<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8702010143
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
870702
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, July 02, 1987
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SEE ALSO STATE EDITION 1D
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1987, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
THESE TEENAGERS TUNED IN TO A MUCH DIFFERENT WORLD
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
WIMBLEDON, England -- In another world, they might be late for gym class,
ditching the cigarets as they sneaked inside.

  "SABATINI?" the teacher would yell.

  "Here!"
  "GRAF?"
  "Here!"
  In another world they might  streak their hair and wear Reebok sneakers
that nobody paid them to endorse. They might jump in the car and crank up the
radio, and Sabatini, 17, would beg Graf, 18, to  let  her drive.
  "Don't tell my dad," Graf would say.
  "No way," Sabatini would answer.
  In another world, at their ages, they might have been anywhere Wednesday --
the beach, the basement,  the summer job at McDonald's. Instead they marched
out to  Centre Court at Wimbledon, turned to the Royal Box, where Princess
Diana was sitting, and did a little curtsy. Then they picked up the tennis
rackets and began.
  This was the first note of a Wimbledon dance that may go on for years.
Graf. Sabatini. West German,  Argentinian. Blond, brunet. Teenagers.
  Where is the future of women's  tennis? Right here, young enough to buy
Beastie Boy albums. This is who we watch when Chris Evert and Martina
Navratilova finally depart. This is the chirping rivalry, breaking through its
shell. Sabatini.  Graf. Seventeen. Eighteen.
  Like, too cool.
And there's more to come  They met Wednesday in a quarterfinal match that
was at times almost frightening, like watching a young prizefighter with more
strength than smarts. Both players seemed to hit too hard for teenagers --
Sabatini's backhand would leave skid marks; Graf's forehand could escape
radar. This was potential,  slamming head-on in the  first set (won by
Sabatini, Graf's first lost set of the tournament) before Graf took firm
control and won the match, 4-6, 6-1, 6-1.
  "Were you upset with losing to Steffi?" a reporter asked Sabatini,  the
dark-haired one.
  "Yes," she said, in a soft, accented voice, "but I think we play many more
matches, yes?"
  Many more. Yes. Counting Wednesday, they have already played eight times,
Graf has  won them all, but they have been close and closer. And Graf is a
year older and a few levels more intense. "I know what she does better,"
Sabatini said, "but I think I will catch up."
  It would only  be fitting. Haven't we see this before? Wasn't Evert the
budding superstar when the younger Navratilova was on the rise? Didn't they
once play doubles together -- as Graf and Sabatini do now? Didn't  they
ultimately become the Betty and Veronica of tennis, destined to be featured in
every adventure?
  "Can you see playing Gabriela here 10 years from now?" Graf was asked.
  "Sure, I can see us  like Chris and Martina," she said. "I'm sure there
will be other players coming up. But we understand each other, we speak and
play doubles together."
  And yet, like Chris and Martina, they are as  different as their homelands.
 Graf, from Bruhl, West Germany, is directed, totally tennis, the product of a
domineering father who oversees every step of her career. She began, as a four
year-old, smacking  balls over her living room couch. Today she is ranked No.
2 in the world, and success seems to replace other teenage attractions,
including boys. Once, last winter, she tried a disco. The noise  prompted  her
to call for a ride home.
  Sabatini, on the other hand, is more moody, occasionally distracted. She
likes to sing, to play soccer, to ride around with her friends. Yet her raw
talent was exciting  enough for her to be shipped from her native  Buenos
Aires to live with coaches in Miami. Photographers drool over her sultry good
looks; tennis experts drool over her potential. Last year, at 16, she  reached
the semifinals of Wimbledon before losing to Navratilova.
Who writes the first book?  So there they were Wednesday, the best of the
post-braces set, pushing each other through a quarterfinal  that would pay the
winner more than $10,000. And when they rested between sets, it was hard not
to imagine the next three, five, even 10 years unfolding. 
  What will the London tabloids be saying  in 1997? That Sabatini was
flitting about town, wearing leather pants, playing the glamor queen? That
Graf's marriage is in trouble, love on the rocks, and she has been seeing
Boris Becker?
  Who will  be fire, who will be ice? Who plays Betty, who plays Veronica? Who
gets the Lipton commercials, the Timex ads? The first book? The first million?
The first Grand Slam?
  Who? Or simply which one? Evert  and Navratilova played Wednesday, but not
on Centre Court. That was reserved, for the blond and the brunet, who curtsied
on the way out.
  In another world, they might be anywhere else; all the other teens in this
world are. But they walk through  Wimbledon like destiny, holding rackets and
a future.  Graf? Here. Sabatini? Here. They'll be answering this roll call for
a while.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN;TENNIS; UK;STATISTIC
</KEYWORDS>
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