At home a topic of late is what professions my teenagers are drawn toward. They have at times asked me if I didn’t choose my current life path, what would I have done. While I have a legit answer, I usually respond with two, unattainable dream jobs. The first is marine biologist studying dolphins in the Res Sea, the second is sports broadcaster. Growing up at a time when women were first starting to make inroads in sports and 99% of broadcasters were former athletes, I knew that broadcasting baseball games was not in my future. Thirty five years later, women’s sports leagues may not be as popular as men’s, but sports are televised, and the need for women as broadcasters, not just cute sideline reporters is evident. If one tunes into a WNBA, softball, or soccer game, at least one of the people in the booth is a woman, usually a former athlete who is knowledgeable in her field. The Second Season was not on my radar, but when I saw that a friend would be reading it and what the subject matter was, I knew I had to join in.
Ruth Devon is a former standout basketball player for Georgetown University. While in college, she fell for her coach who referred to her by her pet name Ruthie. In her last year with the WNBA a few years down the road and few professional opportunities available domestically for even the best women athletes, Ruth blows out her knee on a seemingly easy lay up try. Her career is over, with it the relationship between player and coach, freeing her to marry Lester Devon, keeping his name all these years later. Many female athletes who have male rather than female coaches have been known to view them as father figures, the relationship strengthened in high school or college with the athletes spending more time with their teammates and coach than their families. It would come naturally that a teenager would see their coach as a bonus father. A relationship were an athlete falls for her coach romantically seemed far fetched to me at best but was needed for character development and to further the storyline. For Ruth, being married to Lester means making constant choices to balance her career and motherhood with her husband’s.
Seventeen years later, Ruth and Lester are divorced. He wanted to be the successful parent who coached in the NBA and later broadcast games for ESPN. Lester desired that Ruth stay home and raise their daughter; he could not fathom her becoming the successful broadcaster that she is. For most of Adriana’s developmental years, Ruth was on the road more than she was at home, employing her mother and a myriad of housekeepers to raise her daughter. Lester states that only one parent per family is entitled to a platinum frequent flyer card, and, yet, both he and Ruth have attained that status. She would have to choose between him and being a full parent versus furthering her own career and smashing the glass ceiling. For Ruth, whose first love was basketball, the choice is easy. All these years later, with her and Lester working side by side broadcasting NBA games and Adriana about to graduate from high school, the chemistry is still there. Maybe, the choice was not so easy after all.
For a woman in any field, choosing between raising one’s children at home and working outside the home is never an easy one. Even the most successful women are still viewed as the parent who has to schedule appointments, juggle schedules, and take care of the housework. Nearly a quarter of the way through the 21st century despite women being in the position to make this choice, little has changed in terms of expectations in running a home. Ruth, while becoming ESPN’s top sideline reporter, is no different than women in real life who work full time and leave their children in daycare, missing milestones while carving out a place for themselves in society. Her character notes that ideally she would have loved to be a mom with five kids shuttling them around to basketball and ballet, baseball and gymnastics, but when given this job opportunity only a few years out of college, she knew that she had to jump on it. There might not be many other opportunities given that twenty years ago, male athletes still balked at the presence of a woman on the sidelines, in the locker room, or in the booth. Even Yankees radio announcer Susan Waldman makes a fictitious cameo during Ruth’s shining moment, and Ruth notes that she looks up to “Susan” as a role model and pioneer for all she went through during the beginning of her career. Today, women as sports broadcasters are commonplace, Ruth being one of many. In making the choice to advance her career, Ruth is a household name and known to sports fans as being the best. I could only gush.
Ruth Devon is modeled after Doris Burke, a real life booth announcer for ESPN. Burke is highly regarded as knowledgeable and well admired by her peers and the athletes that she covered. Emily Adrian has crafted a believable story about the choices that women make when being successful in the working world. This could be translated to any field, not just that of sports broadcaster. Some of the character development aggravated my personal views but within the storyline, these fit within Ruth as a she balances being a mom and a top ranked business woman. I do not read much sports fiction as I believe sports as a narrative tells its own story making fiction unnecessary; however, from time to time, it is refreshing to view the sports world from a fictional approach. As fans, we all have pipe dreams, and Emily Adrian’s in crafting a highly regarded woman as a sports broadcaster is spot on.
3.5 stars (for one story development I do not agree with) rounded to 4