If next week's Women's Figure Skating final is the competition  to decide the World's Top Princess, last night's Men's Figure Skating final is  more like the World's Spinniest Boy fight.
Once again, Matt Savoie of Peoria somehow emerged with his dignity intact,  dressing like a wandering Russian lyric poet of the 1840s, which is a more  artistically evocative look than the usual drag queen-in-training costumes. Most  of the other skaters hadn't gotten the memo about how "lyrical" is not  the same as "flamboyant." Silver medalist Stephan Lambiel's outfit of  zebra stripes in front, flaming orange tiger stripes in back, and blue sleeves  was particularly painful to look at. [Results  and video here.]
Easy winner Yevgeny Plushenko was less objectionable looking than most, but I  don't quite get why the judges were so mad about him. It seems like this vaunted  new high tech scoring system is taking us back to the quasi-rigged scoring of  the 1970s and 1980s, when the consensus favorite usually won if he didn't screw  up too embarrassingly. In the 1990s, upsets became more common as judges  penalized drastically for falls. But, in 2006, they only deduct 1 point for  falls, which doesn't seem like enough.
Particularly egregious was the pairs competition in which the Chinese silver  medal-winning team attempted a quad spin throw that practically maimed the poor  girl. They had to stop the music for five minutes while she recovered. It was  brave of her to continue at all, but penalizing them less than 1% for such a  catastrophic failure that they had to stop the competition is hardly enough.
I thought the best performances in the Men's long program were by American Evan  Lysacek and and super-limber Canadian Shawn Sawyer, who can lift one skate over  his head like the best girl skaters.
Speaking of super-bendy guys, I went to the Nissan L.A. Open golf tournament on  Thursday. Opening rounds are placid affairs, but John Daly remains an amazing  show. John looks like he would wear about a 54-Large suitcoat these days (if  ever wore a suit), but, even though the grip-it-and-rip-it man will turn 40 this  spring and must be 50 pounds overweight, he is still the double-jointed prodigy  of long-hitting he always was. He winds up on his backswing like a watch spring  and then uncoils so fast he hits the ball astonishingly hard. Daly combines  flexibility, strength, and an elegant short game, with the worst mental  resources in all of golf, a golfing Nuke LaLoosh (Tim Robbin's scatterbrained  pitcher in "Bull Durham").
The Thursday crowd at a golf tournament is made up of hard core golf fans. It  looked over 90% male, unlike the weekends when it might be 20-25% female.  Something that I might not have remember except from the comparison of coming  home and watching the Twirliest Boy competition is this: Although golf is not a  contact sport, and thus is not considered a very tough sport, almost no  effeminate men play it at all. In 35 years of playing golf at public courses in  major urban areas, I've never been in a foursome where I thought one of the men  even might be gay. That's rather remarkable.
Of course, the golf course is a lousy place to meet girls. Michael  Blowhard asks why straight single men insist on spending their time where  single women are scarce on the ground:
Are arty and "aesthetic" activities inevitably suspect in the eyes of straight American boys? If so, why? And my own favorite question: Given how much easier it is to find eager and willing girls if you have some arty interests, why don't more straight American boys come to their senses? Are they, like, gay?
Well, no, but it does seem like Americans are particularly inept at meeting the opposite sex. We seem to think it a matter of principle not to do what the opposite sex likes to do.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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