Popular Culture Review Vol. 17, No. 1, Winter 2006 | Page 76

72 Popular Culture Review them regardless of what happens. I guess I expect other people to be that way too and, in this case, especially, where it really and truly is a win or lose situation, you have to stand by the people you, you know, care about. And, I really care about these guys. Good girls’ loyalty reflects and reinforces the “hometown” atmosphere of the ballpark. Good girls want acceptance in this environment, especially with respect to players’ wives, to whom the good girls want to seem non-threatening. Consequently, good girls often sublimate their own desires to the good of the team. Such deference reinforces the hierarchy of the ballpark, of which the players are the most celebrated elements. Katie describes the scrutiny of players, management, and wives as a positive aspect of social life at the ballpark: It’s kinda like a Neighborhood Watch program, but the neighborhood’s a baseball team! There’s a lot at stake here. The guys, well some of them, have great futures ahead of them, and the wrong type of girl can really screw that up, I think. You know, if she only wants to exploit him. When asked how she responds to that scrutiny, she replied: I guess you’d say it’s an exclusive organization and the people in i t . .. you know, players, wives, and all are concerned with who’s around and what’s going on. If you want to be part of the group, you have to play by their rules. I have no problem with that. Ortiz (1998) concludes that such behaviors implicate female groupies in their own subordination in this world, because they protect the hypermasculine world of professional sport. While their actions may perpetuate systematic female subjugation in and through professional sports as Ortiz suggests, the Coyotes’ good girls concern themselves with individual upward mobility in and through sports. They do not blindly adhere to social standards because they venerate professional sports. Instead, they integrate themselves into the world of professional sports because players offer opportunities for individual upward social mobility. Instead of nostalgically protecting professional sports, good girls