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Pat on Danica's back? Let's not race to be condescending

 

Freeman: Monumental victory

Why do we set the bar so low for women in sports?

The world's top female tennis player, Billie Jean King, beats a 55-year-old male has-been named Bobby Riggs in 1973, and it's a huge day for women's rights? I get the timing of the whole thing. It was different in the early 1970s. Men were men and women were somewhere in the background baking us cookies.

Danica Patrick finally won a race, but don't pretend it is an earth-shattering event. (AP)  
Danica Patrick finally won a race, but don't pretend it is an earth-shattering event. (AP)  
We were sexist pigs back then, and nobody played the sexist pig better than Riggs. But King was at the top of her game. Riggs was an old man. Beating him wasn't the most she could do. It was the least.

Decades have passed, but we're still condescending when it comes to women in sports. A high school senior named Candace Parker enters the (boys) slam dunk competition at the 2004 McDonald's All-American Game, gently pushes the ball through the rim, and wins the event. J.R. Smith practically sat on the basket for a few of his dunks, but Parker won because, well, she won because she was a girl. And don't tell me I'm being sexist, because I'm not. The judges were being sexist for symbolically patting Parker on her pretty little head and telling her, my, what a sweet thing she is.

At least Danica Patrick competed with men on a level playing field when she won the Indy Japan 300 on Sunday in Motegi, Japan. Patrick played the exact same sport as everyone else, was held to the same standards, and won. What she did was more impressive, from a sports standpoint, than King's tennis win over a washed-up Riggs or Parker's condescending dunk "victory."

But this was not all that impressive. Not if you look with the jaded eyes of neutrality, which very few of you undoubtedly possess. Then again, maybe I don't possess those eyes either. Not on Danica Patrick. She has rubbed me the wrong way for years, including her ridiculous marketing choices, like when she stares seductively into the camera to hawk antifreeze or pretends to peel down her racing suit and makes beaver jokes -- I'm not making that up -- for GoDaddy.com.

Patrick has bugged me for a while, and I'll tell you exactly when it started: It started in July 2006 when she said she was considering a move to NASCAR. No problem there. But then she smugly wondered how high those TV ratings would be. Big problem there. At the time, Patrick was 10th on the Indy Racing League -- 10th out of the 15 drivers who raced every week. She was a non-factor on her B-list racing circuit. And she's wondering about the ratings for her NASCAR debut? Hey, sweetheart, try qualifying for a NASCAR event. Then we'll talk ratings.

If you're wondering why I'm wrapping a wet blanket around what Mike Freeman is foolishly calling a warm and snuggly story, that's the biggest reason: the IRL is not real racing. Not real good racing, anyway. It's not the best car circuit in this country -- that would be NASCAR -- and it's not even the best open-wheel series in the world. That would be Formula One.

So what is the IRL? It's a training ground for decent drivers who hope to be good enough to race somewhere important some day. Sam Hornish Jr. won the IRL season championship in 2001, '02 and '06. Dario Franchitti won the IRL title in 2007. That's the best the IRL has to offer -- or had to offer. Both left the IRL for NASCAR, where they are overmatched. In 17 career NASCAR starts, neither has finished in the top 10. Hornish has broken into the top 20 once in 10 tries. Franchitti? Never. Patrick Carpentier, another dominant open-wheel racer in this country, can't break into the top 10 of a NACAR race, either.

Poll
What is your view of Danica Patrick's first victory?
  56% Major history
 
 
  44% What's the big deal
 
 
 
Total Votes: 3333

The IRL is the junior varsity of racing, is what I'm saying. Danica Patrick finally won herself a JV race, and that's good for her, and it's a neat story. The first woman to do anything -- the first man to do anything, too -- is always cool. But let's not take this too far, OK?

Winning in the IRL isn't a matter of talent. It's a matter of time. Race 50 times, as Patrick has done in the IRL, and you're bound to win eventually, especially when you have the best car and support team money can buy, as Patrick does.

A typical NASCAR weekend will have nearly 50 drivers trying just to get into the field. In the IRL, the field is less than half that large -- and, as I've already explained, significantly less skilled. To win the Indy Japan 300 on Sunday, Patrick had to finish ahead of 17 other drivers. That's it. She beat 17 cars. Do that at Talladega, and you finish 26th.

Those are details nobody wants to hear, and I don't understand why. Maybe you think I'm sexist for pointing those details out. Maybe I think you're sexist for not wanting to know, for wanting instead to feel good about the pioneering done by Patrick and therefore to feel good about your socially uplifted self rather than holding women, and men, to the same standards.

Drag-racer Shirley Muldowney won the NHRA's elite Top Fuel season championship three times. Jockey Julie Krone won more than 3,700 career horse races, including the 1993 Belmont. After the Professional Women's Bowling Association went under in 2003, three PBWA bowlers -- Liz Johnson, Kelly Kulick and Cathy Dorin-Lizzi -- joined the men's tour and earned their way into fields.

Those are all remarkable stories of women vs. men, but if you ask me, the most impressive story involves Michelle Wie. Before unraveling at the hands of her pushy parents and marketing reps, Wie nearly made the cut at the 2004 Sony Open on the PGA Tour. She shot an even-par 140. She finished ahead of nearly 70 male professionals and missed the cut by just one stroke. She was 14 years old.

That beats the hell out of anything Patrick did this weekend, or next weekend, or any weekend, on the IRL.

 
Talk Back
Reputation:99
Level:Superstar
Since:Sep 4, 2006

April 24, 2008 2:46 pm
In his book The Life of Samuel Johnson, James Boswell wrote that he told Johnson, "I had been that morning at a meeting of the people called Quakers, where I had heard a woman preach," to which Johnson replied, "Sir, a woman's preaching is like a dog's walking on his hind legs. It is not done well; but you are surprised to find it done at all."
Reputation:93
Level:All-Star
Since:Nov 21, 2006

April 22, 2008 5:54 pm
Danica won a FUEL MILEAGE RACE, folks!  Actually, I should correct myself - Danica's crew chief won a fuel mileage race. Granted, Danica has some skill but, as Bill Parcells says, "Let's not put the anointing oil on her just yet."  Winning a fuel mileage race is a matter of pit strategy, not driver skill.  That's why so many drivers hate fuel mileage races.  It puts t ...(more)
Reputation:84
Level:All-Star
Since:Mar 9, 2007

April 22, 2008 1:19 pm

Michelle Wie is your most impressive! Are you kidding me?  She accomplished nothing, she didn't make the cut, she failed.

Let me clue you on a couple of things.  First Michelle doesn't play against the men she plays against the course.  Danica races against the men.  Second, the course she played on was her HOME course.  If you play golf and have a ...(more)

Reputation:96
Level:Superstar
Since:Dec 15, 2007

April 23, 2008 3:49 pm

The only issue that I take offense to is the statement that the IRL is a "minor" racing series, and F1 is better open-wheel racing.  To the first point, millions of dollars are poured into each car on each team to race a full season.  It is just as impossible to consistently compete with no sponsorship.

In terms of sheer skill, NASCAR has two road courses, and many t ...(more)

Reputation:99
Level:Superstar
Since:Aug 27, 2006

April 22, 2008 11:45 am

In track racing, there has to be a starting point for women, and this is it. So, she won her first race on the fresman cicuit (wouldn't the Nationwide series be JV?). No woman has dome that before, and that makes this an accomplishment worth noting. There have been women in Nascar before, so there's no ground to break there. For all the hype and hoopla, Nascar has only been ultra compet ...(more)

Reputation:86
Level:All-Star
Since:Sep 24, 2007

April 23, 2008 6:34 pm

Sorry, Doyel, before you assume that NASCAR racing is a lot harder, try asking someone who has raced competitively on both circuits which one is more challenging, more enjoyable and cutting edge.  You'll have to do it off the record, because no one wants to bust the media buzz of NASCAR, but privately. many of the highest level drivers wish they were running the open whell racing of th ...(more)

Reputation:96
Level:Superstar
Since:Apr 29, 2007

April 22, 2008 1:20 pm
I was on board with your column until you wrote this:

"Hey, sweetheart, try qualifying for a NASCAR event. Then we'll talk ratings."

I'm not sure how you can claim there's condescension towards the accomplishments of female athletes, and then wrap the message in a condescension blanket. 
...(more)
Reputation:82
Level:All-Star
Since:Nov 23, 2006

April 22, 2008 11:42 pm

Doyel's argument that Indy Car racing is inferior and has inferior drivers shows his total lack of understanding of the sport in general.   Put about 90% of NASCAR drivers in an Indy car at Long Beach or Elkhart Lake and see where they finish.  In fact, have them run Indy and see.  Sure, guys with experience like Gordon (either one) and Tony Stew ...(more)

Reputation:99
Level:Superstar
Since:Nov 27, 2006

April 22, 2008 1:39 pm
I for one was happy Danica won the race in Japan. I am now hopeing she can win one with the whole IRL and Champ car line-up in the field together.   Maybe this will shut Doyel the idiot up once and for all.  No talent, just a matter of time, Greggy why dont you get your butt out there and drive then if it is so easy.  Your killing me with your non-sense. 
Reputation:97
Level:Superstar
Since:Sep 12, 2007

April 22, 2008 6:11 pm
Had Danica not been such a media whore, then she would have faded into obscurity and this would not be front page news.  But had she not signed every ad deal out there, she would have been a lot more likeable, but no one would have known about just another IRL driver.

That said, good article Doyel.
Reputation:90
Level:All-Star
Since:Mar 6, 2008

April 22, 2008 11:43 am
Freeman and Doyel are both right to some extent.  I think that the real importance is not that Patrick finally won a race, but that she was given the opportunity to.  Back when she started off with Rahal/Letterman, while they supported her, she didn't have the infrastructure around her that would give her a good chance of winning.  Poor pit times for instance often set her back ...(more)
Reputation:98
Level:Superstar
Since:Jul 8, 2007

April 22, 2008 8:34 pm
she didnt do anything where the physical superiority of men could have been taken advantage of.
there is no reason a woman cant be just as good as a man at racing. none that i know of at least.
 
 
 
 
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