While discussing favorite movies with friends this past weekend, a close friend of mine folded his arms as he leaned back in his chair and proclaimed with a scowl, "I don’t do sports movies. Sports are a waste of human potential."
Given that he is an outspoken opponent of most things aerobic, we weren’t necessarily shocked at the sentiment, though perhaps caught off guard by such a strong statement (especially since this is Seattle, land of passive-aggressive euphemisms).
We all granted him that sports culture in the U.S. has spun completely out of control. As a fellow educator who works with him on a daily basis, I also granted him that the number of youth who dedicate their energy to "Hoop Dreams" at the expense of all else to their own detriment could be considered a waste of human potential. Even among the few who do make a living playing sports, most hit their peak at 30. To dedicate oneself to an endeavor in which people generally peak at 30 is almost contemptuous of human life.
My other friend countered that what makes sports great is watching people strive to be the best at something they love. Furthermore, the very fact that the average person cannot do the things professional athletes do routinely is worthy of our attention. The fact that many youth do waste potential on sports is a failure of the adults who pressure them to do so, not the youth following a dream. Sports are not a waste of human potential, but almost a celebration of the human body and perhaps more importantly, the human spirit.
After 5 to 10 more minutes of pontificating about the existential value of sports to humanity, we ended the discussion, exhausting the arguments of our "aerobophobic" friend. However, I coincidentally decided to watch the recently released documentary Sonicsgate about the Seattle Sonics relocation to Oklahoma City last night and was unexpectedly brought back to the discussion through the words of writer Sherman Alexie.
I try to appeal in my columns and talking to people. What’s the thing you love – the thing you love the most – what’s that thing? And what would you do for it? To keep it, to have it? What’s that thing?
We had Ray Allen here. Ray Allen is very likely the best shooter who has ever lived. There is likely nobody on the planet who has ever able to do this one thing better than Ray Allen. I mean, imagine that: in this city lived a human being who was better at their thing than any human who ever lived. He lived here, he played here. There were 41 nights a year – 50 nights a year – when you could have gone and seen that.
It’s the ultimate expression of the human endeavor. The ultimate expression of the human spirit. The ultimate expression of human dedication. The way in which one man, through hard work – through years of hard work – through his own passion, through his own poetry became the very best in human history at one thing. And people let that go.

While it may be possible to challenge the claim that Allen is the best shooter ever, the point remains that the realization of human passion through sports is actually an amazing thing to behold.
If I dare extend Alexie’s thought, watching women’s sports are even more gratifying in that they work hard to be best at the thing they love in relative obscurity. For most female athletes, there is no celebrity status or life altering financial rewards – it’s purely striving to be the best for the sake of doing so.
Seattle has been spoiled with regard to women’s sports by the luxury of watching Sue Bird become among the best female point guards of her time and Lauren Jackson become one of the best female basketball players ever, injuries notwithstanding. We are lucky to be witnesses.
Basketball, to my mind, is a credit to human potential – the best individuals are not only good at one thing, but have the ability to use that thing effectively in collaboration with others to achieve a collective goal. Rather than a waste of human potential, the fluidity and collaboration required in basketball is almost an unrealized vision of what we’re capable of. For some reason, that never ceases to impress me.
Transition Points:
A note to Detroit Shock fans: Although I recognize losing your team is probably painful, it pales in comparison to the slow death the Sonics had to go through. Alexie said that he wouldn't want one of a handful of struggling NBA franchises to come to Seattle because he wouldn't want other fans to suffer the loss of their team. However, the suffering that Seattle Sonics fans had to go through is likely unparalleled in sports history and I'm not forgetting teams leaving in the middle of the night. They were repeatedly disrespected and then the city completely sold them out...and now the city's first of two professional sports championships belongs to Oklahoma City. It's sickening...and the movie captures all of that pain extremely well.
To watch the movie online, see its website at http://sonicsgate.org/.
Update:
I was feeling the soundtrack for Sonicsgate too. Worth checking out.
http://www.sonicsgate.org/music
0 recs | 8 comments
Aren't you
forgetting a PROFESSIONAL championship that still lives in Seattle?
garzai38 - October 26, 2009
Yes.
Corrected. :)
Nate Parham - October 26, 2009
And the guy on skis wipes out.
I’ve always thought it was nothing short of astonishing when I see someone do something on a basketball court, and think, “Wow…someone trained for thousands of hours to be able to do that.” It’s even more amazing when you actually step on a basketball court and the distances appear to be miles away.
I think about that in just about every area of human achievement, even in sports I don’t like, and even in cerebral sports like chess or bridge. As the Roman writer Terence said, “Nothing human can be foreign to me.”
Perhaps one of the reasons people are turned off of sports is because many people honor these athletic achievements over the content of character. This leads to the spoiled millionare brat superstars, people who learned that any crippling personal flaw would be forgiven as long as they could hit a ball/stuff a ball/throw a ball.
It’s almost perplexing to me that someone wouldn’t be interesting in such things. As Stanley Ralph Ross wrote:
“Spanning the globe to bring you the constant variety of sport… the thrill of victory… and the agony of defeat… the human drama of athletic competition… This is ABC’s Wide World of Sports!”
James Bowman - October 26, 2009
"Perhaps one of the reasons people are turned off of sports is because many people honor these athletic achievements over the content of character."
Yes, that is a major part of what my friend dislikes… in addition to the waste of human potential.
But I agree with you: even though I don’t like every sport, I have respect for all of them because it’s hard not to be interested at least on some level….
Nate Parham - October 26, 2009
Human potential
I would agree that the amount of resources we expend on sports is out of proportion to their value. I wouldn’t go so far as to say sports have no value.
pilight - October 26, 2009
The saga unexpectedly continued today when my friend mentioned this interview from Chris Hedges:
“Celebrity culture has created a kind of cult of the self where we measure ourselves against fantasy.”
http://current.com/items/90594616_chris-hedges-the-empire-of-illusion.htm
Clearly, if we don’t keep things in perspective, there’s a problem…
Nate Parham - October 26, 2009
Certain ideologies in anthropology
actually consider sports as a requirement in everyday life. It puts together all aspects of a human person into one act: physical, social, mental and psychological. The bottom line is, you can’t play a sport on your own. Even individual sports require competition from someone else. Team sports are always better, though, as they help bring a community together with a simple act such as playing the game. And competition causes the athletes to strive to improve themselves.
The problem today is that sports has become a religion. Lots of athletes earn way more then they should.
fadeoutin - October 27, 2009
As far as I can tell, every culture that we know of that has had any disposable energy/money/time has had some kind of sporting culture. It seems locked in the genes that we enjoy watching our young men (usually) perform athletic feats.
You could argue that it goes back to the hunting bands (usually between nine and 11 males, which not coincidentally are the numbers of players on teams of most “organic” sports), and that it is bred in the bone to honor those who are capable of going out and literally bringing home the bacon.
Regardless, sports are an integral part of human culture — though modern America is probably the most sports-mad of any on record.
Clay Kallam - October 29, 2009
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