Talking Again
Once bitterly divided over game's direction, two legends of beach,
Kiraly and Smith, say they've erased line in
the sand for good of sport.
By MIKE BRESNAHAN, Times Staff Writer
They slip on the headphones and get ready to work the microphones,
looking for all the world like another comradely broadcasting team.
But Karch Kiraly and Sinjin Smith haven't been this close--or this friendly--in
almost 20 years.
Then, they were tearing up the beach volleyball world as playing
partners. Now they've been brought together--at least once a week, anyway,
over Southland radio waves--by Leonard Armato, the player agent who bought
the Assn. of Volleyball Professionals last year and is doing whatever
it takes to promote his franchise, even if it means persuading former-partners-turned-enemies
to make nice. So far, Smith and Kiraly side by side has worked. For an
hour a week. For next to nothing.
"I'm not going to get rich on the radio show," Smith said. "But
anything I can do to help build the sport, I'll do."
As the AVP's Michelob Light Manhattan Beach Open begins its main
draw today, icons Smith and Kiraly still have the best perspectives and
strongest voices in beach volleyball. Smith, 45, retired last year but
remains an influential figurehead. Kiraly, 41, is the sport's all-time
leader with 143 tournament titles and is still an effective player, having
won the Santa Barbara Open in June with Brent Doble.
Legends on the beach, they started playing together in tournaments
way before prize money was offered and were the key charter members
when the AVP was formed in 1984. They saw the tour rise and fall, and
now are trying to ensure its rebound.
They have compiled a wealth of stories, and they offer predictions
of the future of the AVP as it begins the fifth of seven events on this
year's tour.
Back when Smith and Kiraly started playing as a team in the late
1970s, there was no AVP, merely a loosely organized string of Southern
California tournaments publicized by word of mouth. There were no player
rankings, no statistics, no records kept.
And no cash prizes. Ice chests and beach chairs were given to the
winners.
"If there were beverages in the ice chest, it was a big bonus,"
Smith said. "If you got a new volleyball, you were stoked. Nobody was
making any money back then."
Summer days were endless for the beach boys, who would play on
the sand from sunrise to sunset, arriving early in the morning, staying
all day, trying to avert a loss that would knock them off the main court.
Then there were the actual tournaments. After hitting the sand
during the day, players would hit the bars and parties along the coastline.
"Everybody went from the beach to drink and dance and have fun,"
Smith said. "Some of the top players would end up going out on Saturdays
and would show up Sunday half-drunk. They'd sweat it out and play the
best when they had to."
Said Kiraly: "There was a lot less responsibility. Almost none
of the guys were married, none of them had kids. It was a lot of wild,
immature guys who had fun playing beach volleyball and all the things
that went along with it."
Back when Kiraly and Smith were friends, and winning, it was fun
for them too. Out of college and playing for no pay, they couldn't afford
hotel rooms, so they crashed in an unusual place.
"Sinjin was car-sitting for a buddy of ours who had a VW van,"
Kiraly said. "It was convenient because we didn't have to scrounge around
to find a place to sleep.... Of course, the van never started up unless
we jump-started it. We had to park it downhill, with the emergency brake
on, in order to jump-start it."
The fans shared the beach volleyball lifestyle, camping out for
days so as not to miss out on prime seats for Manhattan and Hermosa. By
Sunday, fans were stacked 15 to 20 rows deep around main court, the nearest
ones less than two feet from the sidelines, oohing and aahing every block
and kill.
"That was one of the special things," Kiraly said. "They'd literally
be inches from the court."
If the AVP put beach volleyball on the map, it also changed things.
Travel schedules became an issue. In 1984, the first AVP season,
there were 18 tournaments, 14 in California. But three years later,
there were 26 tournaments, only 11 in California. Flying time was replacing
some of the previous playing/practice time.
Endorsement deals further reduced time in the sun as players spent
more time pitching beachwear, sun block and volleyballs.
"The sport becoming professional took us off the beach," Smith
said. "Guys weren't playing all day long, all the time. You saw guys
setting up two-hour practice slots instead."
Smith and Kiraly, former teammates at UCLA, split in 1984. Kiraly
went the indoor route and won Olympic gold medals in 1984 and 1988. Smith
stayed on the beach, winning a record 113 tournaments with Randy Stoklos.
Smith, however, feuded with the AVP players-only management and
ultimately chose to play almost solely on the newer international tour
after the 1993 season. Kiraly had returned to the AVP by that time, and
he and new partner Kent Steffes became that tour's top duo.
Smith forged a new career on the international tour and helped
beach volleyball become an Olympic sport in 1996. However, the Federation
Internationale de Volleyball, which ran the international tour, set the
ground rules for Olympic qualifying, ignoring protests by AVP players,
turning Smith and Kiraly into bitter enemies. When they met on the sand
in the '96 Atlanta Games, Kiraly partnered with Steffes, Smith with Carl
Henkel, they played a match that will forever be the standard for measuring
quality beach volleyball, Kiraly and Steffes winning in overtime in the
quarterfinals, 17-15.
Kiraly-Steffes then went on to beat Mike Dodd and Mike Whitmarsh,
another AVP duo, for the gold medal but that was the AVP's high point.
Saddled with debt, the result of poor management decisions and overly lucrative
player payouts, the AVP filed for bankruptcy in November 1998.
"It killed me to see what happened to the AVP in the mid-to-late
'90s," Smith said.
But Smith, who'd had a longtime friendship with Armato, was brought
back into the AVP fold last season and retired after finishing ninth with
George Roumain at Manhattan Beach.
He and Kiraly are now ... friends?
"I think it's a testament to who we both are," Smith said. "No
matter what's gone on in the past, we can both stand up and promote the
sport, not only individually but side by side. The sport is that important
that you can put everything aside to help benefit it."
The new AVP has shown some growth this season. Attendance has increased
at the first four tournaments, and NBC will televise the next two, at
Manhattan Beach this weekend and next weekend at Chicago, renewing the
network's relationship with beach volleyball for the first time since 1997.
"I'm sure it will be at a high-fever pitch at Manhattan Beach and
Chicago, which is something we haven't had in many years," Kiraly said.
In the long run, Smith thinks the AVP's popularity will prevail.
"Break down our sport, piece by piece ... there's no reason why
this sport can't become a major sport in the world," he said. "Look at
the Olympics. Look at the attention, the crowd, the enthusiasm that it
got at the Olympics.
"I guarantee [Armato] did not get involved in the sport to bring
it back where it was. He wants to get it bigger than it was.... I have
a good sense of the sport, its components and how it can be sold to the
public. It may take 10 years, 15 years, maybe 20, but we will get there."