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Can squash have an enfant terrible? Oh yeah. Meet Jonathon Power

From SATURDAY NIGHT, October 1998

In November of 1993, at the world team squash championships in Karachi, Pakistan, Canada drew Scotland in the first playoff round. But when the team bus arrived at the courts, Jonathon Power, the nineteen-year-old prodigy from Toronto, wasn’t on it. Coach Gene Turk tracked Power down at his hotel, where he was still sleeping, and brought him to the stretching area, where other players were warming up. Power was there in body but his head was far, far away. He stood, heavy-lidded, in a tearaway basketball tracksuit. “What do you want me to do?” he asked Turk. “Well, stretch!” Turk said. Power bent over to try to touch his toes. A cigarette pack fell out of one jacket pocket and a lighter fell out of the other. A few feet away, limbering up on the mat, the world champion, Jansher Khan of Pakistan, watched this little bit of vaudeville. He couldn’t believe it. He was looking at a clown.

He was looking at the future of squash.

Team members today tell that story with bemusement, partly because they know how things turned out. Four years later, Power became the first North American ever to beat the long-reigning Khan, and created the tantalizing possibility that he might one day tame his demons and become world champion.

But mostly the story circulates because it captures Jonathon Power in amber. He is not as other men. Or at least not any other elite professional athlete.

When he walked into the office of Graham Carter, a top Toronto money manager, a year ago, Power projected an oddly contradictory image: the worldly naïf. “Here was a kid who had had no real advisers for his whole career, and the guy is number three in the world, and prior to six weeks ago he’d beaten the number one six times in a row,” observed Carter. Like those eccentric math geniuses who tackle complex theorems all day but have trouble boiling an egg, Power did one thing awesomely well but was almost comically deficient in the routine demands of a professional life. He didn’t have a credit card. He didn’t even have an OHIP card. He’d plied his trade in sixty countries, logging hundreds of thousands of air miles, but had never bothered to get on a frequent-flyer program.

What kind of sponsorship deals did he have, Carter wanted to know. None, Power said. Equipment? No. Shoes? He bought his own. McDonald’s had approached him about doing some promotions, but no deals had been finished. There had almost been a racquet agreement, but that fell through after Power left the court audibly slagging the racquet that had let him down. The rep for the company happened to be in the stands watching, and the net morning, he called to say he would not be doing business with Jonathon Power, like, ever.

This wasn’t going to be easy.

WHEN most people think of squash – if they think of it at all – it’s as a pastime enjoyed by toffee-nosed Ivy League seniors, captains of industry, TV psychiatrists. Or just dorks who spend the summers of their youth bouncing balls off the garage and never outgrew the fascination.

People who actually play squash (a fairly small number), or watch it (an even smaller number), have a model in their mind of how top squash players look and act, what they stand for and where they live. The model is probably someone very like the current world number on, Peter Nicol of Scotland. Small in stature – for squash is a punishing game, and only lightweights can withstand the pounding on the joints over time. Gentlemanly – for squash’s British traditions stress fair play, and historically, exchanges between players and referees would not have sounded out of place in the Old Bailey. (“Let.” “No let.” “Appeal.” “Sustained.”) High focused – for squash, which has been likened to speed chess, is a game of infinite combinations and angles and moves and countermoves and perpetual calculation of risk. Supremely fit – for squash is a game of heavy aerobic demands. Deferential to their coaches – for squash is almost a tradesman’s pursuit, best learned at the hip of an experienced mentor who can groove you in.

Jonathan Power defeats all the stereotypes so completely you’d be tempted to conclude he was dropped into the game by some lesser god just to shake it up, the way John McEnroe landed in tennis in the seventies like a hound on the kitchen table.

He is quite a big man – six feet, 175 – and he seems, eerily, to get bigger the moment he steps on a squash court, the way some actors look bigger on stage.

On court, wearing his trademark red bandana, Power calls to mind the young Christopher Walken in the Russian-roulette scene in The Deer Hunter, where Walken sits zombified in the Saigon gambling den with a gun to his own head, somehow absolutely certain the bullet has the other guy’s name on it.

He is not the scion of some wealthy industrialist, who grew up in the shade of a single private club. He was a military brat, born in Comox, B.C., whose sports-fanatic dad was director of athletics at Canadian military bases and took a fierce interest in the physical education of his kids as he moved them from town to town.

He did not go to an Ivy League school. He didn’t go to school at all beyond grade eleven – he dropped out. Having won national junior titles since the age of ten, and having glimpsed the life that awaits an international squash celebrity when his father sent him to England to train with the coach of the great Pakistani champion Jahangir Khan, he saw no point in waiting to turn pro.

And he did not, having turned pro, instantly settle into a mature, ambassadorial role. In 1990, when he was sixteen and just breaking into the circuit, he lost in the first round of a tournament in San Francisco – an unthinkable outcome. Power wasn’t to be seen for the rest of the week. He hadn’t gone home; he’d drowned his miseries in the local rave scene, conducting private research into how many drugs and how much alcohol an athlete can ingest without its affecting his equilibrium on the dance floor. Squash seemed the last thing on his mind. But two days later he showed up for a tournament in Denver and made it to the semis.

Few players accompanied Power into the night. But everyone watched, a little bit amazed, as the bell-bottomed boy went down the rabbit hole and popped back up at match time ready to play. The night before the semifinals of the 1994 Alberta Open, Power for forty-five minutes of sleep. He won.

From the Delphic, on-court utterances (“If you choke, you’re a dead man!”) to the basketball slang that so bamboozles European umpires (“Hey, double-pump, ref!”), he earned a reputation as squash’s Yorick. Or perhaps squash’s Howie Mandel. At one tournament, Power walked past an umpire and said, by way of greeting, “Whose life are you going to ruin today?” In the Qatar Open final in 1997, after Power contested a call by the strict Irish referee Jack Allen, Allen leveled a long gaze at the Canadian. “Mr. Power, please do not talk back to me.” Power feigned surprise, raised his palms, put on his best puppy-dog face, then said, quietly, “Jack, I was only having some fun.” The crowd was in his pocket.

You’d be tempted to call Jonathon Power “anti-establishment,” but that would imply a firm position on the other side of the equation. Power isn’t anti-anything. He just is. “He doesn’t do too much to please other people,” admits his father, John, a top player himself and currently the squash coach at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire. In interviews, Power has not tended to censor his thoughts – to the delight of the media and the despair of the people looking out for him. After he publicly cut up then world champion Jansher Khan after a loss, Power’s coach, Mike Way, took him aside and said, “What, you wanna give the guy more armor?” Power didn’t particularly care. In 1997, when Power accused Khan of failing to clear back from the wall to allow Power to hit it, yet masterfully hiding the fractions from the inexperienced referees, Khan was reported to have replied: “I never block players. The referee can see everything. All players have this problem. That’s how squash is. I think it’s more of an excuse for losing.” Power figured Khan must have been misquoted, because, he said, “he can’t form the sentences that quick.”

Last fall at the Qatar International, the night before his semi-final match against Jansher Khan, a man named Ali Al Fardan took Power aside and made him a deal. Al Fardan, one of the most prominent jewelers in the Middle buy ambien online canada East, was the tournament’s chief sponsor. “If you beat Jansher tomorrow, and then go on to win this tournament,” Al Fardan said, “any ring in my store is yours.” (Power had endeared himself to Ali the year before at a party at Al Fardan’s lavish penthouse. Al Fardan had arranged for a belly dancer to perform. This caused palpable tension among the guests in the strict Muslim country. The players themselves, unsure of protocol, were keeping a dignified distance. The party was stiffing. Then Power got up and started to boogie. All those years of raving finally paid off. He faced the dancer and slowly gyrated to the rhythm she set. He languorously undid his shirt a button at a time. He was in his element. He saved the party.)

With the ring on the line, Power did beat Khan, and then beat Nicol in the final, and Ali Al Fardan honored his bargain. Power showed up at the jewelery store the next morning with a friend. Al Fardan brought out a couple of display boxes and laid them on the counter. Power conferred with his friend, who knew a little bit about jewelery appraisal. Then he pointed to a ring of white gold; he thought he saw Al Fardan flinch just a little. The ring was going, in that market, for about $12,00 (U.S.). Power paid the tax on it and took the ring home. He put it in a safety-deposit box and promptly booked a couple of airline tickets to Paris. He cooked up a story about having to play some matches there, and then he called his long-time girlfriend, Sita Schumann, and asked if she wouldn’t mind joining him. He gave her the engagement ring by the Seine. They will marry this summer.

Had he not met Sita in a Toronto bar in 1991, and had he not turned on the charm when he needed to, things might have worked out quite differently for Power. Sita’s influence has been a key plot point in his life, in the estimation of many who know them both. He’s still unlikely to be mistaken for Prince Philip, but Jonathon Power circa 1998 is a demonstrably mellower version of the Jonathon Power of even a few years ago. “He’s cleaned up his act a hell of a lot – the drugs and so on – because he knows Sita won’t tolerate that – says former national junior coach Stuart Dixon. “She’s also given him some goals, like, ‘Jon, you can be world champion.’ And he’s starting to believe it.”

After that first formal meeting with Power in Toronto, Graham Carter, the money manager, agreed to take Power on – practically pro bono, initially. He called up his friend Wade Arnott, the hockey agent. “How’d you like to try your luck with a squash player?” he asked. And so began the construction of a crude infrastructure around the young man who had somehow gotten so far without one. Carter and Power have become fast friends, with Carter assuming an additional role as a kind of financial tutor. They took out an insurance policy to save Power’s bacon in the event of a career-ending injury. Carter set up a holding company called Top Seed Inc. to catch the endorsement money, when it comes.

If corporate-sponsorship decisions were made on native ability alone, there’d be no discussion and no worries. Blank cheques would quietly be written on mahogany desks. Power is a unique talent. Even fellow players who don’t like the gamesmanship and just generally find it hard to get around his big backside when he sticks it out as an impediment, doff their hat before his skills. “He does things with a racquet that just make you want to play squash,” acknowledges Nicol.

When Power was a young boy and the family was living in Montreal, his father would pull him out of school and they’d drive to Toronto to watch the top players who were coming through for Tournaments. Thus did Jonathon watch and model and mimic – his preferred method of learning. He soaked up Australian Brett Martin and Kiwi Ross Norman and the Pakistani Jahangir Khan, but in the end developed a style all his own.

The difference between a top club player and a Jonathon Power is hard to appreciate just by watching each of them hit. Oddly, framed by a court thirty-two feet long by twenty-one feet wide, really mediocre players can seem more dynamic than the pros. The dentists and accountants – guys with barely reconstructed tennis or racquetball swings who do scary things like turn and play the ball directly at their opponent saying “Coming around!” – are obviously working out there. They skid on their own sweat and sport raspberries on their naked butts in the shower room afterwards.

The top pros, by contrast, hardly seem to be running at all. They just shark around the “T” in the middle of the court, drifting, finning, conserving energy. From some angles, they look like a couple of clever-bearing chefs hustling around each other in a kitchen. The game looks simple at this level. He ball seems peppy and the court looks small and easily coverable. Tight, compact swings drive balls off the front wall and down the side walls, making a sound like flies being swatted. The chief virtue of the best squash shots is not speed but “length,” whereby the ball is hit so that the second bounce, if you let it come, lands near the junction of the floor and back wall – and from the gallery this looks perfectly innocuous because pros take the ball early, or when they don’t they can still usually dig it out from the back, and so the point goes on and on. No flashy smashes or half-volleys or aces: just the slow, calculated working of the opponent out of position, sitting up an eventual loose ball that can, with luck, be put away.

Power has limited patience, so he’s not inclined to let points drag on. And this is what’s most remarkable about him as a squash player. In a sport in which you’re not supposed to be able to win a point quickly, he can.

“He has the remarkable ability to hit a shot more than one way,” says Mike Way. Many of Power’s strokes start off looking the same. Then, like a baseball pitcher, he directs the ball, with astonishing accuracy and touch, at the last second with a crack of the wrist. “What amazes me is when I watch him send the top players in the world in the wrong direction,” says Gene Turk. “That should never happen at that level. His short game is so good, players must feel they need to get a jump on the ball, so they make a commitment.” And the moment they commit, Power goes the other way. To avoid being cartoonishly wrong-footed, anyone playing Power must come to a complete stop, then start again when the ball is struck—an exhausting proposition over the course of a match. Unlike other top-twenty players, some of whom have crippling workout regimes, Power has never been very fit. But until recently he hasn’t needed to be because he himself reads his opponents like airplane fiction, and because, as British player Tim Garner puts it, “Normally his opponent does four times as much running as he does.”

Few squash players have ever been as dominant as Power is when he’s on. Or have self-destructed as badly as Power has when he’s off. Often he has roared through to the semis of a tournament without dropping a game, only to sink quickly in the cream of the draw with brainlock. “When he gets into trouble, he has a tendency to do one of two things,” says Colin McQuillan, who covers squash for the London Times. “He gets petulant, or he stops.” In the 1998 Commonwealth Games final – probably, because of the live BBC-TV coverage, the most widely watched squash match in history – Power seemed to be cruising to victory when a couple of calls went against him. His opponent, Peter Nicol, started playing tougher and clawing his way back into the match. Power began to cave. At a game-break, fellow Canadian Graham Ryding went over to speak to his teammate, who sat at courtside looking uninterested. “Don’t be such a dick,” Ryding urged. “Don’t let him do this to you. You’re the number-one player in the world.” Briefly reinvigorated, Power played better in the next game. But then so did Nicol, to take the match. At one point Power threw his racquet at a wall in disgust, missing Nicol’s face by inches.

He comes as a boxed set: the virtuoso and the drama queen. And in remote corners of the squash-literate world, they love it all. Next to Jansher Khan, Power may have the biggest following on the circuit. He is routinely asked for his autograph in countries where the sport is appreciated, if not necessarily played, by the masses – the Middle East, North Africa, and the Indian subcontinent.

The selling of squash at the professional level seems to be predicated on the hope that if non-players could be seduced into watching this game, they’d be bitten. Hence, exhibitions and tournaments are often held on portable courts set up in some of the strangest, most exotic, most public places in all of sport. A downtown square in Brussels. Grand Central Station. The Palladium dance club. The lower concourse of the World Financial Center. And most spectacularly, the Giza plateau, where last year players fought to keep their concentration as camels moaned in the darkness beyond. Egyptians prayed toward Mecca on courtside rugs, the pyramids loomed through the front wall as the lights went down, and 5,500 fans went nuts in the stands for the local boy, Ahmed Barada.

If he had been born in Cairo, or Karachi, there’s little doubt Power would already be a wealthy man.

The young Egyptian, Barada, to whom Power has never lost, appear on TV there more frequently than the test pattern, bombs around Cairo in a Mercedes, has seen his face on an Egyptian commemorative stamp, has reportedly received hundreds of thousands of dollars in government bonuses for good performances at home, and is one of only a handful of people to have President Mubarek’s private phone number. (Barada is, in Power’s estimation, “just a little shit.”)

Jansher Khan, as an employee of the quasi-state-run Pakistan International Airlines, draws a salary of about $1,000 (U.S.) a month – enough to support four families in Pakistan. (“You can’t be more boring than Jansher,” Power told me a year ago. “He’s no ambassador. He doesn’t really talk to anybody. He arrives at a tournament with his entourage and as soon as it’s over he wants to go home. He’s singlehandedly destroyed the game, I’d say.”)

“If Jonathan moved to England he’s be a millionaire, no question,” says Tammie Sangster, the local rep for Head racquets. Prince, the racquet and apparel company that sponsors Peter Nicol, has said it would jump to the pump if Power transplanted himself, like tennis player Greg Rusedski, to Britain – a bigger squash market. There would also be tax advantages to an offshore move. “Squash players are in an almost unique position to do it, since they’re legitimately out of the country for more than six months of the year,” Carter says. “Until now, he hasn’t really been earning enough money to justify [moving], but he will be if he keeps winning tournaments.”

Power is already a kind of de facto international citizen. He rents a flat in Amsterdam where he hangs out during the European squash season—our winter season – because it’s a convenient halfway point between tournament sites and because “I can make way more money there from exhibitions.” I once watched him trying to settle a hotel bill in Cairo in American currency. He thumbed through his wallet: Dutch guilders, pounds, sterling, Canadian dollars, Egyptian pounds – no U.S. bucks. But Power appears to have no intention of grounding himself outside Canada for good. “I like Toronto,” he says, simply.

Carter believes there is money to be made in North American – by exploiting the U.S. corporate market, doing exhibition matches, speaking engagements, clinics, and so on. Whether there’s serious money here remains to be seen. The powerful American sports-marketing reflex has been unresponsive to squash. McDonald’s did come through with a smallish deal requiring that Power wear the golden arches on that red bandana for every professional match he plays, and a couple of equipment companies now give him free gear, but you won’t see Power announcing plans to go to Disneyland, or slaking his thirst with Gatorade on TV. Big squash tournaments in North America tend to be underwritten by the likes of Rolex or Mercedes-Benz. Power seems a better fit with Airwalk or Jones Soda. Recently, Carter and Arnott sat down with John Nimick, head of the Professional Squash Association in Boston, and raised the question: How can we leverage Jonathon to grow the game while at the same time doing what’s best for Jon?

Carter and Arnott could well make the argument – and no doubt they have – that Jonathon Power is the best thing to have happened to squash since a couple of British public-school boys (or so a prevailing theory holds) invented the modern game when they punctured the ball they were hitting against the school wall and dampened its bounce. Squash needs Power. It has tended to be a boom-and-bust game, enjoying robust health in the seventies and early eighties, then tumbling into a recessionary decade or so when key promoters left the sport, as Power puts it, “people got tired of seeing the same Pakistani guy winning year after year.”

Indeed, you can count the dominant players of the last thirty-five years – Khan, Khan, Hunt, Barrington – on one hand. Squash is desperate for some juicy competition at the top. Now, in the Scot and the Canadian, it has it. The polite, straight, indefatigable little steam engine versus the charismatic shot-maker. Peter Nicol and Jonathon Power, stewards of a rivalry that seems destined to hold and deepen until one of them blows a knee or knocks the other’s block off.

At this year’s U.S. Open at Boston’s genteel Harvard Club, Power roared through to the finals and ran into a confident Nicol, who was feeling he had finally solved Power’s game. In a glass count incongruously plunked down in the middle of a room where heads of state sometimes dine, Power was on (for him) his most excellent behavior. Whether for the benefit of his backers in the crowd – Carter, Arnott, John Power, untold would-be sponsors – or just to see what would happen if he bridled his id, he was practically a gentleman out there. Of course he couldn’t resist a few theatrics. After one questionable call, he straightened up, in mock anguish, with a sharp intake of breath, as if he’d taken a gutshot from the calvaryman on the mesa. The crowd was on Nicol’s side. “Stop wining!” someone snapped when Power queried another call, and the remark drew a little splash of applause. “I was hoping the Scotch boy would win,” one distinguished member told an acquaintance in the locker room after the match,” because the other boy was a pain in the ass.”

Being the “bad boy of squash” is a little like being the bad boy of the philharmonic wind section. The refugees from the arena-rock crowd are going to love you, but you can’t expect the long-time subscribers who came for The Nutcracker to roll over easily. In that Commonwealth Games final, Nicol beat Power in four games. The first three were epic. The fourth was over in twelve minutes. “The one thing that gets me about Jonathon is, I don’t think he has respect for anyone,” Nicol told me last fall. “I see him as being so close to the finished article, and yet so far away because of that. He could be fantastic for the sport, practically the savior of the sport. But in the end he always fucks it up.”

LAST summer, I watched Power on court at the Toronto Athletic Club. He had come to do drills and spar with Graham Ryding, the number two Canadian He was coming off a disappointing showing in a major tournament, having been forced yet again to pull out with an injury. A little square ball machine sat in the front corner of the court puffing out squash balls to Power’s backhand, and Power put down drop shot after drop shot. “Two years ago there’s no way he’d have done this for thirty minutes,” his coach Mike Way said quietly, referring to the tedious drill. Power overheard this remark. “Two years ago I wouldn’t have been in the club for thirty minutes,” he said.

Power was considered pretty much uncoachable for much of his career. Buddha himself – teacher of those who cannot be taught – could not have taught him. “Do you think anybody off the court can tell you what you might be doing wrong?” Way asked Power once. “No,” Power replied.

Way has described his past coaching style as “eggshell coaching” – volunteering suggestions only at opportune times,” waiting until the exact right moment and then planting the seed. He has compared his charge to Andre Agassi, which would make Way Nick Bollettieri, Agassi’s long-time coach. “Nick made Agassi’s practice sessions shorter and shorter to keep the boredom factor down,” Way told me. But now Way was being more directive. Almost stern. And Power was paying attention to every word – as if he had suddenly clued in to what’s at stake.

For years, Power was far and away the best Canadian player. Now, slowly, Graham Ryding is closing the gap between them. “Graham always worried Jonathon,” John Power told me last year. Jonathon is a better athlete, but in some ways Graham is a better squash player. Technically, Jonathon can compensate with strength and imagination.” Ryding knows Power’s game better than anyone. If Ryding has been good for Power, to push him, and Power has been good for Ryding, to pull him, Power and Ryding have been good for the five or six players who are drafting behind both of them and coming up fast.

Peter Nicol is clearly improving. Having lost to Power six straight times, Nicol then won their next three meetings. Shots that Power used to hit for winners are now coming back with interest.

Arnott and Carter have made clear what’s expected of Jonathon Power. “You have marketing value first of all by winning, and secondly by having a presence on and off the court,” Carter says. “We’ve told Jonathon, your job is to win. If you keep winning and you aren’t financially comfortable in the end, then we’re not doing our job. The last couple of years, Power has averaged close to $100,000 in total income. He has always understood that figure could more than double if he were to rise to world number one overall or, especially, become world champion. To leverage the boy to sell the sport, “Number two isn’t good enough,” says Arnott.

Strange as it seems to say about a twenty-four-year-old, time is running out. Squash takes its measure on the human body in invisible increments. The relentless joint-compression and subtle body contact of this “non-contact” sport grind down the knees, lower vertebrae, and especially hips. With few exceptions, the top squash player’s body gives out in the early thirties. There are no Baryshnikovs.

Even more than most players, Power has been struck by injuries, which have tended to come in bunches and always at the worst possible times – a bizarre golfing accident here, an unlucky basketball injury there. At last year’s world team championships in Kuala Lumpur, Power disappeared into the bathroom just minutes before Canada was to play England in the final and somehow send his back into spasms on the throne. I once asked him about the condition of his knees, which had been giving him grief from overstress during the Professional squash Association’s demanding fall schedule.” They wake up sore,” he said, “but once they get going, they’re good.”

Back in juniors, Power had created future trouble for himself by failing to work out. At the world junior championships in Hong Kong, the Canadian team coach, Stuart Dixon, had a couple of experts check out Power’s aching back. “What they discovered is that he was physically very, very unbalanced,” Dixon says. “He hadn’t done the weight training or the strength development. These people told him, ‘Unless you do something about this upper-body imbalance, your life span in this sport will be five years, max.”

And so he had had to catch up as if his life, or at least his career, depended on it. “I hadn’t seen Jonathon in three or four years,” recalls Alex Pogrebinsky, the Edmonton massage therapist who has worked with bobsledder Pierre Leuders and figure skater Kurt Browning, among others. “Then in 1996 he had some exhibition games in Edmonton and he came to me for a massage. His body had changed. He had these big legs. He had done so much training, I didn’t recognize him.” That October, Power chewed through the pack unseeded to win the Tournament of Champions in New York City – his first major victory on the tour. He started stringing some wins together: Hamburg, Budapest, Hong Kong. He shot into the top twenty for the first time debuting in the top ten at number six.

He has since experimented with exercise routines he once would have scoffed at: plyometrics – a system of explosive muscle development. (It gave him shin splints, initially.) Under the guidance of his new trainer, Chris Broadhurst, he recently found himself face down in a dressing room at Maple Leaf Gardens with five acupuncture needles in his naked butt. Broadhurst went upstairs to attend to business, and some Leafs players came in and shuffled past with no idea who the skinny guy was or how he hoped to make the squad looking like that.

Power had taken an enormous gamble on squash. “The problem with you Americans is, you go to college,” he told a family friend from New Hampshire. “These are your prime squash-playing years.” It was a joke, but at the same time no joke at all. Without an education, he has, as they say, little to fall back on, but Power has never thought about falling back. This is it. He must make as much as he can now – otherwise, he understands, he’ll be forty-four years old and wearing that McDonald’s bandana under a little headset at the drive-thru window. He must earn back what his parents to painstakingly invested. For twenty years, since Jonathon was old enough to hold a racquet, the Powers lived on a complicated system of debt juggling – continually borrowing, working credit-card floats, taking out loans to pay off interest on other loans, all to finance the development of their kids’ squash. IN the spring of 1997, Power returned from a tournament in which he’d done well. He approached his dad with something to say but not quite the tools to say it. “Here, I’d like you to have this,” Power said. “He gave us $8,000,” his father told me last summer. “In cash. He just pulled out this big wad of bills. His mother put it in an RRSP, and set up a plan to pay it all back.”

But there remained one more thing to deliver.

“I guarantee you Jonathon is not going to keep losing to Peter Nicol,” national-team member Kelly Patrick told me this fall, after Power had dropped his third straight match to the Scot. “He’s too competitive. If this keeps up, he’ll either explode, implode, or play the best squash ever.”

NOVEMBER 29, 1998. Doha, Qatar. Jonathon Power has just come off the court after his quarterfinal match at the Mahindra World Open in the Middle Eastern oil state: the world championships. To his huge relief, he is still alive. He met the man he has most feared meeting, compatriot Ryding. And crushed him in three quick games.

Back in Canada, the squash world is abuzz. Squash Canada’s web site racks up a record number of hits as players and coaches log on to follow Power’s progress. A question mark hangs in the air. Everyone has wondered what a health Power might be able to do if he were able to perfectly focus the beam.

In the quarterfinals, Power plays the Egyptian, Barada, who has somehow squeaked ahead of him in the world rankings. It is all over in twenty-nine minutes. Power, the assassin, decamps quickly. Seven hundred stunned Egyptians, who have turned out to lend their usual raucous support, look for a lightning rod for their rage. A small group of them rush the umpire’s section and are restrained by security.

IN the semis Power meets his friend, Australian Anthony Hill, the only player acknowledged to be as wild as Power. “I’ve been trying to keep out of trouble all week, but it doesn’t seem to have worked,” Hill remarks after losing. He pronounces Power “unbelievable.”

The final is almost anticlimactic. Peter Nicol takes the first game, but then Power, who has ripped off his ankle brace to play unencumbered, cannot be stopped. This time it’s Nicol who gets tired on the fast glass court, and Power who gets stronger as the match goes on.

It takes seventy-two minutes for Jonathon Power to become what the London Daily Telegraph calls “the first World Champion from the New World.” “What was your game plan in the final?’ he is asked by reporters. “I don’t usually have a game plan,” he shrugs. “I just wing it.” In Toronto, Wade Arnott is already fielding calls. The kid who a couple of years ago couldn’t buy a sponsor has just become a poster boy for Dunlop, the world’s leading squash brand. He will endorse a new racquet line, and his autograph will appear on every boxed squash ball that rolls out of the factor in the new year.

On a Qatar Airways flight to London, the pilot makes an announcement: the new world squash champion is on board, and he will be receiving free drinks. A flight attendant cruises down the aisle, past the suddenly anonymous Peter Nicol, and serves champagne to the beaming man in the row behind him.

Bottle this. Exploit it for all its symbolic value. For in a strange way, the appearance of the feral boy, Jonathon Power, actually does honor the game he now seems ready to rule. Squash, as the distinguished squash writer Rex Bellamy observed, was conceived in a prison (the famous Fleet debtor’s prison). Power’s ascension reminds us that squash, like opera, belonged to everyone before the elites kidnapped it. The blood of rebels runs through its deepest plumbing.

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The Lightning Field

The Lightning Field

Essays

SATURDAY NIGHT magazine, December, 1997

“Have you heard of the Lightning Field?” my friend Frank asked as we sat waiting for menus in a café in Victoria. I said I hadn’t. He cocked his head, as if downloading the recollection from some deep data bank. “It’s out in the middle of the New Mexican desert. Quite a place. Hard to describe.” A few seconds of silence passed. “It’s a couple of hours from Albuquerque. I can’t tell you where.”

“Why not?”

“Because I don’t know. It’s not on the map, and it’s not really near anything. You can’t drive there yourself. You drive to a small town, and you leave your car there. A caretaker pickes you up and you travel through the dust for awhile. You stop at one point at a gate into a ranch, and then you go further until finally you see an old cabin. The caretaker drops you off there, and that’s where you stay.” As Frank spoke, I heard his voice catch a couple of times. I wondered if he had a cold coming on.

“They leave food for you in the cabin, and there are beds. Out on the front deck there are some chairs.”

“What do you do there?” I asked.

“You look. You listen. You wait.”

“Wait?”

“For the lightning.”

“Frank closed his eyes like a narcoleptic. He didn’t look unhappy. Something had happened to him out there, wherever there was. I wouldn’t begin to understand quite what until, eight months later, I received a phone call telling me that Frank had died.

*

“Out here we don’t talk in acres much,” says Karen Weathers, navigating the GM Suburban over the cattle guard and through the gate to the biggest spread of private land I have ever been on. In New Mexico they talk in sections. There are 640 acres to a section, and Dia owns twenty-three sections – which amounts to the whole New Mexican desert as far as I can see.

Dia is the Dia Art Foundation of New York, a body dedicated to, among other things, funding and maintaining land art — man-made monuments in remote parts of rural America. We are in Kittram County, thirty-five or so miles east o Quemado, where I exchanged my rental car for blind trust in Ms. Weathers. She’s not what I expected—a young Frances McDormand where I had in mind Peter Lorre. She is the caretaker of the Lightning Field. In four years she has riven 1500-odd people from around the world out here for an experience that often leaves them permanently changed, though rarely in ways they can explain.

I had arrived at the Albuquerque airport with no plan but to find this place. All I knew was what Frank had told me that bright day at lunch. The locals I met had never heard of it, and it was by chance that I finally found someone who knew someone and wrote down a phone number on a packet of sugar. The Lightning Field is open to visitors six months of the year, from the beginning of May to the end of October. No more than six people are permitted to view it at a time, and only advance written requests are considered. After explaining that I’d come from Canada just to see the field, I was squeezed in—though the spontaneous-pilgrimage story was clearly one they’d heard before, and had the booking sheet been full I would have been on the next plane back to Vancouver.

I am not alone here. Peter Healey, a photographer from Massachusetts, and Tom Arthur, a sculptor and university professor from Sydney, Australia—old friends from art school in Boston—have come to cap a reunion trip across the Southwest. For Arthur, the Lightning Field is the cobbler’s unmended shoe. Until now he has been too busy lecturing on it to actually come and see it. Healey has his camera with him, out of sight in his overnight bag. Photos are discouraged, if not expressly forbidden. “This is a privately owned work of art,” a Dia employee, Kathleen Shields, told me. “We want to limit how widely the image of the piece is distributed out in the world.” Two years ago, Dia threatened action against the producers of Lightning Field, an American cable movie in with an environmental artist played by Nancy McKeon gets crosswise with a satanic cult at an art installation very like this one. (The producers backed off, renamed their picture The Lightning Incident, and redesigned the ads.)

Weathers lets us out in front of a cabin that looks just as Frank described it – a 1920 homesteaer’s lodge of rough-hewn pine, warty and solitary on a low scrub flat of pinon bushes and Torry yucca. She will leave us here overnight. “Watch out for rattlesnakes,” she says. The snakes have been around more frequently since Dia got rid of its cats, and now, when guests leave the doors open, the snakes sometimes come into the cabin and find a corner to sleep in. When this occurs, Weathers comes round with a shotgun and blasts the snake where it lies. She promises to return the next ay at 11 am, and then she gets into the truck and drives off.

Inside the cabin are an airtight stove and a couple of heavy oak mission chairs. Old wood with new fixtures, old iron beds with crisp, clean sheets. Rustic living without the hardships. Inexplicably, here in the geographic centre of nowhere, there is running water and electricity. Yet there are no power lines. A buried cable brings the power in, which contributes to the illusion that the cabin is magically self-sustaining.

We put down our gear and get our first full-on look to the west. There, in the desert, 7,200 feet above sea level, is the Lightning Field: 400 polished stainless-steel poles sharpened to points, like giant silver knitting needles arranged in a grid a mile by a kilometer. This is the chef’d’oeuvre of sculptor Walter de Maria, who approached this project with a jeweller’s eye and a geometer’s rigour. Sixteen (four squared) poles by twenty-five (five squared) making 400 (twenty squared). The measurements are so precise that an imaginary sheet of glass placed on top of the poles would be perfectly, evenly supported. Distances between the poles—220 feet—are accurate to within one-twenty-fifty of an inch. From any direction, the rows appear to stretch to infinity.

De Maria spend five years searching for this spot. He scoured California, Arizona, Nevada, Utah and Texas before settling, in 1977, on this isolated plain—isolation being, in his view, the essence of land art. Unlike Robert Smithson, who chose Great Salt Lake for his famous Spiral Jetty partly because it was supposed to be an energy vortex, De Maria was looking for a more pedestrian combination of virtues: it had to be a flat, lonely spread in an area of high lightning activity. There are roughly sixty days a year when lightning can be seen from the Lightning Field. In the summer, changes of seeing some are good. In the summer, lightning comes in with what the Navajo call “male rain”—that hard rain that falls in big drops—as distinct from the gentler female rain that falls between November and March.

I had a taste of a New Mexico lightning storm two days earlier when, as I was travelling north from the Chihuahuan desert, a storm brewed up in the east. Sheet lightning bounced around up there, looking for a way out, and every fifteen seconds or so the cloud put down a big fork. National Public Radio was playing a jazz suite to which the lightning seemed somehow choreographed. The British composer George Benjamin, I remembered reading, had been inspired by a New Mexico thunderstorm to write “Ringed by the Flat Horizon”—all soft bell chords and tremors in the lower registers. NPR kept interrupting its programming to upgrade the storm warnings: severe lighning-storm warning, tornado warning, and then: “Radar has picked up a tornado heading directly for Caprock, New Mexico. Residents of Caprock are advised to take cover.” The announced dropped his broadcast diction. “Go down into the basement and cover yourself with cushions.” Caprock was about forty miles to the east. This storm, now moving at about the speed I was driving, would sweep east, pick up steam, and kill fourteen people in Texas.

When lightning strikes a pole at the Lightning Field it generally melts the steel at the tip, blunting it, and the pole has to be replaced. But this happens so infrequently—maybe once or twice a season—that it’s hardly worth thinking about. People who come to the Lightning Field aren’t storm-chasers. A lot of them are art students, paying homage to what’s acknowledged as one of the most important earthworks in America. (A few pilgrims do both Donald Judd’s place at Marfa, Texas, and the Lightning Field, in a kind of double-shrine swing.) Earthworks are those conceptual pieces, monumental in sale but minimal in form, that went up mostly in the seventies, when people such as Michael Heizer, Robert Morris, Smithson and De Maria took it as their mission to rescue art from preciosity and re-pot it well away from the city. New land art still gets done—James Turrell is still working on his big crater near Flagstaff, Arizona—but for the most part the movement has been paved over by the next phase of public art: big urban projects people can actually see without renting a Land Rover and taking time off work.

Every visitor, Karen Weathers told us, has a unique response to the poles. Some climb them. (“Very disrespectful,” said Kathleen Shields.) One man, inexplicably, mummified himself from head to toe in aluminum foil and went running among the poles, hoping to attract a charge. (It was a clear day.) Some self-impose a vow of silence. De Maria recommends the work be viewed alone, or with a small number of people over at least a twenty-four hour period. Visitors, he believes, must wander about and see the poles from all perspectives. Watch them pick up light in the morning and let it go at night. The Lightning Field resists comparison to anything else. But I came to think of it as an image of Jesus in a plate of billboard spaghetti, drawing travelers off the blue highways, giving them a brief, shared common experience, some life-leavening mystery.

Certainly, coming here is the closest a lot of middle-class white folk such as Tom, Peter and I will ever come to a spirit quest. The aim, quite literally, is enlightenment. The whole exercise recalls the line from the class Buddhist text The Bodhicaryavatara: “As when a flash of lightning cleaves the night, and … virtuous thoughts rise, brief and transient, in the world.” We cannot muster virtuous thoughts, so we decide to tell stories instead.

Peter, who from some angles looks just like Bill Clinton, sits on a porch chair and peers into the distance. It’s ust. The air is thin and dry, crisping the edges of everything. He begins with a tale of his music teacher back home in Massachusetts. The teacher’s mother, who apparently has some psychic gifts, has been plagued by Southwest indigenous imagery so vivid she is compelled to get into her car and drive to New Mexico. She arrives in the middle of a freak snowstorm. She can barely see the road. Suddenly an animal darts in front of her car. It’s a white coyote – a sight so novel she is moved to mention it when she arrives in the next village. The villagers’ reaction is startling. Turns out the local shaman has just died. When a shaman dies,his soul is said to take the form of a white coyote. “The first person to see the white coyote,” the villager explains, “becomes the next shaman.” Peter’s friend’s mother did not stick around for the formal initiation. She now lives in Calgary and has a postgraduate degree in chaos theory.

*

The stars are out in force over the desert. The low light has lent my cabinmates a sinister air. Can I trust them? Possibly they wonder if they can trust me. If this were a Tony Hillerman novel, one of us would now turn into a shape-shifting Navajo witch and take out the other two with a shiv made from a human femur. Dia would be party to it. Earlier, Arthur noticed there was enough bacon in the cabin’s fridge to clog the arteries of half a dozen really big men. “That’s what they do,” he concluded. “After you’re dead they come in and take your passports and sell them, and then they prepare for the next earthwork. See those three mounds out there.”

There’s nothing to do but wait. In this, we are not alone. Waiting is New Mexico’s unofficial pastime. The whole state sits face-to-the-night in a kind of suspension. Near Jemez Springs, in the cold mountains northeast of Santa Fe, five young Ohioans pass a joint counterclockwise around the fire, steam from a mineral spring frosting their beards. They are waiting for the economy to turn, the snow to melt, their coffee to run out; waiting to get back into the water. At Bandelier National Monument in Frijoles Canyon, a kiva built by the Anasazi lies unexcavated—waiting for the hands of future archaeologists who, it’s assumed, will have more sophisticated methods of digging, preserving, dating. Tim McVeigh passed through this town, perhaps stopping briefly for gas or a smoke, after hatching a bomb plot in Kingman, Arizona, and driving easy along Route 66 to carry it out. Now everybody waits for the next McVeigh to come around, tor the violence inherent in a fringe of the American right to bite in.

My friend Frank was waiting too. Looking at this landscape, maybe sitting right in this chair, he was staring down his own mortality. Frank had AIDS. He hadn’t told anybody. I imagine him peering out at the poles, in twilight, as they stood out against the distance Sawtooth Mountains like the gradations on a thermometer. He was here with a friend. What did they talk about? Favorite movie exit lines. The gratuitious precision of Mr. Walter De Maria. Anything, everything, but the Big Thing. Maybe they took a little peyote and saw the nearest silver pole as the lance of the Caballero de la Triste Figure: Don Quixote.

I have no idea whether lighting stuck on the night Frank was here. I have a romantic notion that one bolt fell like the finger of God. But of course that couldn’t actually have happened. Lightning does not fall. I was surprised to learn, in the same way I was surprised to learn that the North Star is not fixed, that lightning isn’t a single charge. There are two strokes. One leaves the sky for the ground, and another leaves the ground for the sky. And somewhere in the middle, they meet.

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Going Ballistic

Going Ballistic

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From Monday Magazine, August 1990

At one point I thought, You know, if I had to turn around right now and leave this party at Lake Cecebe, it would have been worth the drive from Toronto just to have crossed paths with this guy Brantz.

Five minutes after we arrived, we heard a sound like a wine cork popping at the bottom of a well. Down on the lawn was Brantz, and he was holding something that looked like a leaf blower. A three-foot length of four-inch black ABS tubing that fed into a little cylinder with a spark plug attached. It was a potato bazooka. He’d made it himself. And he’d carried in a giant box of potatoes to supply it.

How the device works is, you jam a potato into the mouth of the barrel. If the potato’s too big you shave it down with a paring knife until it just fits. To demonstrate, Brantz fitted a potato into the aperture and snugged it right to the hilt with a piece of rebar.

He then readied the propulsion. He’d brought a can of Tame hairspray, which he discharged for about a second into the chamber before quickly screwing the end on tight. In warmer temps you have to use more – maybe two seconds of spray. If it’s too warm the gun won’t work at all. “A computer does it for you now, in your car engine, but in the old days you had to mix the gas to get the right richness through the carburetor, it was a science, just as this is a science,” Brantz said. He shouldered the device, pointed it straight up and depressed a button to create an ignition spark. Thoomp. The potato flashed from the barrel, a quick smudge, and it was suddenly a couple hundred feet in the air, like a fireworks shell, and everyone braced to scatter until it became clear that the potato was headed out over the lake. It landed with a faint plunk.

“Do you make these guys for sale?” someone asked. Brantz allowed that he had made a couple, but he didn’t really want that getting out. “We’re not sure if it’s a firearm.” People lined up for their turn to try. Mostly the guys. In fact, from the moment he heard the first dull boom, and saw what was happening, virtuallly every guy at this party was on his feet and coming over to investigate, before his rational mind had a say in the matter.

The first few customers fired their potatoes out into the lake, tracking the trajectory. Then Brantz loaded the gun and pointed it at a boulder about ten feet away. He fired. The sound of the gun and the sound of the potato hitting the rock were almost instantaneous. The potato was vaporized. Anyone within fifteen feet of the rock was covered with juice and fine pulp and bits of peel. I thought of the O. Henry story “The Ransom of Red Chief,” where a potato baked in the first is dropped down the shirt of a camper. You don’t often think of potatoes as weapons, but anything can be.

Brantz has blown things up all his life. At age five he was caught just in time before putting a bowl of gunpowder in the oven.

Folks should have been scared of Brantz’s gun, but many people were emboldened by liquor and the tests became riskier. Terry, a Toronto software distributor who had earlier humiliated me by exposing my ignorance of the cow-tipping myth (“It’s a joke. Oh, man!”) put on a ball glove an stood fifty metres away on the lawn, pumping the mitt and asking for heat. Branz must have felt this was a safe proposition as long as he was the one firing the gun. He’d had quite a lot to drink himself. He leveled the weapon at Terry, then put it down and went to get his video camera, “in case I need it in court.”

The first shot sailed over Terry’s head by about three feet. Terry didn’t even react. I don’t think he saw it. The potato vanished into the trees behind. A few people grew rightly concerned at this point. Brantz loaed again and passed someone the video camera. They got behind Brantz like a serious cinematographer, crouching there, and Brantz fired again. The potato zipped out of the barrel.

Terry saw it coming this time and tried to move his glove into position. The potato hit him – it wasn’t clear where at first – and it atomized, just as it had on the rock. He remained standing, stunned. It had struck his thigh. Had it been eight inches to the West the weekend would have turned out very differently, and Brantz and Terry’s lives would have wound together into a future probably involving the medical, legal and carceral systems. As it was, Terry – either the most fearless man I’ve ever seen or an exceptionally high-functioning drunk – walked back to the barbecuing area and carried on with the rest of the day’s events. He didn’t even limp. He’d grimaced and swallowed the pain and just walked it off, like Pete Rose. By the next morning he had a bruise the size of a pancake there. “If you hit someone from close range you’d kill ‘em for sure,” Brantz said, “even if you only hit them in the belly.”

We were left to speculate about Brantz’s fascination with this weapon, which never left his side all weekend. No one mentioned Freud by name.

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