<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
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<UID>
8702010308
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
870703
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, July 03, 1987
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color and Photo Associated Press;Chart
</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>
MARTINA BEATS CHRIS IN CLASSIC DUEL 
FRIENDLY RIVALS EXIT LAUGHING
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
WIMBLEDON, England -- What you  noticed most  was the laughter. How often
do you hear that during a  Wimbledon semifinal?  Chris Evert would hit a great
shot, and Martina Navratilova would shake  her head and chuckle. Then Martina
would scoop a volley out of the grass and Chris would drop her racket. And
smile. It was not loud. It was not even often. But it was there. Quiet,
gentle, familiar.

  Laughter.

  "Wasn't that a little strange?" someone asked Evert afterward. "For such an
intense match? To smile and even laugh at certain moments?"
  "Yeah," she answered. "I usually don't give  anything away when I play my
opponents. But when I see Martina . . . well, we've played so many matches
that by now, if there are light moments, it sort of relieves the tension."
  Laughter. Why not?  They have been playing each other forever, haven't
they? Chris and Martina: a never-ending dialogue between two rackets and a
little yellow ball. For years, even the dullest  tournaments had hope if
these two met. Even the weakest fields could be excused if a Martina-Chris
showdown was possible.
  How many matches? Seventy-three, counting Thursday's. They have had major
ones and historic ones  and good ones and not-so- good ones but in this one --
Navratilova's 6-2, 5-7, 6-4 victory -- they were simply great, as excellent as
they can be. And the prize was sufficiently worthy: a Wimbledon final.  How
many more will either player get?
  So their baseline exchanges were crafty and quick. Their net play was like
a video gun stuck on "fire." Pow-pow! Chris lobs a bull's-eye.  Pow-pow!
Martina dives  for a drop shot. Unforced errors? Hardly any. First serves?
Almost always in.  "That may be the best tennis we've ever played,"
Navratilova said afterward.
  And yet they found time for this: Chris  came to the net and poked a
winner, then, surprised,  she pointed at Martina and yelled: "You were
supposed to go there!" 
  Laughter.
  A serve was called out by the center linesman, only his voice cracked when
he yelled "OUT!" and Martina rolled her eyes and Chris' lips began to spread.
  Laughter.
  This is what you noticed. The laughter, the grins, the warm feeling
between two supposedly  bitter rivals. But this you might have missed:
sympathy. "I had tears in my eyes,"  Martina said. "And it wasn't for me
winning, it was for Chris losing. I really wished that she could win this
tournament  one more time. . . . 
  "At 5-4 in the final set, I started thinking about our friendship. Then I
thought, 'God, you're crazy to be thinking about that now. . . . ' It actually
overwhelmed me, because  I didn't expect to feel so much. I would be as happy
if she won this tournament as if I do. . . . But she lost. I feel sad about
that."
  Sad? About winning? Martina? Well. This is how far they have come. They are
 longer than vaudeville, the best rivalry in sports, now, then, maybe forever.
Chris and Martina. Another suitcase, another show. But Martina is 30, and
Chris is 32, and Chris is asked  about retirement now a hundred times a day.
  For years they were Nos. 1 and 2 in the world, jockeying with the ranking
like the last two players in musical chairs. At first Chris was better. Then
they were even. Then Martina was unbelievable. Then Chris came back. 
  Fourteen years of intense rivalry. Now everything is changing. Evert has
fallen to No. 3, behind Steffi Graf, the 18- year-old  bomber who will play
Martina Saturday for the Wimbledon championship. Graf is a blip on the screen
that grows brighter every second. Who knows if Evert and  Navratilova will
ever hold the wishbone again?
  "What would it be like if you started showing up at tournaments and Chris
wasn't in the draw?" Navratilova was asked.
  "Pretty strange," she said softly. "It would be a  definite void. . . . I
would miss her a lot."
  The Centre Court crowd Thursday at Wimbledon  obviously shared the
emotion. Here was Navratilova, fighting for a record try at an eighth title,
and yet Evert was the one cheered  as if history rested on her racket.
Surprised? Well. Doesn't emotion always rule over numbers?
  So when Evert, down a set, took  Navratilova to 5-5 in the second, beat her
in the sixth game, broke  her in the seventh, won it with a strong net volley
-- well, the crowd was a cloudburst, applause raining down.
  And when Evert pulled ahead in that final game, and all she needed was
one point  to tie the set, 5-all, and send them playing on and on -- win by
two; it could have gone till nightfall! -- the crowd was ready to leap.
Instead, Martina muscled a killer serve, won the point, and soon,  the match.
The fans applauded politely the victory. 
  But they were thinking about the defeat.
  "She plays one of the best matches of her life and she loses?" Navratilova
said. "Of course you're  sad. It takes a lot away from me winning because I
had  to beat Chris.
  "When we shook hands at the net, do you know what she said? 'I hope I
didn't take too much out of you for the final.' I mean,  what a thing to say.
I put my arm around her when she said that."
  And that was how they walked off -- together, side by side, dipping in sync
toward the Royal Box, then disappearing into the tunnel.  Seventy-three
matches together. Who knows if they'll ever do that here again?
  "What if you came to the major tournaments and Martina wasn't here?"
someone asked Evert, a switch on the earlier question.
  "I wouldn't have anybody to talk to in the locker room," she said,
laughing. "No. . . . I'm just kidding. But it's almost like she's family now.
We've been together so long. We've seen other players  come and go, but we've
been the constants. . . . "
  Longer than most? Longer than any of them. Any sport. Longer than Magic and
Bird, than Tunney and Dempsey, than Snead and Hogan. How long have they  been
out there? All the Wimbledons and French Opens and U.S. Opens and Australian
Opens and Tokyos and Romes and Clevelands and Atlantas and Team Tennis and
exhibitions and clay and cement and indoor  carpet. How long? When they played
their first match in 1973, Chris was single, and Martina was a brunet Czech.
And today Chris is single again and Martina is blond and American. How long
have they been  out there? Two hair colors, one husband and a country. That
long.
  "You know, over the last years we've gotten to know each other better,"
said Evert, smiling despite her defeat. "Before it was always  a lot of
respect on the court, but 'see you later.' Now it's more socializing. We say,
'Do you wanna go out to eat?' It's more of a family thing now.  . . . 
  "Friendship," she said.
  "Friendship,"  Martina said.
  There is no more enduring rivalry in sports. There is no more enduring
quality in life.  Finally, it seems the two have come together: prodigies,
challengers, enemies, friends. That is what we can say now, after saying all
the other stuff about Chris and Martina. Friends. They are friends.
  So this latest Wimbledon semifinal, this magnificent display of tennis,
was a loss for  Evert, but not a defeat. A victory for Navratilova, but not a
celebration. Consider it a great production number in the closing act of a
great play, an occasion to marvel and applaud and yes, even laugh.  You were
allowed to laugh. They laughed.
  "I really wished we could have stopped this thing at 30-all in the last
game," said Navratilova, sighing.  "When people talk about the greats of all
time,  they'd have to talk about both of us. . . . "
  Not to worry: They will anyhow. Here's laughing with you, kids. This was
splendor in the grass.

Navratilova vs. Evert
Martina Navratilova's 6-2,  5-7, 6-4 semifinal victory over Chris Evert:
      NAVRATILOVA  EVERT
First-serve percentage  76  81
Aces      4  0
Service winners    21  5
Double faults    2  1
Placement winners    57  58
Unforced errors    23  18
Service games held   13  11
Service games broken  2  4
Total  points won    105  91
Approaches to net    93  31
Points won at net    55  18
Time of match: 2 hours, 3 minutes.

CUTLINE
Loser Chris Evert (left) is consoled by Martina  Navratilova as they leave the
court after their semifinal match at Wimbledon. 
Matina Navratilova gestures after winning a point.
A glum Chris Evert shakes hands with the umpire after loss to Martina
Navratilova.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN;TENNIS;STATISTIC;COMPARISON;TOURNAMENT;WIMBLEDON
</KEYWORDS>
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