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<UID>
8802120959
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
881002
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, October 02, 1988
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
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<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo;Photo Color PAULINE LUBENS  
Photo Color Associated Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1988, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
THE OLYMPICS ARE BACK
JOY, HEARTBREAK, CONTROVERSY
-- AND A FLOOD OF MEMORIES
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
SEOUL, South Korea -- The gloves are unlaced, the shoes are removed, the
water in the pool is still.  The Games of Summer will close today, amid a
splash of color and ceremony.  It will take days  to pack up and weeks to
clean up and years, perhaps, to pay up, but to  sum up what has happened here
the last 16 days is really quite simple: For all the highs (Florence Griffith
Joyner) and lows (U.S.  loses basketball to the Soviet Union), the
unforgettable (Greg Louganis' final dive), the unexplainable (Roy Jones robbed
in his gold-medal bout) and the unforgivable (Ben Johnson busted for
steroids),  the sights (Chusok),  the sounds (taxi horns), the smells (garlic)
and the stories, the Olympics -- and all that they imply -- are back.

  And how.

  Oh, to be Janet Evans, wet head, big smile, returning  to high school with
three gold medals; to be Carl Lewis, soaring over the sand, knowing victory
waits upon touchdown; to be Ray Mercer, who began boxing only five years ago,
now leaping for joy as the  referee signals end of bout, heavyweight gold
medal, in the red corner.  . . . 
  To be Portugal's Rosa Mota, running alone through the streets of Seoul,
while your whole country watches back home;  or Soviet gymnast Dmitri
Bilozerchev, whose leg was shattered in 40 places three years ago -- "He'll
never compete again," they said -- yet here he was, winning two individual
golds.
  The best Olympic  Games make you wish you had taken up the sport when you
were a kid. Could anyone deny these Games did just that? Weren't you inspired
by something these last two weeks? Some beautiful breakaway in basketball?
Some pinpoint spike in volleyball? An arrow that hit yellow, a javelin that
caught the breeze, a horse that needed one leap and made that leap with inches
to spare? We saw perfect 10s in gymnastics, the vault, the floor exercise. We
saw world records in the pool, relays, backstroke,  freestyle. We saw barriers
fall in track, the 200 meters, the 100 meters.  . . . 
We saw the 100 meters. Ben Johnson.  Steroids. Not since the awful tragedy in
Munich in 1972 has a single event so affected an Olympic competition. Like a
teenager's first romance, the Seoul Games were fresh and wonderful that Friday
night  when Johnson broke the world record and beat Carl Lewis in an awesome
9.79 seconds at Olympic Stadium -- and for two days we basked in the glow of
what humans can do.
  And then we discovered it was  more than human. And suddenly, we were all
very much adults. The word now is that Johnson began using steroids several
months ago, on the Caribbean island of St. Kitts, to speed his recovery from a
pulled  left hamstring. He was injected, inflated, falsely strengthened into
an almost superhuman specimen. "His eyes were so yellow with his liver working
overtime to process those steroids that I said he's either crazy or he's
protected with an insurance policy," an American trainer told Sports
Illustrated last  week.
  There was no insurance. The user was caught, confronted and kicked out; his
gold  medal was given to Lewis. Ben Johnson never existed, according to the
final Olympic tapestry. Yet he cannot be forgotten. His story was an ugly jab
to the chin of our conscience: How far will we go to  win? How much pressure
are we putting on our athletes? Is second place really so bad, that a man
would risk shame, unemployment and, more importantly, cancer -- just to avoid
it?
  And he was not alone.  Six others had failed doping before him. Dozens,
perhaps hundreds more, were suspected. It was suddenly impossible to watch a
spectacular athletic performance without wondering, "Does he or doesn't he?"
These became, sadly, the Steroid Olympics.
  And so the final shots of Johnson still linger: that shameful walk through
Kimpo airport, devoid of medal, stripped of honor, his face half hidden behind
 a briefcase as he was swallowed by a sea of photographers, blank, empty,
spiritless.
Better to remember the faces of victory.  How about an emotional gold for
Louganis, who, after winning the platform  on his final dive, buried his
stitched-up head into the shoulder of coach Ron O'Brien? Or hurdler Andre
Phillips, overcome with joy at finally beating his lifelong rival Edwin Moses?
He, too, wept --  on the victory stand. There was Bulgarian-turned-Turkish
weight lifter Naim Suleymanoglu, who fled his country to save his name; when
he won the gold -- Turkey's first in 20 years -- he led a raucous  section of
countrymen in a swaying love song. And don't forget Korea's Kim Young Nam, the
Greco-Roman wrestler who earned his country's first gold medal, which,
literally, sparked a roar in the streets.
  We saw grown men shaking and grown men sobbing. But for sheer,
unadulterated glee, the nod goes to the women -- particularly the Americans.
Close your eyes and see Florence Griffith Joyner, golden  in the 200 meters,
being swirled like a jitterbugger in the arms of husband Al. Not to be
outdone, FloJo's sister-in-law, Jackie Joyner-Kersee, the heptathlon and long
jump champion, did the arm-in-arm  bop with husband Bobby. The U.S. women's
basketball team held a sock hop on the hardwood, while Louise Ritter, a
30-year-old Texas high jumper given little chance here, went airborne for
glory and snatched gold on the last jump of the competition, raising a fist to
all the critics who said she could never win the big one.
  "I guess that proves y'all were wrong, huh?" she said.
  Yep.
Did the celebration  somehow seem more earnest this time? Perhaps because the
athletes knew that these Olympics counted. For the first time since Munich in
1972, medals were not handed out with the caveat, "Of course, if  such and
such were here."
  It was a critical rebirth for Olympic competition.  Almost everybody
showed. Unfortunately, America learned that when everybody shows, we are lucky
to place. Both the Soviet  Union and East Germany  out-hardwared the U.S. in
the total medal count. And TV ratings back home plummeted compared with 1984.
Why? Los Angeles was fun. But Los Angeles was a Star Spangled orgy. We  didn't
beat the world, we just marked it absent and took over its desk.
  Are we that enamored with our own success? The U.S. moaned with the world's
sudden parity in swimming, track and basketball -- traditionally "our" sports
-- and groaned to discover that, despite 1984, we are really way behind in
others, including our beloved gymnastics. We earned one bronze in the entire
men's and women's  competition this time.  Where are you, Mary Lou?
  "You get a little tired," one U.S. Olympian said, "of hearing the Russian
anthem over and over."
  And yet, did you watch the Olympic shot-put competition? American Randy
Barnes, down to his last chance, heaves an Olympic-record 73 feet 5 1/2 inches
to leapfrog past world- record holder Ulf Timmermann of East Germany. The
crowd explodes. Timmermann is shocked.  His face contorts, reddens, and, down
to his final try, he puts it an index finger farther, 73 feet 8 3/4, to win
the gold. And the crowd explodes again. This is wonderful, delirious
competition. East  vs. West. It never happened in 1980 or 1984.
  So, we hope  we are reunited for good. In which case, these will be the
Games that make America think. Is it really important that we keep abreast in
things  like rowing, team handball, archery, walking and women's discus --
events that cannot raise a yawn in between Olympics? Can we possibly resist
the urge to ship our NBA players next time, after the Soviets outplayed our
finest amateur basketball players? Is there such a thing as moving to the
backseat gracefully?
  "No way," some Americans say. "We got our butts kicked."
  Perhaps. Or perhaps we need  to think again. Remember that, despite our
final medal count, not a single U.S. athlete tested positive for drugs. Nor
did a single U.S athlete attend a government-run sports school. Nor did a
single  U.S. athlete receive the promise of a house or car or big chunk of
cash for a medal. The truth is, the U.S. may very well have the cleanest and
most sincerely earned gold medal collection of these 1988 Games. That counts
for something, right?
  It says here that counts for a lot.
Not that we didn't have our problems in Seoul. We were robbed in boxing (even
the Korean broadcasters admitted Jones  won his fight Saturday night) and
jobbed in gymnastics (where the Western bloc is the wrong bloc). We were shut
down in soccer and women's volleyball. But OK. Every Olympics has its mishaps.
For the  United States,  three stand above the rest:
* Boxer Anthony Hembrick, who showed up late for his first bout thanks to his
coach's inability to read the schedule. Hembrick never got to throw an Olympic
 punch. He spent two weeks watching his teammates.
* The U.S. men's basketball team. Possessed from the start with a
single-minded concentration, John Thompson's group proved to be too much
defense and  not enough offense for the more- together Soviets. Perhaps the
wrong players were chosen? Perhaps they were coached poorly? The saddest part
is that under Thompson's reign of terror -- closed practices,  no talking to
media, no wandering -- all the fun seemed to go out of basketball.
* The U.S. 4-by-100 relay team. The men  blew a baton pass in the very first
heat, something that might not have happened  had they  practiced a few times.
Big egos, poor communication and overconfidence erased what should have been a
gold medal and world record for Carl Lewis & Company. Fittingly, Lewis wasn't
even on  the track when the dream vanished.
  In all three cases, we come back to the words of Soviet basketball coach
Alexsandr Gomelsky: "The U.S. has excellent players," he observed, "but it is
not a team."
  A little more teamwork might have avoided all three blotches.
But Olympic Games are nothing if not variety. And so for every moment we
sighed, there was a moment we laughed. How about tennis star  Pam Shriver,
describing life in the co-ed dorms: "It's great. You read their little badge
and you say, 'Oh, hi, Jim.' I just wish the badges included the room numbers."
  How about American baseball  player Billy Masse bragging about Olympic
shopping: "I picked up a Rolex for $30. I bet it runs at least until next
week."
  How about a weight lifter named Oxen Mirzoian?  How about a cab driver
named  Ho-nee-moon? How about Central African basketball players, taking
pictures of one another after their first win? Or the indignant reporter who
screamed at a confused Korean official: "Do you understand?  I am from the NEW
YORK TIMES!" The official finally nodded, and came back two minutes later.
"The time in New York is eight o'clock," he said, happily.
  Humor. Tragedy. Call these the Games of Contrast.  The rat- pack mentality
of East German athletes, versus the lonely elegance of Kenyan distance runner
John Ngugi. The bulging yet expelled Bulgarian weight lifters, versus the
unbridled joy of one-handed  baseball pitcher Jim Abbott. The morning calm of
Korean sunrise, versus a riot in the ring after a Korean boxer was eliminated.
  "That day will always be our shame," lamented Yg. H. Lee, a translator  in
the Olympic Village. Angered at the decision, and thinking that New Zealand
referee Keith Walker was the same referee who had jobbed a Korean the day
before (wrong, but perhaps we all look alike),  several Korean boxing
officials had stormed the ring and attacked Walker. They were followed by two
security guards, who were joining in, not breaking up. Bottles flew. Chairs
flew. When it was over,  heads were hung. The young Korean boxer, Byun Jong
Il, sat in the corner of the ring for more than an hour, even after the lights
were turned out. A lonely man caught in a moment of madness.
  It was  the sole blotch on an otherwise sparkling job by the hosts. The
fear of danger that kept so many tourists away from Seoul never materialized
-- at least it hasn't yet -- and about the closest anyone  came to terrorism
was the taxi ride between venues.  Korean cab drivers made Manhattan cabbies
look like drivers-ed teachers. The sun shone on Korea and the people shone
back, smiling and bowing almost  to a fault.  Westerners left the shopping
district of Itaewon without a spare leather jacket or eelskin wallet. Nobody
was served dog who didn't order it. And the visitors who came in skeptical
left  with music in their ears and a suddenly new feeling for this part of the
world.
So maybe the International Olympic Committee knew what it was doing when it
chose Seoul in 1981.  These will forever be remembered as the "reunification"
Olympics (an ironic word to use in Korea), the Olympics in which Carl Lewis
became human -- and, compared to Ben Johnson, almost saintly. The Olympics in
which Matt  Biondi and Kristin Otto needed wheelbarrows to haul home their
medals. The Olympics in which table tennis  and bowling were suddenly
five-ring sports.
  There was no finer example of Olympic spirit  than Canadian sailor Lawrence
Lemieux, who abandoned his race to save a Singapore sailor who had fallen off
his boat and drifted into rough waters. And there was no worse example than
East German gymnastics  pooh-bah Ellen Berger, who demanded the U.S. women's
team be penalized half a point because 17-year-old alternate Rhonda Faehn was
crouching on the podium during a competition. Berger's East German girls
wound up winning the bronze by .3 over the U.S. Gee, what a coincidence.
  But such are the Olympics. They have changed, for sure. Top athletes now
stay outside the village, in private homes or hotels.  Nations promise cash to
medal winners (Ray Mercer's Korean opponent, Baik Hyun-man, will receive $550
a month for life -- for the silver medal). Every athlete must fill a bottle
now. And walk through  miles of security checks. The Games may be growing too
big for their friendly britches. Maybe the athletes from Swaziland had it
right when they marched into the Opening Ceremonies in just loincloth,  beads
and headdress. 
  Sometimes less is more.
  But for 16 days, more has been fine. More countries, more athletes, more
real competition. More new faces moving in (Steve Lewis, Andre Phillips,
petite Soviet gymnast Elena Shushunova), more old faces moving over (Edwin
Moses, Mary T. Meagher, Daley Thompson). More records. More drama. More of
everything -- a growing  pastiche  set against a  gracious Asian backdrop.
  And tonight it ends. No Olympics for four more years. How much will we
miss it? During a midweek cab ride, the driver handed an American journalist a
small notebook and  asked her to write down her thoughts of Korea.
  "The Olympics will never come again in my lifetime," he explained. "I wish
to give this to my grandchildren, so they will know what happened."
  Here  is what she might have written: Thank you, Korea, for smiling and
cooperating and luring us all here  to remember  why the ancient Greeks put
these crazy Games together in the first place. As Kelly Garrison-Steves,  a
21-year-old American gymnast who had missed the 1980 and 1984 teams, said upon
arrival: "Wow! These are really the Olympics."  
  For the first time in too long, no one could argue.
CUTLINE
Top,  the U.S. 4-by-400 relay team exchanges a hug after winning the silver
medal. Members of the team are Florence Griffith Joyner, Diane Dixon, Denean
Howard-Hill and Valerie Brisco. Above, Greg Louganis  watches the diving
action with a bandage on his head. Louganis hit the board during springboard
preliminaries, but came back to win the gold. Right, pitcher Jim Abbott of
Flint is engulfed by teammates  after the U.S. baseball team won gold, as did
Jackie Joyner-Kersee, above left.
Ben Johnson waves the Canadian flag after winning a 100-meter gold medal that
would later be taken away.
Janet Evans  hugs teammate Tami Bruce after Evans set a world record in the
400-meter freestyle.
Detroit's Anthony Hembrick shadow-boxes at his mother's apartment while
awaiting final decision on his disqualification.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
OLYMPICS; COLUMN
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
