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<UID>
9101160672
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
910421
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, April 21, 1991
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
COM
</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) 1991, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
FOREMAN STANDS . . . AND DELIVERS
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
ATLANTIC CITY --  The scene that replays, over and over, is the ninth round,
maybe 12 seconds left, the boxers stalking each other like animals. Suddenly,
Evander Holyfield throws an overhand right  that lands square on the head of
George Foreman and knocks his cheekbones halfway to Ocean City. The old man is
staggered, his hands are down. Holyfield hits him again. Another right. A
left. A right.  Foreman sways, like a tree in the wind, his eyes are glassy,
he should drop, everyone knows it. The people are screaming. "He's going
down!" 

  But he does not go down. He stays upright, as if his  feet are locked in
cement. The bell rings. Holyfield stares at him, at least partly in disbelief,
and Foreman lumbers to his corner, refusing to sit, resisting any temptation
to collapse and end this  war.

  Something happened at that moment. Some sort of shift in the night.
Foreman, who for months had shamelessly promoted this fight, an overweight
carnival barker, was actually delivering on his  promise. It was like finding
out that the stuff the snake oil salesmen sold you really does work. You can
grow hair. You can grow younger.
  And later, when Foreman -- who ultimately lost by unanimous  decision --
entered the massive interview area, wearing a red head wrap and a bulky white
satin jacket, another strange thing happened. Reporters began to smile. Some
of them clapped. Some actually cheered.  Big George had done more than put up
a hell of a fight against a man 14 years younger (and a whole lot lighter). He
had actually erased cynicism.
  "Tonight I proved that if you can live, you can  dream," Foreman croaked
into the microphone. Remarkably, no one thought it a corny thing to say.
 Dignity in defeat 
  So much of what we see in sports is just hot air, all talk, athletes
promoting  themselves. A baseball player takes one swing and wants to
renegotiate. A football player wears an earring and a buzz cut and gets $11
million -- and never plays a decent game. After a while, you adjust  your
expectations. You figure everyone is lying.
  Nowhere is this more true than boxing, where lies are the currency of the
business. But suddenly, here comes Friday night, and into this sea of cynicism
 splashes Foreman, 42 years old, the size of a house, getting a second chance
at the heavyweight challenge and doing it differently this time. Having fun.
Making friends. We all figured he would pop like  a balloon when the fight
actually started -- after all, it had been 17 years since he last fought for
the title -- and instead, he was dishing out punishment to Holyfield in the
second round, stinging  him in the fifth, taking a beating in the seventh --
at least a dozen straight blows to the face, chin, ear -- then coming back
with a flurry.
  And in the final rounds, when it was clear the ex-champ could not win, he
did the next best thing: He survived. He wrapped around Holyfield as the last
bell rang. Afterwards, he handled defeat with such cheer and dignity you
couldn't help but lower your defenses.
  "Why didn't I sit down between rounds?" he told the post fight crowd. "My
legs are so strong, I didn't want anyone saying the senior citizen has an
unfair advantage.
  "Maybe I should get serious  now. Maybe I'll switch from cheeseburgers to
turkey legs. Nah, I'll stick with cheeseburgers.
  "I tried to finish him, but every time I tried, he tried to finish me.
That boy is some champion, let  me tell you.
  "What will I do next? I don't know. As you can see, I'm still growing."
 Rematch unlikely 
  It was unlike any post-fight press conference I have ever witnessed.
Almost . . . gentle.  A 42 year old man, who refuses to diet, after a decade
away from the sport, putting on a show against the top guy in the world.
  "No shame in losing," Foreman said. "We didn't retreat, did we?"
  He laughed and said good night. You almost hate to see him go. There is
not much for Foreman to prove now. He spent the last three years building
towards Friday night, one more crack at the title.  He got his money -- at
least $12 million -- and he proved his point. A rematch against Holyfield
seems unlikely, at least for a while, and bouts against lesser fighters would
not make much sense. Maybe  a Mike Tyson? Maybe a Tommy Morrison?
  Maybe not. "I'm gonna open a fast food franchise and get rich," Foreman
said, grabbing the microphone one last time. "Because I'll buy all the food
myself.  Hahaha!"
  And with that, he left the stage, heading off, he said, to a church
service he was to conduct this morning. History will decide how significant a
fight this really was. But standing there,  watching Foreman leave the room, I
was left with a feeling much like Holyfield must have had: a little dazed, and
not sure what had just hit me.
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