Sinjin Smith leans forward in his chair at a bustling Pacific Palisades
deli and points to his biggest adversary. No, not Karch Kiraly. It's Smith's
right knee. The knee used to be a willing co-conspirator, helping Smith
win 139 tournaments, second most in history, while thrusting him into a
cultural spotlight as the top man on the sand. But after six operations,
the knee has had enough. Smith,44, is retiring after the Michelob Light
Manhattan Beach
Open, which continues today and ends Sunday.The journey has been equally
rewarding and controversial for Smith, whose tanned visage and deft skills
made him eminently marketable. He appeared in more than 20 TV commercials,
had a video game modeled after him, sold his name to a short-lived restaurant
in El Segundo (alas, the memorabilia at Randy and Sinjin's was better than
the chili), and co-owned a clothing store in Santa Monica
where East Coast folks would breathlessly call with one request: Send
us everything Sinjin wears.It was hardly a surprise when People magazine
named him one of the 50 most beautiful people in the world in 1990.Early
in his career, he formed an unbeatable partnership with Kiraly and, after
that ended in 1984, joined Randy Stoklos in what became the most successful
team in beach volleyball history, winning 113 tournaments.
As his popularity grew with the sport, he fought openly with the tour
he helped found, the Assn. of Volleyball Professionals, and was ultimately
exiled by its player-only management in 1993. But he forged a career on
the international tour, extending his sphere of influence to such places
as the Canary Islands and Klagenfurt, Austria, while helping beach volleyball
become an Olympic sport in 1996.Over a tuna melt with fries on a sunny
Wednesday
afternoon, Christopher St. John Smith--his given name--knows that life
has been as unpredictable as it has been successful since he first started
playing beach volleyball as a teenager."Did I think I could have made a
living playing volleyball? Absolutely not," he said, remembering with a
smile that early tournament prizes included a beach chair, a new volleyball
or an ice chest--an empty one, no less."Did I think anybody in the country
would know who I was? Absolutely not. Did I think volleyball would become
an Olympic sport and I'd have a hand in it? No way. It's unbelievable,
really." Smith initially made a name for himself playing indoor volleyball,
going to UCLA from Loyola High and leading
the Bruins to a 31-0 record as a senior in 1979, the first undefeated
season in college volleyball history.He was supposed to play in the 1980
Olympics, but watched it on TV while the U.S. boycotted. From there, he
chose the beach game, teaming with Kiraly to win a
stunning 21 of 24 tournaments until they split, Kiraly going the indoor
route and winning Olympic gold medals in 1984 and 1988 while Smith gained
fame on the beach with Stoklos.
Smith and Stoklos won more than half of the 225 tournaments they entered
and reached the semifinals more than 90% of the time. When they broke up
in 1993, Stoklos shocking his partner with a request to go in a different
direction, Smith had already soured on the AVP.
Smith and Stoklos were reprimanded by the AVP in 1992 for skipping
a tournament in Seal Beach to play in an international tournament in Spain.
The event in Almeria came up a week after the Barcelona Olympics and was
a trial run of sorts for intrigued members of the
International Olympic Committee. It also had a generous prize pool
of $250,000.
AVP officials thought Smith was chasing the money.Smith thought otherwise.
"[AVP management] was telling us we couldn't go to an event that had
a big impact on whether beach volleyball would become an Olympic sport,"
he said. Smith and Stoklos were each fined $35,000 for skipping Seal Beach.
A year later, Smith left for the rival international tour,although he did
not leave controversy behind, quarreling with AVP players during the qualification
process for the Atlanta Olympics. Kiraly, who had remained with the AVP
and considered Smith a turncoat for choosing the international tour, was
irritated that Smith and partner Carl Henkel were granted an automatic
Olympic berth by virtue of their ranking on the international tour. Kiraly
didn't understand why he and other U.S. players had to beat one another
up in the U.S. Olympic trials in Baltimore, while Smith and Henkel got
to watch from afar. "I have nothing against him personally," Kiraly said
at the time, "But I am critical of an Olympic qualification system that
allowed a certain team to be exempt of [U.S.]Olympic trials." To some extent,
the dispute was settled on the court.
Kiraly and partner Kent Steffes qualified via the U.S.trials and met
Smith and Henkel in the Olympics with a semifinal berth on the line. In
one of the top beach matches in history, Kiraly and Steffes won, 17-15,
and went on to take the gold medal. "I was mistaken," Kiraly said afterward.
"They gave us all we could handle and more. The way they played today
proved they should be here." Smith still carries worldwide clout as
president of the
international beach volleyball world council. He was brought back to
the AVP when it was purchased in May by sports agent Leonard Armato, who
used to represent Smith.
As Smith gets ready to walk off the sand for the last time in a tournament,
he knows he is making a wise choice. He is also ending on a civil note
with Kiraly. They spoke last Saturday at the Santa Barbara Open. Kiraly,
40, told Smith he would be missed.
"I think he's done an incredible job of promoting beach volleyball
here in the '80s, through the early part of the '90s and then overseas
after that," said Kiraly, who passed Smith's career tournament titles record
in July 1999, and now has 142. "He's one of the guys responsible for getting
beach volleyball in the Olympics and he deserves a lot of credit for that.
"It's unfortunate that he's retiring and most people in the sport haven't
had a chance to see him. He essentially had to leave the country for a
few years to qualify for the Olympics. But he's still fun to watch and
has been an incredibly tenacious competitor."