PRESS RELEASE

http://more.abcnews.go.com/sections/us/dailynews/kickball020924.html
September
24th, 2002
Older,
But Still Kicking
Across
the Nation, Adults Revisit Their Schoolyard Days With Kickball Leagues
By Michael
S. James
Sept.
24 Most kids probably know one day they have to graduate from the kickball
field, get a real job and do the boring stuff grown-ups do.
Jimmy
Walicek became an IT consultant. But then he got a better job kickball
executive.
"There's
nothing that compares to hitting the big red ball and hearing that noise,"
says Walicek, full-time chief operating officer of the Washington-based
World Adult Kickball Association Inc. "It's almost impossible to describe,
but it's sort of a bowwmmmmm! right off the foot and into the field."
They may
have grown up, but for increasing thousands of American 20- and 30-somethings,
recess still plays out on the kickball field but now it adjourns to
the local bar for laughs over the game's highlights and pratfalls.
"When
they kick the ball for the first time since fifth grade they get this
magical smile on their face where they remember the good old days," Walicek
says.
Co-ed
adult kickball leagues have become the rage in Washington, Milwaukee,
Seattle, St. Louis, Baltimore, San Francisco and towns in Maryland, Virginia,
Wisconsin and Minnesota. Some leagues claim dozens of teams and thousands
of players, and organizers see more expansion next summer. Walicek's organization
is planning new divisions in New York, Chicago, Atlanta and Philadelphia.
A division
of the World Adult Kickball Association plays its games in the shadow
of the Washington Monument. (World Adult Kickball Association Inc.) "I'm
really amazed; it's taking off all over the country," says Keith Flournoy,
recreation coordinator in Oak Park, Mich., north of Detroit, who initially
had to turn away hundreds of late applicants when he announced a municipal
adult kickball league last year.
"I think
it touched on a lot of people's childhoods," he says. "I'm amazed every
time I mention it to somebody. They say, 'Man, kickball? I haven't played
that since I was a kid.'
If I talk to 100 people, 99 give the same response."
Schoolyard
Fixture
As almost
any elementary school graduate knows, kickball is similar to baseball
or softball, except instead of hitting a little, white, hard ball, players
kick a fat, soft, red rubber ball generally making the game easier.
Unlike baseball, players can be put out by being hit in the torso with
a thrown ball.
For decades,
kids have spontaneously run pickup kickball games during school recess,
educators say.
However,
even as kickball becomes more popular with adult players, it is falling
out of favor among physical education teachers. It involves too much standing
around and too few physical demands, says Judith Young, executive director
of the National Association for Sport and Physical Education.
"We need
to modify it in physical education classes," perhaps by using fewer players
or more confined spaces to heighten the action, she says. That way, "the
kids can get the good things out it which is learning to kick, learning
to throw, learning the strategy of a bases-type game."
For adults,
Young applauds the kickball leagues.
"That's
great," she says. "It gets people active and they have fun. And if it
gets them back to positive memories at school, a time when they were young,
that's great, too."
Turning
Back the Clock
At least
since Citizen Kane mulled the significance of "Rosebud," people have craved
nostalgia and longed for their youths, psychologists say. Some say that
public yearning is getting more intense now, as adult life, jobs and careers
become less stable.
"We've
become a population of highly educated and well-dressed people who go
down to the loading docks each morning and wait to be hired on only
we don't load ships, we work on computers," says Armond Aserinsky, a North
Wales, Pa., clinical psychologist who specializes in studying the media
and popular culture. "Great big companies that used to have stable work
forces are now hiring consultants."
At first,
upon hearing of the kickball fad, Aserinsky considered it in a psychological
context as a way to connect with one's youth. But suddenly, he, too, seemed
to connect.
"This
is brilliant, actually," he said, laughing out loud. "Kickball."
A
Kids Game
The reaction
of new adult players is typical, league organizers say.
"You can
see their face go from disbelief to, 'Wow, that's kind of cool,'" says
Walicek of WAKA, whose first league may have started the kickball craze
in 1998.
Next thing
you know, they're signing up for kickball leagues on whimsically named
teams like the Playground Bullies, the Grass Kickers, Kickin' Balls and
Takin' Names, Kick Asphalts and Pity the Fool.
If they're
lucky, they might win a regional championship. This past summer, the Milk
Money Millionaires of WAKA's D.C.-Potomac division took the "Founder's
Cup," and Twisted Frogmeat won the "Golden Lunchbox"
of the Milwaukee-based Midwest Unconventional Sports Association's kickball
league. But that's not necessarily
the point, says the latter league's founder.
"I
don't want to call it a silly game, but it's a kid's game basically,"
says Joe Szatmary of Milwaukee. "There are teams that have zero athleticism
that still have a great time playing. It's not as intimidating [as other
games or sports]. It's not as skill-necessary."
Plus, says Szatmary, everybody gets to have fun over beers, kid around
on MUSA's Internet chat room, or participate in other MUSA events such
as dodge ball tournaments or the "Big Wheel 500," named after the children's
plastic three-wheeler.
Kickball
Romance
In the
Oak Park, Mich., league, the social aspect went even further. Between
games of a doubleheader on Aug. 2, Jeff Somers proposed marriage to his
girlfriend, co-worker and kickball teammate, Krista Swindlehurst.
Somers'
and Swindlehurst's families and friends, intrigued by stories of the kickball
league, were at the game, and teammates "burst out in happiness, joy,
clapping, yelling, screaming," as Swindlehurst accepted, Somers says.
A kickball most likely will be present at their May 16 nuptials.
"In grade
school, I had a girl sit on top of me and say she was going to marry me,"
Somers says, "but [I] never in my dreams thought I would actually propose
to somebody on a [kickball] field."
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