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TIME: Almanac 1995
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TIME Almanac 1995.iso
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<text id=89TT2225>
<title>
Aug. 28, 1989: Beach Volleyball Nets Big Bucks
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Aug. 28, 1989 World War II:50th Anniversary
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
SPORT, Page 71
Beach Volleyball Nets Big Bucks
</hdr><body>
<p>Once a laid-back pastime, a waterside game goes major league
</p>
<p> These are the good vibrations of August: soak up some rays
on the beach, sip a brew or two and slap a volleyball over a
net. A few years ago, Los Angeles beach boys thought it was cool
if they were given a couple of six-packs for winning a
beach-volleyball tournament. But times have changed. Last year
Sinjin Smith, 32, beach-volleyball's top professional, earned
nearly $135,000 for a season of bumping, setting and spiking out
there on the sand, and he may do even better this year. Predicts
Christopher Marlowe, an ESPN sports commentator and the 1984
U.S. Olympic volleyball-team captain: "Next year a
beach-volleyball player will make more than the President of the
United States ($200,000)!"
</p>
<p> Beach volleyball was once part of the laid-back Southern
California style -- a bunch of parking-lot attendants and
cabana boys devoting their spare time to fun in the sun. Today
the game is a hard-charging sport, complete with big-bucks
sponsors, a 29-tournament tour of 13 states, an aggressive
players' association, lucrative television deals and mobs of
loyal fans. "Players used to party all night and wake up under
a coffee table an hour before the game," remembers Jay Hanseth,
37, a 19-year veteran player. Now, he says, "there's so much
money at stake, players take it very seriously."
</p>
<p> Although it is called volleyball, there are some signal
differences between the seaside sport and the amateur game
played in schools and in the Olympics. Regular volleyball
employs six players a side on a hard-surface court, while beach
teams consist of only two usually bare-foot acrobats who charge
through the sand to get to the ball, giving the game the flavor
of balletic misdemeanor. The ball used on the beach is somewhat
heavier than the indoor one, mainly to counteract the effects
of sea breezes. The object of both games is to make the ball hit
the floor -- or sand -- on the opponent's side. Both sports are
played in a 30-ft. by 60-ft. playing area and use a net that is
36 ft. wide and 8 ft. high. Outdoors and in, the first team to
score 15 points wins.
</p>
<p> Beach-volleyball stars themselves were the ones who pulled
their sport up from the tide line. Back in the 1970s,
tournaments, such as they were, could offer top players no more
than a free pair of swim trunks, dinner in a local restaurant
and perhaps a date with the winner of the accompanying bikini
contest. But in 1983 a group of players who believed in the
game's potential formed the Association of Volleyball
Professionals to fight for bigger purses and better promotions.
The group, which numbers 250 members, went on strike during the
1984 World Championships in California's Hermosa Beach to
protest conditions. Since then, A.V.P. organizer Leonard Armato,
a former player and an attorney with a Los Angeles law firm that
represents such athletes as Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Ronnie Lott
of the San Francisco 49ers, has helped the players win control
of tournament profits, concession sales, TV contracts and
endorsement fees.
</p>
<p> Central to their success is a lucrative contract with the
Miller Brewing Co. The deal reportedly provides most of the
more than $2 million in prize money offered this season. Miller
sponsors 20 of the A.V.P. tournaments. All matches are arranged
by the association in cities that express an interest and have
suitable facilities. Between them, ESPN and Prime Ticket, cable
sports networks, air 25 tournaments on the tour, and they
reputedly pay the A.V.P. handsomely for the rights to do so.
Armato thinks volleyball does well on the small screen because
it features "a lot of action, the beach and a lot of tanned,
great-looking people." Formerly a big hit only between San Diego
and Sorrento Beach, north of Los Angeles, the tournaments are
currently attracting crowds that average 25,000 at waterside
sites in Atlantic City, Chicago and Cleveland. A.V.P. officials
are thinking of charging admission next year.
</p>
<p> The most startling result of all the action is that six
players made more than $100,000 in prizes last year. Smith, for
instance, who is president of the A.V.P., leads the league in
endorsements. He was awarded part of a beachwear company, owns
a clothing store, published an autobiography and will soon be
featured in a beach-volleyball video game. Says he: "Everyone
is surprised at what's gone on."
</p>
<p> They certainly are. For one thing, women can't seem to
watch enough beach volleyball. Players have become sex symbols
who are regularly asked to autograph arms, legs and other parts
of bikinied anatomies. "It's just outrageous how many girls go
to these things," says Hanseth. "For some of the younger guys,
it's like a sailor going into port." Male fans around the U.S.
may soon have the chance to swoon over sweaty women. Thanks to
the success of the A.V.P., some members of the fledgling Women's
Beach Volleyball Association have asked attorney Armato to help
them kick up their heels too.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>