Picture this. It’s late on a Sunday afternoon. You’re full from too much Father’s Day celebratory luncheon, it’s too hot to take a walk, it’s even too hot to go swimming, and you’re not in the mood to read. You just want to sit. If it was 40 years ago you’d do your imitation of a couch potato.
Then you remember, even though it’s not your sport, you know this is that weekend. The Weekend. The weekend that gets capitalized The one with the biggest names, the longest drives, the finesse when it’s needed, the trophy, the payoff. The U. S. Open.
Of badminton.
I didn’t set out to watch the U.S. Open of Badminton. I didn’t set out to watch the U. S. Open of Golf. (That’s the one you were thinking of, wasn’t it?) I wasn’t in the mood to do anything so I sat in my chair. (Yes, I have a “my chair.” Every male over the age of 40 has a “my chair.”) And after sitting therein (thereon?) (there?) for some time, I decided I needed to do something other than just sit. So I reached for the remote and remembered about that golf thingie. But I didn’t know what station was carrying it so I pushed the button with the picture of the microphone and said “U S Open” (I might have said it with the periods after the “U” and the “S” but I didn’t hear them so I’m not including them here) figuring it would take me to that golf thingie. Instead it brought up a screen for me to clarify which “U. S. Open” (I saw the periods on the screen so I am including them here). Who knew?
Since I was given a choice, I picked badminton. Wow. It’s not your backyard after picnic probably most played on Father’s Day badminton. First of all they use a real court with real poles holding up a real net. We always had to hold up one end of the net with the clothesline pole and make the sidewalk to the tool shed one back boundary and the hedges with the red berries you’re not allowed to eat the other. The other thing is they had a lot of shuttlecocks. We had three. One was stuck in the gutter and would remain there forever. One we couldn’t use in case we lost the one we were using. They certainly didn’t need a lot of shuttlecocks. I watched them for several sets and they never once flung the one in play out of anyone’s reach.
That’s another thing. They played it sets. And kept score. Even though the court looks like a 3/4 scale tennis court the scoring is more like table tennis. Unlike tennis, or golf for that matter, the crowd is obviously into the competition. Tennis and golf spectators might be into their respective competitions but you could never tell. Everybody at those events is so reserved. Even the TV announcers whisper. Not in badminton. These fans cheer their favorites, they scream their approval at a diving save, and they openly applaud a well-placed lob. When the contestants entered the arena it could have been 1974 with Muhammed Ali and Joe Frazier coming down the aisle at Madison Square Garden. The lights, the music, the cheers! They don’t do that at Wimbledon.
Overall, it was a good way to spend a late afternoon. I’m not sure that I’ll track the progress of the world class badminton players on their March to the Olympics (yes, it is), but if I’m not doing anything next Sunday, I have an alternate to watching golf.
I don’t think I’ve ever (knowingly) watched badminton. I have tried to play it and never got the hang of doing anything useful with a shuttlecock. In my opinion, a gutter’s a pretty good place for it. 😉
I’m not sure even the professionals could come up with anything seriously useful to do with a shuttlecock if you asked them out of context! I bet that old one is still in the gutter.
I could never take badminton seriously, as the object of attention had such a weird name and wasn’t a spherical form. It’s got this net thingie on it, ferkristsake!
So you’re telling me you take issue with nonspherical objects of attention? I never realized you were so closed minded! 😏
Well, I do have a cold brewing, so I may not be in my right mind right now.
And, when I’ve beaten back the bug, I’m certain that the shuttlecock will once again be a great source of mirth and suggestive jokes.
But, you gotta admit…that net thingie is a little weird 😀
That’s cause it goes along with the weird net. (You know, no matter how hard I looked, which wasn’t very to be honest, I can’t find a shuttlecock emoji. Perhaps it’s overly suggestive.)
I love it when randomness takes hold and I find myself watching an unexpected something or other. The thing about any non-dominant sport (meaning no one’s putting the champion on a Wheaties box unless he or she is RALLY attractive and has something other than just the sport to recommend them) is that the players frickin love it. They do it because it’s awesome, not because they’ll get rich and famous. Worth the watch.
So true. They define professional athlete. As in, it’s a JOB! They have to work really hard for little monetary return. I think the badminton “U S Open” winner got $1700. I’m sure the golf “Open” winner picked up more than that just for wearing a certain hat on the course for a day. But like the rest of us lucky enough to get paid for doing something we like to do, you can tell the non-mainstream athletes can’t believe their good luck. Most of the time. ☺
I meant REALLY not RALLY attractive—unless that’s some new thing the kids on Snapchat are into. It could be for all I know.
It might be! 😮