<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8502050742
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
850908
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, September 08, 1985
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
STATE EDITION
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1985, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
WILANDER JOINS MCREST WHEN HE LOSES THE MCBEST
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
NEW YORK -- Say what you will about John McEnroe, the Prince of Pout, the
Court Crybaby, the No. 1 male tennis player in the world. If nothing else, he
is a fighter. And on center court at the U.S.  Open, when your survival is on
the line and it's about a million degrees and you're losing bad and 20,000 New
Yorkers are screaming at you and a Swedish robot across the net is picking you
apart, well,  being a fighter is what it's about.

  Saturday afternoon it was about three hours and 49 minutes worth of
racket-to-bloody-racket combat -- McEnroe versus Mats Wilander, U.S. Open
semifinal -- on a  day in which summer decided to kiss off the Big Apple in a
Big Way. Courtside temperature was 114 degrees. Hey, they were carrying the
fans out in droves.  No such luck for the players.

  So they  swatted, and dove, and drop-shotted, and chased down each other's
shots and doused themselves with water in those precious seconds they got to
sit down between sets.
  It seemed almost too hot to keep  track of the score, and then, suddenly,
some 140 minutes in, there they were, Wilander comfortably ahead 2-1 in sets
and leading 2-0 in games in the fourth and appearing well on his way to
knocking off McEnroe, the prince of this city.
  They lined up for game three, and here's where the naked sunlight told it
all. Both were soaked with sweat, but Wilander seemed to be sweating ice.
  McEnroe was  sweating blood.
McEnroe proves he wants it 
  Oh, the subplots here went much deeper than what you saw on television.
For here was the No. 1 player in the world facing the man who many feel could
be No. 1 if he really wanted to. Wilander is, at 21, an incredible tennis
talent. But people question his desire, the way he seems to loaf through the
smaller tournaments.
  Earlier this week, McEnroe  had scolded him in the press: "You can't be No.
1 by going through the back door. That's what he's trying to do. Just slip in,
win a tournament here, win one there."
  But now, at center court, with  the world watching, Wilander had McMouth on
the ropes. He had played brilliantly, coming to the net, winning the first and
third sets by whipping balls that screamed past the tip of McEnroe's racket
as if radar-directed.
  "Who wants to be No. 1?" Wilander seemed to say. "Suck it up, John. Show me
who."
  McWatch me.
  John paced the court, like a lion before the kill. He yelled at cameramen,
at spectators, at himself. It revived him. It always does.
  He slammed several shots past Wilander. He won a game. And when Wilander
hit long to lose the next one, McEnroe let loose a guttural "Yeeeeahhh!"  that
seemed to quake the very court that had been so favorable to his opponent. He
must have scared the hell out of it. It was never the same. 
  Five games later they were even, two sets apiece, and  headed for the Last
Chance Zone.
Too hot even to cheer 
  By this point the heat was a sealed dome atop the stadium. Fans were
slumped over like unhinged scarecrows, too pooped to even go for a Coke.  And
the players? Well, the sun had sweated off nearly everything extraneous from
their bodies. All that remained was will and bones.
  Wilander took the first two games. But McEnroe was merely catching  his
breath. He came back again, taking balls that zoomed at him at 100 m.p.h. and
playing them off his racket strings like a kid's  ukulele. Pluck it here. Drop
it there.
  McEnroe tied it at 2-2,  went ahead 3-2, then 4-2. Each win got another
"yeeeaah!" along with a few fists waved in triumph. Who wants it? Who wants
it?
  At 5-3, he must've known the answer. And Wilander knew too. The Swede
lofted a return high and soft -- which McEnroe slammed back halfway through
the concrete -- and Wilander simply raised his arms in surrender. Three points
later it was over, and the crowd roared with  whatever energy hadn't been
sapped.
  You want it, you take it. A fighter's credo.
  McEnroe plopped into his chair as a crowd of photographers encircled him.
He ignored them, pouring water on his  head, sucking cup after cup down his
throat. Wilander left the court quickly.
  There used to be a motto amongst cocky New York street toughs: "You mess
with the best, you end up like the rest."
  The rest are in a pile. McEnroe's in the final.
  McWow. Again.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN;TENNIS;JOHN MCENROE
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
