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Teaming with singles
at sports leagues
By Andrea
Lorenz
AMERICAN-STATESMAN
STAFF
Thursday, October 26, 2006
There I was at Cain and Abel's, surrounded
by sweaty people while women in short shorts spelled
words with their back ends.
The sweat was
from dodgeball games played earlier in the evening
and the "butt charades" was
a bar game among many in what I discovered to be the
slightly seedy but all-in-good-fun singles scene of
social sports leagues in Austin.
These groups don't
advertise specifically for singles. Mention that
word and the owners will quickly correct you, and
players say no way would they join the "Austin Singles Sports Club." But
the Austin Sports and Social Club? Without even planning
to, you hit the singles jackpot.
Couples are welcome, but most members
are single, if only because single people have more
time to fill.
Clare, 23, joined
the league for a "completely
innocent" reason — "That would be weird," she
says if it were a specified singles group — to
avoid the "work, home, work, home, occasional weekend
night out" routine after college.
On a sports team, she's met new friends
and gets out during the week. The owner of the sports
club, Marc Tucci, chose Austin because of people like
Clare. After scoping out cities in warm climes, he
saw Austin to be the most fit and least likely to watch
TV.
(I didn't tell
him I missed a kickball game when "Lost" premiered
this month.)
Tucci was surprised
at how many individuals in Austin sign up to be placed
on teams — about
40 percent of total membership — compared with
only about 5 percent in a similar Baltimore company.
In other words, you won't feel like an oddball if you
join alone.
It's not just
Tucci's club: Other groups in Austin report a large
singles membership, but they don't advertise it.
Hill Country Outdoors and Austin in Action skew a
bit older — average age is 35 — with
not as much emphasis on the bar scene and more events
geared toward families. (Single parents, take note.)
And if you think
you can compete with the best of 'em to earn the
title of "biggest flirt," "biggest
lush" or "best makeout," you might want to check out
the World Adult Kickball Association. Each week the
group puts out an e-newsletter with game recaps and
bar recaps: "There seems to be a strange magnetism
between Hoodies and RBL Rebels," one recent edition
read.
Austin Sports and Social Club is more
mellow (rump charades aside). Clare's softball teammate
Sam, 36, said that when you're single, meeting someone
is always in the back of your mind. But a singles group?
"It seems kind of weird because you're
there for the same reason," Sam says. "If you're going
up to talk to someone, it's like, I'm single, you're
single, we're both here to meet people, and we're talking,
so I must be interested."
At a singles event, you know everyone's
single and looking.
What you'll never know is whether the
one you find likes you because you're you or because
you fit a demographic.
Singles at these places are tired of
being single, and they've been through enough wrong
ones to know the recipe of likes, dislikes and apparel
sizes that will produce their perfect mate. If you
fit (or pretend to fit), you're in.
Will you find your one and only at
a social group or sports team? Maybe. But if you're
joining just for dates, these places don't want you.
You'll just "single-ize" the
atmosphere.
We already spend too much time of our
single lives trying to not be single. Let's just play
ball.
alorenz@statesman.com;
246-0008
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