You have
ten seconds - name a famous athlete from Thailand.
Ten,
nine, eight
What
is there someone new playing for the Mets? Has
Major League Baseball pulled another promising pitcher
out of Southeast Asia?
No!
Seven,
six, five
A
high flying NBA prospect out of some Bangkok high school?
A defensive tackle in the NFL from the rugged mountains
of the northern city of Chiang Mai? A Major League Soccer
striker with "tricky" speed?
No!
Four,
three, two, one
Michael
Chang
Michele Kwan
Vijay Singh
?
No!
but that last guess hit the right sport.
Ding!
Times
up.
The
answer is
Tiger Woods.
OK,
hes not exactly babbling in Thai in his latest
car commercial or spending quality time on the beaches
of Koh Samui, but Tiger is without a doubt the most
famous athlete connected to Thailand. His mother is
Thai, which means that at least half of Woods is Thai.
All
right, Im reaching a bit
but its
true, and the Thais hold onto him as one of their own.
I also like to think of it as the emergence of the Thai
athlete. A new kind of athlete and sports industry for
the new century.
I
mean
how bored are you with the sports in the
United States?
Arent
you a little burned out by the bloated monster that
is the U.S. sports industry? I know Ive had it
with the loser millionaires who haunt the ESPN broadcasts.
For
me, theres a whole new obsession waiting to be
discovered in Asia. The sports scene here is refreshing,
like stepping back and seeing minor league baseball
or a Little League game after too many games at Oriole
Park at Camden Yards. Like watching Salvadorean immigrants
playing soccer on some field in Maryland instead of
trooping down to RFK Stadium and watching another Major
League Soccer fiasco. Like watching some streetball
after viewing Bill Walton and his bland associates and
their BORING NBA playoff coverage.
I
dont mean talent here necessarily, although there
is plenty of talent involved. I mean a sense of raw
energy you find after youve been spoon-fed in
your easy chair by some statistics-spewing, marketing-savvy
sports corporation.
Take
the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta as an example.
Thailand
didnt go to Atlanta with a very big squad, only
forty-two athletes. One of them, Thai boxer Somrak Komsing,
fought his way through several opponents, before beating
Bulgarian Serafim Todorov for the countrys FIRST
EVER gold medal in the Olympics.
How
many gold medals did we get? 100-something? How many
of them can you name? You ever wonder what the gold-medal
winning rowing team has been up to lately? Have you
seen them in soap operas or watched them travel along
ticker tape parades through New York City?
All right, I know
the U.S. is approximately 50,000
times bigger than Thailand, and the weight of expectations
are that much larger. Were supposed to win everything
in sight (expect for soccer). But lets face it.
Weve become so fat and bloated with winning in
so many sports that we are dulled to it. The story in
the U.S. during that Olympics was whether wed
be able to take triple digits in gold medals.
For
his solo gold medal, Komsing got rewarded with a bunch
of cash, a pickup truck, met with the king, got paraded
around the country to all sorts of speaking events,
and eventually worked his way into Thai daytime soap
operas.
Now,
let me just step back for a minute. I have to admit
that I grew up with the Red Sox. I grew up hating the
"whoops, we won another championship" Yankees.
I also root for the U.S. soccer team in its ongoing
battle for respect. And when those teams win it all
and cultivate the "oh jeez, its lonely at
the top" sense of entitlement, then Ill probably
get bored with them as well.
Think about your own most exciting sports memory.
Is
it the 1980 Miracle on Ice? Is it the 1986 World Series?
Is it that wrestler from Iowa defeating the great Soviet
behemoth in the Australian Olympics? Lance Armstrong
winning the Tour de France every year?
The
idea that all those share is the thought of overcoming
great obstacles (unbeatable Russian athletes or a 3-2
World Series disadvantage) or some great limitation
(say testicular cancer), and for a brief moment in time,
they spark our imaginations.
The
Thais have this in spades as a country a sense
that while they can compete and do well at sports, theyre
a bit of a ways from becoming champions. Theyre
perpetual underdogs. In Asia, youve got to beat
the Koreans, and Japanese, and Chinese if youre
going to get anywhere. When the Thais win here, it stands
out.
The
Thais are not constant participants in all facets of
the world scene, although there are some rising swimmers,
golfers, and tennis players on the world stage, and
some of their soccer players star in Japan and Europe.
Their best athletes are probably the kickboxers and
the takraw players, who youll never see anywhere
outside of Southeast Asia, unless Jean Van Damme gets
to making Kickboxer XXXV. You can include snooker and
badminton on this list as well. The big sporting event
is almost always the annual Southeast Asian games.
Kickboxing
and Takraw, by the way, are fascinating things unto
themselves. Takraw is the Indonesian-Malaysian-Thai
version of volleyball, played with a rattan ball and
the feet. Players usually spike the ball by heading
it down after leaping in the air, or by performing a
bicycle kick toward the net. You can block with your
back, by throwing your body into the air.
The
Thai mens national soccer team has made some waves
recently, and they search for respect as much as the
Americans do.
The latest installment of their story is the current
offer the Thai Football Association has made. For every
win the team has in the qualifying round, the Football
Association will pay them two million Baht. For every
tie on the road, the team receives one million Baht.
They
havent been winning much money.
Thailand
has been through a brutal qualifying round, which they
started by flying through Iraqi no-fly air space for
their first game on the road in Baghdad. Other participants
in their group include Iran, Saudi Arabia, and Bahrain.
The Thais are out of it at this point, as they either
had to win their division or pull out a wild card and
go against the fifth-seeded South American team.
One
of the biggest stories in the last five years was the
volleyball team (staffed by several transvestites),
which captured a national mens title. They would
appear at games in full makeup, and wailed on anyone
that took the court against them. Their story appeared
as a major motion picture here.
Where
do you get that in America?
Then
theres female weightlifting champ Khassaraporn
Suta. She bagged the first ever medal for a Thai female
in Australia after the original winner was tagged for
failing a drug test.
See
how interesting sports can be?
So
heres what you should do. I recommend cheering
for your local Thai athletes whenever you can. Demand
snooker coverage in your area. Look for the red, white,
and blue flag at the Olympics (their flag has the same
colors as the U.S.), and revel in the exploits of Tiger
Woods.
Well,
then again
just know that hes half-Thai.
If he isnt part of the corporate sports deal in
America, I dont know who is.
Or
pick your own country to cheer for
beat the bushes
for an underdog
Kenyan cross country skiers,
the Faroes Islands mens soccer team, Japanese
womens hockey teams
the possibilities are
endless.
Theres
a world of sports to root for!
email
us with your comments.
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