<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8701150708
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
870329
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, March 29, 1987
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
12D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo United Press International
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1987, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
MONROE'S DAD KNOWS, AND HE MUST BE PROUD
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
NEW ORLEANS -- It doesn't matter, all the money and the music and the new
clothes and the computers. College is still about kids making their parents
proud. It always has been.

  The last time  Greg Monroe's father came to see him play basketball, Greg
was a freshman in high school. It was the first game he would get to start,
and Greg recalls his father's only advice: "Do what you gotta do." 

  That was it. One game. In the games that followed, in the years that
followed, through the high school championships and county all-stars and
freshman and sophomore and junior years at Syracuse  University, all those
nights, all those tournaments, Greg Monroe never played before his father
again, never saw him waiting in the tunnel after the gym had emptied.
  Instead, he "did what he had  to do." When the games were over, he visited
the hospital, where Walter Monroe would spend the better part of seven years.
A stroke put him there. Another stroke robbed him of his speech. Then cancer
struck, brain cancer, and yet he somehow survived, he lived for years in that
bed, and his son grew up and brought him newspaper clippings and videotapes of
his blossoming basketball career.
  "We  communicated a lot through eye contact," Greg Monroe said. "Every now
and then he'd try to mumble a few words. Usually he just smiled, and I guess
the smile was telling me, 'Don't worry about it, keep  your head up, don't let
this situation bother you.'
  "That's the kind of guy he was. Very strong."
  And then, last summer, Walter Monroe died.
  ON SATURDAY afternoon, Greg Monroe was introduced  to a thunderous roar
inside the sold-out Superdome. The Syracuse Orangemen were in the semifinals
of the NCAA tournament, one game from the championship finale. Monroe, a
stocky player with sleepy eyes,  is their starting guard and team co-captain.
  The game began and Monroe got the Orangemen's first shot. He went up calmly
from the right of the key and buried a three- pointer. And in the stands
behind  the Syracuse bench, his mother, Mary Monroe, quietly applauded. To
almost everyone else watching, he was another college ball player on another
magic carpet ride to glory. "Lucky kid," they would mumble,  eyeing the
screaming fans and the national attention.
  Mary Monroe knew better. She knew of the daily hospital visits, of the
agonizing silence, of the slow ooze of life that those things bring about.
Her son had dedicated this season to her and her late husband. And so well had
he played, that his teammates dubbed him "Money" -- as in "Money in the bank."
  And Saturday, Money delivered. He hit  several key three- point baskets; he
shut down Providence's Billy Donovan, the man deemed most dangerous in this
contest; and then, with under 12 minutes remaining and Syracuse mired in a
sudden slump, Money stole the ball from Providence's Delray Brooks, ducked his
head and drove the length of the court, dishing off for a basket and getting
fouled in the process. The play was worth three points and  that, more than
any single occurrence, turned the tide back in Syracuse's favor.
  THE ORANGEMEN would win, 77-63. They are going to the NCAA final, the top
of the mountain. And as the last seconds  ticked away, it was Monroe dribbling
past defenders, his shirt dangling out of his shorts. Do what you gotta do. He
had scored 17 points. The TV announcers named him player of the game.
  The buzzer  sounded and as his teammates leaped  up and down, he walked off
the court quietly. One more to go for his team. One more for his personal
quest.
  When the game was over,  there was no father to congratulate Greg Monroe,
but his mother was there, and she kissed him. And when this is all over,
whatever happens Monday night,  Monroe plans to go to the Rochester, N.Y.,
cemetery where his dad is buried. He'll  go alone. No crowds, no cameras.
  "I'll just have a quiet moment there with him," he said. " It'll be the end
of my college career and I'm sure he'd be very pleased to know that I
graduated on time,  that we had a chance to go to the Final Four, that me and
my Mom are coping as best we can."
  So it really doesn't matter, all the hype and the attention and even the
final score. College is still  college. It is largely about one thing. "I just
hope my father's proud of me," Greg Monroe said before leaving, and somewhere,
no doubt, he is.
CUTLINE
Syracuse guard Greg Monroe (right) battles for  a loose ballwith Providence's
Delray Brooks (left) and David Kipfer.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN
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