were less entertaining than the rakers
who came to level the sand between periods of play) but probably don’t help
challenge the attitudes of those who would reduce the game to a celebration of heterosexual
sexuality. However, I naturally assume
this is an attempt to recreate the “fun” culture of actual beaches (well,
beaches anywhere apart from Lowestoft) where you might actually see people in
bikinis playing with giant balls. Whatever it is, it is a sideshow and hardly
the essence of the sport. As for “Mexican
waves and playing the Macarena” – in what way does that debar beach volleyball
from being a valid sport, Mr Coren? A
few years ago I went to a football match at Burnley and saw cheerleaders aged
between 6 and 8 writhing around to Don’t
you wish your girlfriend was hot like me?
If people want to complain about the use of sexual appeal in sport there
are far more valid objections to make.
Anyway, let’s get back to the main thing: the game which, it is claimed, is devoid of skill, subtlety or any other redeeming qualities. I’ll make it simple: beach volleyball is a form of volleyball, a game that I used to play. Volleyball itself is a sophisticated sport, combining strategy and technique with individual player specialisation and choreographed team movement for systematic play. True, in beach volleyball the importance of the latter are much reduced but it is no more a non-sport on that basis than is Twenty20 cricket, which is not the highest form of the game but certainly not one lacking in skill. It’s simply that the required skills are different. The parallel with Twenty20 cricket is actually a very good one, as beach volleyball is often distinctly more exciting and entertaining than “true” volleyball, even if the tactical purists will never fully take to it.
To serve with consistency and accuracy is a skill in itself. Some of the blocking on display, especially from the Brazilian men, was world class and would be recognised as such in any form of the game. In some respects beach volleyball is that bit tougher than conventional volleyball, as teams are smaller and allowed fewer touches and thus accuracy, understanding between the players and co-ordination of movement is of increased importance. It’s also not easy playing on sand, something that obviously doesn’t occur to Coren or others who believe that “you or I could get up to something like bronze medal standard with a couple of hours of training”. All forms of volleyball require a great deal more preparation than that, and to excel at any sport requires the ability to think a good game and intellectually outmanoeuvre opponents.
Coren seems to take the view that beach volleyball is a
woman’s sport, perhaps due to a combination of his viewing sex as the essence
of the game and his own heterosexual preferences. The idea that men actually play the game too sends
him cold: “some men came on to play and I found that a little gross. I felt dirty just watching it”, he says. This says far more about the journalist than
it does about the game. He goes on to
describe male beach volleyballers as “the Olympic distillation of a jobless
thicko beach bum, carrying totally inferior sperm to the supercharged world-beating
millionaires of the serious track and field”.
This man has some serious prejudices, which presumably account for him
being unable to value the amazing performances of the British duo and their
Brazilian counterparts in one of the most dramatic first sets I have ever
witnessed.
Clearly a problem beach volleyball has is how it popularly
compares to other, more “serious” sports.
This makes it easy for Coren to claim that “if [beach volleyball
players] were good enough to play tennis, they’d be playing tennis”. But why should they want to play tennis, when
they’re volleyball players? It’s a
completely different discipline. I
wonder if Coren extends the same logic to table tennis players, who should
presumably be putting down their bats and showing off their bums like Maria
Sharapova? It is a great pity that a
society we seem to have developed a sporting hierarchy, with the likes of the
highly publicised football, rugby, athletics and tennis towards the top and the
less popular or more “marginal” sports such as water polo and beach volleyball easily
disregarded.
I don’t ever expect to see a beach volleyball player voted
BBC Sports Personality of the Year. I
don’t imagine Britain will ever produce a beach volleyball world champion, or
even an Olympic medallist. Part of the
reason for this is, ultimately, the way the sport is perceived in this
country. As long as the likes of the
sex-obsessed Coren are allowed to pour scorn on the game and its participants
unchallenged, its potential development into a wider participant sport in the
UK will be stifled. The message that
should be sent out, loud and clear, is that beach volleyball is fun and while
we can’t all be Misty May-Treanor there is plenty of scope for individuals of
all ages to get out and enjoy it.
Let’s not have any of this tosh about beach volleyball not
being a sport. It is and the Olympics
are the ideal forum for it. In fact, if
the sex associations simultaneously derided yet reinforced by Coren are to be
challenged, the continuing development of the game as a respected,
widely-enjoyed Olympic sport must be central to it. It may be true that Olympic beach volleyball
is as much a spectacle as a game, but if that enables more people to enjoy what
the sport can offer it is no bad thing.
All photographs taken by myself at Horse Guards' parade on Monday 30th July 2012.
All photographs taken by myself at Horse Guards' parade on Monday 30th July 2012.