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<UID>
8902050296
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
890906
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Wednesday, September 06, 1989
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo ADAM STOLTMAN Associated Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SEE ALSO METRO EDITION PAGE 1D
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1989, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
U. S. OPEN LOSES CHRISSIE
HUMOR, STYLE -- THE LADY'S STILL A QUEEN
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
NEW YORK --  It was all behind her now, the last match, the last press
conference, the last walk through the fans as they sang her name and reached
to touch her. Chris Evert was alone with a friend  in the women's locker room,
dressing for the last time after 19 glorious summers of U.S. Open tennis.

  "I have an idea," she suddenly said to Ana Leaird, a high school classmate
who now serves as  PR director for womens' tennis. "Tell Andy I fainted."

  "No! Really?"
  "Yeah. Tell him I fainted."
  It would be a natural reaction, no? After all this? To faint? Hadn't she
just said good-bye  to the game she had dominated, molded, loved and honored
for the last two decades? Hadn't she suffered the whole continental press
corps just waiting to witness her final historical point? 
  Leaird  burst from the locker room.
  "Chrissie fainted!" she said, rushing up to Andy Mill, Chris's husband.
"She fainted."
  Mill moved quickly towards the locker room door . . . 
  And out popped Evert,  all smiles.
  Applause, please. The lady leaves 'em laughing. She was never much for  the
fires of emotion; ice was more Chris Evert's game, icy stare, ice-cold
concentration. 
  And yet, she was  the role model for a generation. She was, pardon the
expression, a gentleman athlete, fusing effort and grace. Throw sneakers and
Emily Post in a bag and you get Christine Marie Evert, queen of the courts,
America's prom date. And there she was Tuesday, taking the hard serve of young
Zina Garrison and returning it into the net for her final stroke of Grand Slam
tennis.
  "GAME, SET, MATCH . . . " the  announcer began and the crowd rose to its
feet and began the farewell clap. Evert, 34, who had told the world weeks ago
that this would be her last Grand Slam tournament, jogged forward and shook
hands  with Garrison. No tears. Not for Chris, that is. 
  Zina would start crying in a minute.
  "Hey, I remember going up to Chris and asking for her autograph when I was
16," Garrison, 25, later explained.  "I mean, this was really emotional."
  For everyone but Evert. She kept her cool by squeezing her lips into a
smile, then a grimace, then a smile again, the way she has done so many times
on the court.  They were hoping for a storybook ending here in New York, they
were hoping that the Open, her tennis cradle when she was pigtailed and 16
years old, would somehow serve as her last gold ribbon.
  She  got pretty far. Reached the quarterfinals. Led Garrison five games to
two in the first set. And then the creak of age arrived -- not in her knees
but in her mind. "What happened today is the reason I'm  retiring," she said
in the stuffed press room, after Garrison ousted her, 7-6 (7-1), 6-2. "I play
a great match two days ago, and then I come out flat for the next one. It's
been happening to me all  year. I can't sustain my intensity every single time
out there. That's how I knew it was time to get out."
  Trust her. She is showing characteristic wisdom, right to the end. How nice
to see a champion  leaving when she can still beat nearly everybody. What a
lovely shadow that throws over her career accomplishments: 18 Grand Slam
Championships -- seven French, six U.S. Opens, three Wimbledons and two
Australians. And how many titles? One hundred and fifty seven? More than any
player ever -- male or female? You want to know how long Chris Evert has been
around? At this tournament alone she has defeated  78 different opponents.
Can that be right? Can you even name half that many women's tennis players?
  She will be remembered, of course, for the pigtails and the kisses with
Jimmy Connors and the  curtsies at Wimbledon's Centre Court and the marriage
to a handsome Brit and another to a handsome Olympic ski star, but mostly,
Chris Evert will be remembered for this:
  "Are you glad it's over?"
  "Well, I thought I would be glad when it was over, but I'm not really
relieved now because of how I played two days ago. I mean, I thought I was
just starting to play the kind of tennis where I could  challenge  anybody.  .
. . "
  She never gave up.
  She still doesn't.
  As Evert left the stadium, she was spotted by young fans milling around the
souvenir stands -- first one, then three, then  dozens. Children. In a gulp,
they were all around her. Some in sweatshirts, some in dresses.
  "Chrissie, over here!"
  "Chrissie, we love you!"
  "Chrissie! Chrissie!"
  Children. Less than  half her age. Less than a third her age. Here is Chris
Evert's legacy, the kids, the girls, especially, who now find it's OK to be a
female athlete, it's more than OK, it's cool, it's good, it can be  done
without sacrificing your personality, without turning into some lead- footed
monster. This is what Chris Evert leaves behind: An army of size 3 tennis
dresses, whacking the ball as if it were a pinata  filled with candy.
  As she made her way out of the grounds, Evert passed her mother and father,
Colette and Jimmy, who started her playing on the public courts of Ft.
Lauderdale back in the 60's. Players don't come up that way much anymore, the
public courts. Mostly it's private lessons, live-away camps, personal
masseuses. One of the few players out there today from the public courts is
Garrison,  the woman who sent Chris packing. There's a nice symmetry there, I
think.
  "Excuse me," said a heavyset blond woman in an oversized pink sweatshirt.
"Are you Mrs. Evert? I just want to say thank you."
  "Oh," answered Chrissie's mom. "What for?"
  "For doing such a wonderful job with your daughter. My daughter plays
tennis and I always taught her to act like Chrissie on the court. I'm proud to
say  she had, and I just want to thank you for that."
  From all of us.
  For the record, the end came at 4:29 p.m. Tuesday afternoon. She wore a
striped jersey and turquoise skirt. She had a red tennis  bag. She watched
films the night before and said she was going out to dinner when she got home.
The trivia about Chris Evert's final Grand Slam match will go on for a long
time, but not as long as  our  memories of her. There were a thousand quotes
to mark her departure and maybe none more curiously eloquent than 13 year-old
Jennifer Capriati, the budding star from Chris's hometown, who hugged the
former champion and, if she's lucky, absorbed some of those magic vibes.
  "It was a bummer," Capriati said.
  Yeah, it was.
  Here's to her power, her style, her two-handed backhand, the way a bead of
sweat seemed to dance down her temples, her victories, her defeats, her
wonderful wars with Navratilova, Graf, Austin, King, Stove, Goolagong,
Mandlikova, Shriver, Jaeger and Court -- and the way she  was able to joke
when it was all, finally, over. She said good-bye, fittingly, in Louis
Armstrong Stadium, named for a man who immortalized the following lyrics:
  Give me
  A kiss to build a dream  on
  Applause, please.
  She gave us a lot more.
CUTLINE
  All is forgiven between victor and vanquished Tuesday after Zina Garrison
(left) of Houston ousted Chris Evert from what Evert says  is her final U.S.
Open.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
CHRIS EVERT;BIOGRAPHY;END;CAREER;TENNIS;MAJOR STORY
</KEYWORDS>
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