Sexiness Is a Warm Gun

By Mike Wise
Tuesday, February 14, 2006; Page E07

CESANO, Italy -- I am at the women's biathlon today because I am a lonely male sportswriter in a room full of female colleagues and the only principessa who speaks English in this godforsaken mountain town rejected my advances like Mutombo about an hour ago.

Which is why, being a progressive, non-misogynistic sort of columnist, I am now interviewing heat-packing women on skis.

"I don't understand why we don't like this sport more," said Alaskan Jay Hakkinen, our best men's biathlon hope. "Woman on skis in tights. Guns. This should be our kind of sport."

The women ski like mad and empty four magazines each filled with five bullets during the race, twice aiming at targets while lying down and twice aiming while standing up. Their heart rate fluctuates wildly between the starts and stops.

The combination of stamina and marksmanship has been compared to trying to thread a needle after running a marathon.

Yes, the biathletes had a response ready for questions about the Vice President Cheney hunting accident and whether such a thing could happen in their sport. "We're very safe with our equipment," said American Lanny Barnes. "We don't have 'accidents.' "

Lanny was carrying a 22-caliber Anschutz on her back, which she said was not loaded. So was Norwegian Gunn Margit Andreassen, her blond pigtails hanging over the warm pewter barrel. She also said her chamber was empty. Still, just standing next to a woman with a weapon is intoxicating. It has this dangerous, hit-on-or-miss quality to it. There's no gray area. Kind of like being next to the vice president.

It just so happens that many of the sport's best European stars are indeed attractive, leading to an intriguing gender role reversal. Male fans actually plead with their female athletic heroines, rather than the tired, old "Marry me A-Rod" back home.

Take Monday, the five slovenly German youth standing sentry over a banner that read, " Uschi: Wir Wohlen Ein Kind Von Dir ."

"Uschi, We Want A Child From You."

Ooooo-sheee. Ah, the name alone invokes danger, adventure, perhaps a clandestine romance on a gondola. I'm not saying I feel that way about Uschi Disl, the biggest biathlon star of all. But some people might. Uschi makes more than $1 million per season, mostly through product sponsors. Fortunately for Uschi, she is dating a Norwegian ski technician and not one of the troubled youth holding the sign.

In Europe, Uschi has a fan club Web site in which she peers back from a photo in a sort of playful, inviting way -- as if Uschi would like you to join her for a day of skiing, cocoa, hand warmers and sawed-off shotgun blasts in the woods and, well, again, I'm not saying I feel that way; some people might though.


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