THIS IS NOT YOUR FATHER’S BADMINTON

by | Nov 21, 2008 | Detroit Free Press | 0 comments

BARCELONA, Spain — Now, wait a minute. I think we’ve taken this “all sports are equal” thing a little too far here. Badminton? Badminton is an Olympic event? You win a medal for slapping a birdie over a net? What’s next? Olympic hot dog grilling?

“Badminton’s cool,” someone says. “Go see it.”

Listen, pal. I know badminton. I know the roots of badminton. The roots of badminton are in your basement, in a box that sits untouched until the Fourth of July barbecue, when you take it out and pray the moths haven’t completely eaten the rackets.

Here is what happens next:

First, you spend an hour untangling the net.

Then you have a beer.

Then you hold the birdie under the faucet to wash off the mildew.

Then you have another beer.

Then you call in your kids, and you give them the rackets, the birdie and the net — which you still haven’t untangled, so it looks like something a New England fisherman would pull in over the side of the boat — and you say a few inspirational words, such as, “Here. Try not to kill yourselves.”

Then you have another beer.

So I know badminton, OK? But because I am a curious man, I take a trip to the Olympic badminton “venue.” And I’m thinking, “Venue? Don’t they mean
‘backyard’?”

And I walk inside.

And I’m thinking “inside?”

And this is what I see: four large, hard courts with perfectly straight nets, and these ridiculously healthy- looking players, racing around, slapping birdies a la Boris Becker. Some are even wearing kneepads.

Where I come from, wearing kneepads to play badminton is like playing checkers in a helmet.

And I don’t smell any burgers.

Where the hell is the grill?

Yawn … another interview?

“You have come to interview the Malaysians?”

Well, sure, I say. I mean, I’ll interview whoever has the barbecue sauce.

The official points to three well-built men, with jet-black hair and stringy mustaches. They are in full badminton action, looking very much like tennis players, running and grunting as they whack the birdie at tremendous speeds. They do drop shots. Overhead smashes. Someone should stop them, I figure, before they knock over the beer cooler.

“They are brothers,” the official says. “The Sidek family. Very good players. Medal favorites.”

Hmm. They must celebrate the Fourth of July every month in Malaysia.

Their practice ends. I approach the brothers. They are Razif, 30, Jalani, 29, and Rashid, 23. I figure they will be totally thrilled that a journalist has come to talk to them, and maybe offer me a burger. I introduce myself to Razif. This is the first thing he says:

“Didn’t you interview me yesterday?”

I have been pretty patient with the Olympics. I said nothing when they added synchronized swimming, even though you can see the same thing in an Esther Williams movie. And I kept quiet about rhythmic gymnastics, which should be called “Olympic Ribbon Waving.”

I put up with taekwondo and field hockey and yachting — amateurs? yachting? — and I even looked the other way when some genius tried to make bowling an Olympic sport (“If he gets this 7-10 split, Chris, he’ll have the gold medal . . .”). But I will not — will not! — tolerate attitude from a badminton player.

“No,” I snap. “I was not here yesterday.”

Razif shrugs. “I do many interviews.”

He must be joking. Keep your eye on the bulutangkis

He is not joking. In Malaysia, badminton is big, and so are the Sideks. They get stopped for autographs. Women bat their eyes flirtatiously. These guys — who have been offered $100,000 each by their government if they win a medal — are the Malaysian Dream Team.

Go figure.

“At first, I like the attention,” Rashid says, “but now, it can be troublesome.”

Yeah. Everyone wants you to sign a birdie.

By the way, the Malaysians do not use the word birdie, or the British equivalent “shuttlecock,” which has to be the worst name in sports since
“pigskin.”

This is what the Malaysians call a birdie: “Bulutangkis.” As in “Boy, I really smashed that bulutangkis!” Or, “OK, everyone, watch the bulutangkis!”

(By the way, these birdies — or bulutangkis — are not cheap. Nor are the

top-flight badminton rackets, which can cost $100 — or $98.01 more than an entire badminton set costs in America. And ours comes with a box.)

“You know,” I tell Razif, “in my country, badminton is quite different
–“

“Yes, I know,” he says. “You play on grass. Ha ha. Is very funny.”

He pulls off his kneepad and zips his $100 racket inside a leather case. I decide not to bring up the cooler thing.

Instead, I ask the Sideks how they got started in the sport. They say their father pushed them. They say they “wanted to be football (soccer) players,” but Papa made them play badminton instead. I can see this happening in Texas, can’t you?

But what the heck? These are the Olympics. All sports welcome. Even ones that come in a box.

“It was always our father’s dream to be badminton champion,” Rashid says.
“Now, he gets his dream with us.”

Maybe. What he doesn’t get is a burger.

And as far as I’m concerned, it ain’t really badminton until he does.

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Mitch Albom writes about running an orphanage in impoverished Port-au-Prince, Haiti, his kids, their hardships, laughs and challenges, and the life lessons he’s learned there every day.

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