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THE WILD LIFE
Shuttlecocked
Without Mercy:Badminton Punk
by
TED KATAUSKAS
243-2122
Ah, spring.
I open a window for the first time since October and consider the
sounds of the urban outdoors. Starlings twittering in a bud-crusted
cherry tree. Subwoofers thudding like distant artillery. The hollow
bounce of a basketball. The shriek of the Dayglo Abortions.
The mohawks
have emerged from their nest on Northeast 7th Avenue. Peculiar species,
these badminton-playing punks, with their bristling plumage, their
leather and stainless-steel-studded coats, their combat boots stomping
the hell out of naked clay where there once was a lawn. One after
the other, each player--diminutive racket in one hand, cylinder
of Pabst in the other--takes an overhand swipe at a shuttlecock
and bellows "Yeah!" A rubber-nosed plastic mesh funnel flutters
over an insubstantial net, capricious as a leaf in the wind.
What the hell?
I walk around
the corner, down a driveway past a van sprayed with graffiti (DESTROY...RIOT
PUNX...I'VE BEEN SHUTTLECOCKED), and stand on their turf. What's
left of it, anyway. The doubles match abruptly stops and a yellow-haired
punk wearing fatigues tosses his racket to a beer-swilling bystander
and introduces himself as Ricky. After I explain who I am and what
I want, Ricky tells me that he bought the badminton set for a barbecue
three years ago. The game quickly spread to other punk houses in
the neighborhood, which now harbors four makeshift courts
and an informal circuit.
Right now, a
sizable subset of Portland's punk rock population is practicing
for a summertime championship (played with a $30 shuttlecock, with
real feathers) where each game costs two bucks and the winner stumbles
home with a wad of cash. Picture it: Punks on the roof; punks in
the trees;
a bi-hawked ref on a ladder at mid-court, enforcing the rules of
international play with a broadsword. They call it "badkitten."
Broadsword aside,
I wonder if the sport isn't a bit, um, wussy for this crew. Ricky
allows that some shitheads laugh when he says he plays a lot of
badminton, but they're always the ones who end up coveting $100
composite rackets. "This isn't most people's idea of the mighty
outdoors, but it's one of my favorite things to do," he says. Next
to swilling Pabst. "If I go to a bar, they better fuckin' have Pabst,"
he adds.
Beer break.
The doubles
teams dive for a fragmented six pack, Ricky grabs his racket. As
we volley the shuttlecock, I remember something I once read: "Punks
only stay punks for a brief part of their lives before settling
down to become pleasant lawn-mowing Christians." Of course, if the
Riot Punx ever settle down, they won't have a lawn to mow. They'll
already have stomped it to hell.
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