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<UID>
8601300239
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
860705
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Saturday, July 05, 1986
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1C
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1986, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
'BOBO' LOSES NAME GAME, WON'T FACE 'BOOM, BOOM'
</HEADLINE>
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</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
WIMBLEDON -- It was unbelievable.

  It was unpronounceable.

  "My name," he said, "is Zivojinovic."
  Huh?
  He served like  a cannon. He moved like a Westinghouse. He was the tall,
dark stranger at center court, taking chunks out of Ivan Lendl, the No. 1
player in the world.
  "My name," he said, with every smashing point, "is Zivojinovic!"
  Huh?
  Zivojinovic. Slobodan Zivojinovic.  Pronounced like it's spelled. I think.
Who's to say?
  He had no seeding here at Wimbledon.  He was back of the bus. Ground floor
locker room. He was a 6-foot-6 Yugoslav with the serve of a hurricane  and the
grace of Henry Finkel.
  And there he was Friday,  Centre Court, the semifinals, and he was staying
even with the best player in the world.
  "My name," he said as he prepared to tear the  cover off the tennis ball
once again, "is Zivojinovic!"
  Huh?
Advantage, Zeevohyeenav--
  They had started playing late in the afternoon, he and Lendl. It would be
over in an hour and a half.  That's what people figured. Unseeded players
don't last in these high- pressure rounds. And Lendl won the first set.
  But the stranger was strong. He was tireless. So what if his most quotable
sentence  was "unnnngh!"
  "My name," he said, as he won game after game, and went into a tiebreaker,
"is Zivojinovic!"
  Huh?
  No one could get it right. Not the journalists. Not the crowd. Not the
umpire who sat in the chair at  Centre Court and had to announce every point.
  "Advantage, Zeevohyeenav--
  "Advantage, Zoorigeenovay--
  "Advantage, Zivoojanoochka--
  No. No. No.
  "My name," he  said, as he rushed the net . . . 
  But wait. What about the tennis? Oh, the tennis was remarkable, if you like
 turkey shoots. This was a match of you blast me, I blast you. When
Zivojinovic was serving,  Lendl was lucky to get a racket on the return. When
Lendl was serving, Zivojinovic was lucky to get it back over the net.
  Tennis, it is said, can be like a ballet. This was more like the Bristol
Stomp.
  It went on for one hour. Two hours. Three hours. The sun was gone. The air
was cool. Still, the stranger kept coming. He won that second set. He won the
fourth set. A Yugoslav journalist ran  through the press room with a gleeful
scream. "We're going to the finals, I tell you! . . . "
  Who would have thought it? Where did this guy come from? Where does any guy
like that come from? A table  in some laboratory, maybe?
  "My name," he said, as he walked out for the fifth set, "is . . . 
  Well, you know his name.
  Or maybe you know his manager. His manager is Ion Tiriac. Pronounced  like
it's spelled. I think. Who's to say?
  Ion advises Zivojinovic. Friends call Zivojinovic by his nickname, which is
"Bobo." Ion also coaches Boris Becker. Friends call Becker by his nickname,
which  is "Boom Boom." Sometimes Bobo and Boom Boom practice together. We
won't go into it.
  "Game, Zivoyeenovii--
  "Game, Zorroyonivyc--
  "Game, Zivuneecheee--
  No. No. No.
  "My name," he said,  as he chased a lob. . . . 
  Well, anyhow. The fifth set went back and forth -- much to the dismay of
the chair umpire -- but finally Lendl broke that mighty serve. And on the last
point of the match,  Lendl sent his own serve right at Bobo's feet, which are
farther from his head than most people's.
  Bobo took a swipe at it and clomped the ball into the ground.
  Game, set, match, Lendl. Nice  try Mr., uh. . . . 
  The two men shook hands. Then they walked off together. As they walked off,
Bobo put an arm around Lendl. Then he tripped on the net.
  "Are you very disappointed?" the Yugoslav  journalist asked him afterwards.
  "I am disappointed," said Zivojinovic, in pretty good English. "Some of the
balls were bad, then everything was OK. I'm a human being. Playing on the
center court  -- I got nervous. It is not easy. Everybody's looking at you.
You play the semifinal to be in the final, and it's a great thing."
  Huh?
  Maybe he was confused. Maybe he was overwrought. Who's to say?
  Obviously, to have come so far, from unseeded to within a game of the
final, was a draining experience. But after all he had tried, he had just
missed. He was left at the semifinal dock, waiting  for his ship to come in.
  "I am not happy," he said.
  "He is not happy," the journalist said.
  The umpire is happy.
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