I recently read Future Sports, edited by Gardner R. Dozois and Jack Dann, and wasn't happy with it. I stumbled across this one, published years before, and thought I'd give it a go, despite it being edited by Terry Carr. I usually don't like Terry Carr's anthologies, but this one was a pleasant surprise.
This book's most recent story was from 1974, so if you like your sci-fi more recent, then skip this. If you're interested in the history of sci-fi, want to read more than shoot 'em ups or New Wave (and have a laugh), then crack this open and enjoy. It's certainly more entertaining than watching real sports.
Selections:
* "Introduction" by Our Editor. Your basic two page introduction.
* "Joy in Mudville" by Poul Anderson and Gordon R. Dickson. This is part of a series the duo wrote about aliens called the Hoka who come from Toka ... the latter name giving a possible explanation for how this story came to be. This time around, the Hoka fad is for baseball. If you don't know anything about baseball AND do not know the poem "Casey At the Bat", skip. This does have some funny moments, but it really is about 10 pages too long.
* "Bullard Reflects" by Malcolm Jameson. This 1941 story is from the Space Patrol series, pulp fiction fun on a Mystery Science Theater 3000 level. The sport here is a modified football game called Dazzle Dart, which you really don't need to understand to get the goofiness.
* "The Body Builders" by Keith Laumer. A surprisingly humorous story about wearing bodies as if they were changes of clothes. The body models were based on celebrities of 1966, when this story was first published. One major quibble -- at the beginning of the novella, Our Protagonist is wearing an Eddie Arcaro (jockey) and loses a fist fight. The real Arcaro was incredibly strong (you have to be to control 1ooo pound Thoroughbreds gojng over 40 mph), and could've won in dirty street fighting against Sonny Liston.
* "The Great Kladnar Race" by Robert Silverberg and Randall Garrett. Originally published under the pen name Robert Randall ... I think. Anyway, this is a short parody of horse racing, complete with a tote board, although these steeds seem more like giant, six-legged caterpillars.
* "Mr. Meek Plays Polo" by Clifford D. Simak. Part of a series of stories about Mr. Meek, where he gets scammed into coaching and playing space polo -- a game he only saw once as a youth. No horses were hurt in this, as space polo is played with spaceships. Although meant to be funny, trying to exterminate sentient insects was disturbing.
* "Sunjammer" by Arthur C. Clarke. Also published under the title "The Wind From the Sun." It's about sailboats racing in space, where ships sail the solar winds. Although racing hasn't happened yet, solar sails have become a reality. You can find this story in a zillion other anthologies.
* "Run to Starlight" by George R. R. Martin. Before he became famous for not writing fantasy, Martin wrote sci-fi. This 1974 effort is one of his least known sci-fi stories, about American football in the future, where an alien species decides to play. Odd to read in the intro of Martin being described as "a young man." I live in the greater Philadelphia area, so it was even older to have humans give the alien team the nickname of "Baldy Eagles" ... which was meant as an insult.