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<UID>
8801290637
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
880703
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, July 03, 1988
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1E
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<ILLUSTRATION>

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<CAPTION>

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<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

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<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1988, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
MARTINA A CHAMP EVEN IN DEFEAT
</HEADLINE>
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<BODY>
WIMBLEDON, England --  Martina Navratilova was getting slapped around,
pounded, humiliated on Centre Court.  Every serve from Steffi Graf drew blood,
every forehand doubled her over, she was reeling,  she lost nine games in a
row -- nine in a row? She never does that -- before suddenly, mercifully, the
rains came and play was suspended as everyone scurried inside.

  Heaven called time out. In less  than an hour, Navratilova, 31, would be
dethroned, stripped of the Wimbledon crown she had held for six years. She lay
inside the women's dressing room, taking treatment on her aching legs, as
Graf,  19, listened to a Walkman.

  Forty-four reign-delayed minutes.
  And that was that. When the skies cleared and the sun returned, it was a
younger woman's day -- and before you could say, "Grand Slam,"  Graf had
finished the destruction and tossed her  racket into the stands.
  It's Steffi's Wimbledon now. She can take it home, cradle it, put it on the
shelf next to her Bruce Springsteen albums. Her teen-age game was fully
licensed to kill Saturday afternoon, flawless from the second set. History
will show that she took 12 of the last 13 games and captured the Wimbledon
crown, 5-7, 6-2, 6-1.
  She was the winner. People are talking about her. But let us talk, for a
moment, about Navratilova. Because sometimes, it's not whether you win or
lose, but how you repay the game.
  The thing about  the young is they can make you feel so old. Navratilova
-- who was trying to break the record for most Wimbledon singles titles
(eight) by any man or woman in history -- had never lost a final here before.
And suddenly,  she was getting the stuffing knocked out of her. Graf, after
self- destructing through the first set, was running her ragged, almost toying
with her, seemingly rushing the net with enough time to say, "Let's see,
should I embarrass Martina to the left or the right this time?" And then
making the shot.
  It was bad. It was ugly. ("I got blown out," Navratilova herself would say
later.)  Trailing, 4-2, in the second set, the eight-time champion slammed the
ball over the net and into the corner. Her point, right? Wrong. Graf chased it
down -- which in itself is a miracle -- then whipped  it crosscourt for the
game winner.
  From then on, it was no contest. The rain served only to delay the
inevitable:  Graf won all but one game in the final set -- the one Navratilova
took right before  the rain delay, ending Graf's string at nine.  In the
clincher, she came back from 0-40, watched Navratilova double-fault twice,
then fired a backhand that hit the net and landed just inside the line. 
  Game, set, match.
  "I was very happy," Graf would say. "I always thought, after winning my
first major at the French Open, that I would never feel that happy again."
  How much were those same  words running through Navratilova's mind?
  Let's be honest here. Martina has never been appreciated like other tennis
stars. She was born in Czechoslovakia, but now carries an American passport;
neither  country has completely forgiven her. She is, by her own admission,
gay, nothing more, nothing less, but there are people for whom that is enough,
that is too much. They turn off.
  She has always been  the foil for Chris Evert, the black hat to Chrissie's
white hat, and yet, Saturday, with a new rival, on a court she has graced with
more talent and more drive  than any other woman in the history of  the game,
Navratilova was the enemy again.
  They jeered her. They showed her no respect. When the rains began to fall,
she paused to wipe her glasses, and the crowd broke into a slow clap, its way
of saying, "Come on. Get on with it."
  "That was really bad," admitted Navratilova, who made an angry gesture in
response. "It really upset me. What did they want me to do? I couldn't see!
I'm not  stalling, for God's sake. I'm not arguing line calls. I'm just wiping
my glasses. It's not my fault I have to wear them."
  How sad. A champion needs to explain why she was wiping her glasses? No.
She deserves better. Know this: When Graf took away her crown, Navratilova
came right to the net, shook Graf's hand and whispered something encouraging.
When Graf accepted the 1988 silver plate (which  Navratilova had wanted "more
than anything in my career"), she stood by and applauded and forced a smile.
  "How hard was that for you?" Navratilova was asked an hour later.
  "Not as bad as you  might think," she said. "I could feel what she was
feeling. I know that joy. Sure, I'm very disappointed. But she was the better
player today."
  Here is a woman who has never been less than gracious  about her opponents,
a woman who, at times, bent over backwards for something nice to say when she
was crushing them all, 6-1, 6-0. All she ever wanted to do was play well, she
was the harbinger for  "athletic" women's tennis, the forerunner for the Grafs
and Sabatinis -- and yet, because of her rugged looks and her private life,
she takes the invisible weight of dislike every time she steps out  there.
  Two days earlier,  she beat Evert to advance to the Wimbledon final for the
ninth time in her career -- an astounding feat. Yet she received no applause:
The crowd was busy jeering a line call on Evert's last point. 
  On Saturday, the clapping was merely polite when Navratilova accepted the
runner-up award. The explosion of love was reserved for Graf.
  In the press conferences afterward,  the questions to Navratilova were
often about retirement. 
  "I don't know," she repeated. "If my body holds up, then I'll be back."
  The questions to Graf were of power and future.
  "Do you  compare yourself at all with the fighter Mike Tyson?" a German
writer asked.
  "Well, I'm not going to talk about retirement like he did," she said.
  The room broke into laughter.
  In time, perhaps,  we will come to appreciate what a sports star
Navratilova really is. Perhaps she will indeed come back, if her body holds
up, and win Wimbledon one more time for the history books. "If anything would
keep me going, that would," she said, "but I'm not greedy. Eight ain't bad,
you know."
  And perhaps it will have to be enough. Graf will only get stronger. She is
single-minded about her tennis, and,  at 19, is already just one win away from
a Grand Slam (the U.S. Open) --something even Navratilova never accomplished.
  "It won't give me any more motivation to try and beat her," said
Navratilova, who will be in Flushing Meadow  this September, as usual. "If she
wins it, I'll be the first to congratulate her. . . . 
  "Hey, if I had to lose today, this was the way it should have happened. If
I had lost to Chris (in the semifinals) I wouldn't have been happy, but it
would have been OK, because it was Chris. But to lose to the best player in
the world at Centre Court in the finals, well, maybe  that's the way you sort
of pass the torch. . . ."
  Nice. Classy. You wonder how many newspapers will bother to print that
quote amid the brouhaha over Graf's win. Don't misunderstand. Graf did
something  spectacular Saturday. She demolished a legend.
  But hail the conquered hero. She was, in defeat, every inch a champion.
Someday perhaps, when Graf reads these accounts, she will realize that as
well.
  "What did Martina say to you when you  walked off together?" a reporter
asked, eager to jot down the comment for posterity.
  Graf paused.
  "She . . . um. . . . "
  Graf giggled.
  "She .  . . um. . . . I can't remember what she said."
  Ah, youth.
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