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<UID>
8901280449
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
890710
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, July 10, 1989
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1F
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<ILLUSTRATION>

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<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

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<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1989, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
IN THE END, STRENGTH TOPS SENTIMENT
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
"It is like a fairy tale.  . . . Only maybe when we are grandfather and
grandmother will people realize what we have achieved today.  . . . "

      Boris Becker
WIMBLEDON, England  --  Well, I guess you don't have to be young, blond
and West German to win Wimbledon. Then again . . . danke schoen. It's the
Boris and Steffi show. And they say nobody gets famous from the old
neighborhood.  Here, shaking hands with the Duke and Duchess and holding up
the silver trophies, are your 1989 Wimbledon champions: born within two years
of each other and raised a few miles apart.  They even played  on the same
courts after school! "I was the worst of the 9-year-old boys and she was the
best of the 7-year-old girls," recalled Becker, after whipping Stefan Edberg,
6-0, 7-6 (7-1), 6-4, to win the  men's title Sunday, hours after Steffi Graf
had taken the women's crown, "so Steffi and I wound up hitting against each
other."
 
  These days they just beat up on everybody else. Especially on grass.
Becker  won his third Wimbledon in five years, and if you don't think his
thunder serve and laser volley are perfectly suited to this surface, consider
that he is internationally famous, maybe the first  guy people think of when
asked to name a tennis star, yet he has never even reached the final of any
other Grand Slam tournament. Such is the glow of Wimbledon.
  Graf, meanwhile, has no such limitations.  Grass, clay, cement, shag
carpet? She could play on the lunar surface, the results would be the same.
Sunday she fended off two months' worth of intense preparation by a gritty
Martina Navratilova -- who skipped the Italian and French Opens to concentrate
on her grass game -- and put her away, 6-2, 6-7 (1-7), 6-1. Whip. Slash. No
problem. What time is the plane back to Heidelberg?
  "Many things  depended on this win," said Graf, 20, who cried briefly after
defending her title.
  "What things?" she was asked.
  "Well, we have a family vacation coming up and if I had lost I don't think
I would  have wanted to go. I would not have been too happy."
  She won Wimbledon to save her vacation.
  What a story.
  But then, how fitting. Thus ends two weeks of tennis that ultimately
honored strength  over sentiment. Becker and Graf deserved to win, they were
the best players out there. But the best stories of this Wimbledon were the
losers: from young Michael Chang, who thrilled crowds with his unexpected
passage to the fourth round, to John McEnroe, who sent over-30 heartbeats
thumping by almost making the finals for the first time since 1984 -- and
nearly losing his shorts in the process. From Jimmy  Connors, the aging
gunslinger who was blown away in the second  round, to Ivan Lendl, the best
player in the world, who has still never won this thing and may be the first
to die trying. From the petite  Monica Seles, 15, who lost to Graf in the
fourth round despite being young enough to read Tiger Beat magazine, to
34-year-old Chris Evert, who said good-bye to Wimbledon in the semifinals, a
loss that  chilled the very grass of Centre Court, because it will never be
the same without her.
  Even Sunday, the vanquished were as notable as the victors. Consider
Navratilova, who wanted this desperately,  madly, she was like a demon as she
advanced during the early rounds. "I am not the underdog," she insisted, over
and over. "I am ready to beat Steffi. I am not past my prime." Only history
can inspire Martina like that (she has already won everything else), and a
victory here would have given her nine silver plates, breaking the  record of
Helen Wills Moody. But Graf stopped her last year, and Sunday  -- despite the
sell-out crowd's pulling for her on every point -- Martina was  ousted again,
blown away in the third set after exhausting her miracles by winning a
tiebreaker in the second. The final  point was an  ace that may have cut
Martina's flesh as it passed. Did somebody catch the number of that ball? All
the graceful ex-champ could do was applaud her opponent, shake hands and get
off the  court.
  "I did my best, she was just too tough," said Martina, 32, an hour after
the match. "You know, I'll be the oldest person on the tour when Chris
retires. I try not to think about that. But  it seems like everyone else is in
their teens."
  Will she ever win this title again? Not as long as Steffi is healthy, happy
and  motivated. The Bruhl Bomber is  too fast, too powerful and too  young  to
be beaten on this surface. Her serve is a bullet, and her forehand is such a
missile, she literally plays a volley game from the baseline. Why come to the
net? Sunday marked her sixth Grand Slam title  in her last seven tries.
  "In the third set today I had such a good feeling inside I had to tell
myself, 'Come on, concentrate,' and not start laughing," she said. In the
Wimbledon final? Laughing?  Let's face it. The only antidote to Graf  is the
antidote for the common cold: Drink plenty of liquids, get lots of rest, and
wait. 
  Maybe 10 years.
  As for Becker? His was a grudge match, a retaliation against Edberg, who
beat him in the final last year. Becker was too confident in that first
showdown. He had beaten Pat Cash and Lendl to get there; how tough could
Edberg be? After losing in four sets,  Becker sneaked up and touched the
winner's trophy before they handed it to Edberg. "Just to remind myself what
it feels like," he said.
  He can touch it all he wants now. Becker blew Edberg out of the water in
the first set Sunday, winning, 6-0. The second set went to a tiebreaker before
Becker grabbed it by the throat, winning six straight points.
  And from that point, it was a countdown.  Becker had grown up in his two
years away from the throne -- "I am tougher now. My first wins here were like
a fairy tale, I was a young boy, I didn't even know what I was doing" -- and
when Edberg  sent his final service return halfway to downtown London, the man
they call Boom Boom raised his hand in triumph. "I am king again," he seemed
to say.
  Then, after walking toward the umpire's chair,  he suddenly whirled and
threw his racket into the stands. "It takes a couple seconds to realize you've
won," he explained. "I thanks God it didn't hit anybody."
  Only  Edberg perhaps -- right in  the pride. The friendly, quiet Swede has
lost both the French and Wimbledon finals in the same year. The last person to
do that was a German named Gottfried von Cramm in 1935.
  That's 1935, B.B.
  Before Becker.
  And there you have it. An all-West German finish on the first Sunday in
Wimbledon history to host both the men's and women's finals (we can thank
Saturday's rain for that). How old are Graf and Becker -- 20 and 21?
Incredible. Hearing they once were runny-nosed kids in the same tennis school
is like hearing (a true story) that Woody Allen and Barbra Streisand once
played the same  nightclub as unknowns.
  Makes you shake your head, doesn't it?
  "This means so much for German tennis," Graf said. 
  "It may never happen again," added Becker. He thought for a moment. "Of
course,  that may depend more on me than on Steffi."
  Danke schoen, kids. For murderous volleys, for passing shots that rise from
the ankles and travel across the court, for drop-shot balls that seem  to
barely touch the grass. This may be the Wimbledon more remembered for those
who didn't take home the trophies, but in the record books, it will go down as
the year of the blitzkrieg, tall, blond and serving  like thunder.
  And not just tennis balls, either.
  "Did you ever get your racket back?" someone asked Becker.
  "No," he answered, "it is gone with the wind."
  No doubt blowing toward Munich.
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<KEYWORDS>
TENNIS; MAJOR STORY;WIMBLEDON;WINNER;STEFFI GRAF;BORIS BECKER;
REACTION
</KEYWORDS>
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