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- <text id=91TT2649>
- <title>
- Nov. 25, 1991: The Dangerous World of Wannabes
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Nov. 25, 1991 10 Ways to Cure The Health Care Mess
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SOCIETY, Page 77
- The Dangerous World of Wannabes
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Magic Johnson's plight brings fear into pro locker rooms across
- the country and spotlights the riskiest athletic perk:
- promiscuous sex
- </p>
- <p>By John Elson--Reported by Sally B. Donnelly/Phoenix and David
- E. Thigpen/New York, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> Baseball players call them "Annies." To riders on the rodeo
- circuit, they are "buckle bunnies." To most other athletes, they
- are just "the wannabes" or "the girls." You'll find them hanging
- out anywhere they might catch an off-duty sports hero's eye and
- fancy: at Los Angeles' private Forum Club, at jock-oriented
- watering holes like Mickey Mantle's in Manhattan or Bigsby's in
- Chicago, in the lobbies of hotels where teams on the road check
- in. To the athletes who care to indulge them, and many do, these
- readily available groupies offer pro sport's ultimate perk: free
- and easy recreational sex, no questions asked.
- </p>
- <p> The sex may be free, but there is a price for the
- life-style. In the Nov. 18 issue of SPORTS ILLUSTRATED, Earvin
- ("Magic") Johnson attests that he contracted the virus that
- causes AIDS, and which forced his premature retirement from the
- Los Angeles Lakers, "by having unprotected sex with a woman who
- has the virus." And who was that woman? Magic does not know.
- "Before I was married," he wrote, "I truly lived the bachelor's
- life...As I traveled around N.B.A. cities, I was never at
- a loss for female companionship...After I arrived in L.A.
- in 1979, I did my best to accommodate as many women as I could--most of them through unprotected sex."
- </p>
- <p> Like most other Americans, pro athletes were generally
- shocked and saddened by Johnson's plight. His fellow players of
- the National Basketball Association, however, had special
- reason for concern about Johnson's flagrant promiscuity. It has
- been common practice for some pro players to share the favors
- of groupies who beguiled them. Had the woman who infected
- Johnson passed the virus to other players? Magic's pregnant wife
- Cookie tested negative for HIV, but had he given the virus to
- other women who were still out there sleeping with the stars?
- Says Charles Barkley, star forward of the Philadelphia 76ers:
- "There are an awful lot of men, women and children sweating it
- out in this league. If you don't practice safe sex after being
- scared like this, you're out of your mind." The possibilities
- were frightening enough to get some athletes thinking about the
- unthinkable: abstinence and marital fidelity.
- </p>
- <p> The presence of sexually available women on the sidelines
- of sport is nothing new. After all, Babe Ruth's appetite for
- women was as insatiable as his lust for food and booze. In his
- newly published memoir, A View from Above, Hall of Fame center
- Wilt Chamberlain boasts of having slept with 20,000 women--an
- average of 1.4 a day for 40 years.
- </p>
- <p> Many experts believe the groupie subculture flourished as
- professional sports became ever bigger as a business. Athletes
- now expect pampering off the court or field as long as they
- perform well on it. The notion that athletic prowess and sexual
- attraction go together reaches down to every budding jock who
- swaggered across a junior high schoolyard. Colleges routinely
- line up young campus beauties to orient athletically talented
- freshmen who have signed letters of intent. And the sexual
- mystique of the college sports hero lives on. Says Bill Little,
- sports information director at the University of Texas at
- Austin: "When I went to school here, girls always swooned around
- the football players. Now they do something about it."
- </p>
- <p> When these stars hit the big leagues, with salaries to
- match their talents and egos, opportunities and temptations
- multiply. Says Harry Edwards, a sociology professor at the
- University of California, Berkeley, and a personnel adviser to
- two pro teams: "We are looking at an institution so influenced
- by images of virility, masculinity, potency and sensuousness
- that sex and sport have almost become synonymous."
- </p>
- <p> Who are the groupies, and what do they want? Observers of
- the scene say they are usually of college age or slightly
- older. Mainly they seek money, attention and the glamour of
- associating with celebrated and highly visible "hard bodies."
- According to a 31-year-old who has had affairs with athletes in
- two sports, "for women, many of whom don't have meaningful work,
- the only way to identify themselves is to say whom they have
- slept with. A woman who sleeps around is called a whore. But a
- woman who sleeps with Magic Johnson is a woman who has slept
- with Magic Johnson. It's almost as if it gives her legitimacy."
- </p>
- <p> Wannabes are usually too smart to approach athletes on the
- playing fields. But they know all the after-game hangouts and
- usually can find out where visiting teams are staying. "We never
- reveal where we stay when we go on the road," says Arthur
- Triche, an executive with the N.B.A.'s Atlanta Hawks. "But some
- of them are willing to call every hotel in town. When night
- falls, they move in. You see some of the same faces from town
- to town. They're like card collectors." And they are seldom shy
- about intentions. Recalls Miles McPherson, a former pro-football
- defensive back turned preacher: "When we went to clubs, women
- would be competing in any way to get to us, and it is very easy
- to take advantage of that situation. Some said they wanted an
- autograph, and then they'd ask you to sign their breasts."
- </p>
- <p> Says Susie Erickson, fiance of Atlanta Braves pitcher Mike
- Bielicki: "I'll be holding Mike's hand, and they'll come up and
- whisper, `What are you doing with her when you can be with me?'
- Ask any wife or girlfriend to pick out a groupie, and they'll
- all point to the same one."
- </p>
- <p> Groupie action, says a New York City-based sportscaster,
- is heaviest in baseball, with basketball second. "Baseball
- players have a long season, they're on the road for weeks, and
- they stay in one place longer," this announcer explains.
- "Basketball players have it easy because they're so recognizable."
- Although a few tennis stars like Andre Agassi are invariably
- trailed by a mob of squealing fans, that sport is not conducive
- to groupie action: the best players stay inaccessible and have
- entourages to fend off unwanted wannabes.
- </p>
- <p> Women athletes, less well known and less well compensated,
- are not usually subject to the same degree of temptation as are
- men--though much of that may have to do with a lingering
- double standard. "A guy can go out to a bar, have a beer, talk
- to the bartender," says tennis star Gabriela Sabatini's coach,
- Carlos Kirmayr. "But if you are a woman alone in a strange town,
- you are usually stuck in a hotel by yourself."
- </p>
- <p> The problem for male stars, of course, does not simply
- have to do with the wiles of conniving women. Philosophy
- professor Dallas Willard of the University of Southern
- California notes that a lot of team athletes are ill-equipped
- to handle pro sports' off-field pressures. "Many star athletes
- today," he says, "are from poor backgrounds--poor not only in
- a financial sense but in terms of education, emotional and
- social preparation for life. They do not have the wherewithal
- to deal with the availability of sex, the offers to satisfy
- almost any gratification." Berkeley's Edwards claims to know of
- at least seven cases in which athletes have paid off groupies
- who threatened to go public with phony rape or paternity
- charges. And as both league officials and team executives
- increasingly admit, at some of the places where groupies trawl,
- drugs and alcohol are often present in quantity, further
- impediments to sensible judgment.
- </p>
- <p> Just as Magic Johnson is now promoting protection in sex,
- franchises are doing more to protect their assets--the players--from temptation. The N.B.A. has a mandatory rookie
- orientation program that includes a seminar on AIDS and a
- dramatized enactment of problems a player may face regarding
- women and friends. More and more N.B.A. teams are flying charter
- and unloading their athletes onto buses parked right on the
- tarmac. Some teams visiting Phoenix prefer hotels near the
- Coliseum to the Westcourt hotel, 10 miles away. The Utah Jazz
- books rooms at a hotel in New Jersey even when they are playing
- at Madison Square Garden. "New York has too much," says the
- team's president, Frank Layden.
- </p>
- <p> Some stars admit that there is only so much teams can or
- should do. "Players have to take more responsibility for
- themselves," says Knicks guard Gerald Wilkins. "That's just the
- bottom line. No woman can ever be caught with a guy if the guy
- doesn't want her to be there. It's just that simple." Kevin
- Johnson of the Phoenix Suns concurs. "Nobody's forcing anybody
- to do anything," he says. "We have to be in charge of our own
- bodies." The penalties for failing in that responsibility have
- never been higher.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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