<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9401240545
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
940630
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, June 30, 1994
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1994, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
BORIS BAD ENOUGH? ONLY IN TENNIS . . .
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
WIMBLEDON, England -- Did you hear?

  Hear what?

  Boris Becker cheats.
  He cheats?
  That's what they say. Three matches in a row.
  Three in a row? What did he do?
  Well,  the first match, against Javier Frana--
  Who?
  Javier Frana.
  You sure you're not talking World Cup? 
  No. Javier Frana.  He's a tennis player. In his match against Becker,
Boris called for a toilet break and--
  A toilet break?
  That's what they call it.
  When my toilet breaks, I get a plumber.
  Yes. Well. Boris called for a toilet break, and while he was  there--
  You mean in the bathroom?
  Yes. While he was there, he had therapy administered. 
  That sounds severe. Had he tried prunes?
  No, no. Physical therapy, for his body. His trainer, according to reports,
"gave him a stretch." 
  I still think prunes would have been enough.
  You don't understand. It's against the rules.  Boris cheated. He was
fined $1,000.
  For getting  a stretch in the toilet?
  Absolutely.
  I'm afraid to ask -- what did they stretch?
  They said he got a neck rub.
  How long did it last?
  Maybe 20 seconds.
  That's cheating?
  Absolutely.
  Hmmm. I see. What was his second offense?
Time out for . . . what?
  His second offense came against Andrei Medvedev.
  Who?
  Andrei Medvedev.
  You're sure you don't  mean the World Cup?
  Medvedev and Becker were in the fifth set Tuesday, triple match point.
Medvedev went to serve and--
  Don't tell me. Boris went to the toilet.
  Worse. He called for time.
  That's it?
  You shouldn't do that in tennis. It breaks the server's concentration.
  Maybe Boris needed time.
  It made Medvedev angry.
  What happened when they resumed play?
  Medvedev  won the point.
  If he won the point, what was he mad about?
  He lost the next point. And the match. Later, he said Becker distracted
him. He said, "If you're good enough, you should win without  cheating. Boris
does this all the time."
  Hold it. In basketball, you can call time in the middle of a play. In
football, the quarterback can call time just before the snap. Nobody
complains. Opponents  just laugh and say, "Ha-ha. You're scared!"
  This is tennis. It's different.
  I'll say. What was the third offense?
The phantom 'out' gesture
  The third offense came in Becker's match Wednesday  against Christian
Bergstrom.
  Who?
  Christian Bergstrom.
  I gotta watch more tennis. Go on.
  Bergstrom and Becker were in a first-set tiebreaker, set point. Bergstrom
hit a smash. As  Becker returned it, he raised his hand momentarily because he
thought it was long.
  Yeah? So?
  Bergstrom hit the next shot out. He claimed Boris distracted him.
  Because he raised his hand?
  Of course.
  Wait a minute. Baseball players stare down 90-m.p.h. fastballs while fans
are doing the wave. Basketball players shoot free throws while opponents yell,
"Choke!" You're saying tennis  players can't hit straight when an opponent
raises his hand?
  Well, Bergstrom complained loudly.
  Who won the match?
  Bergstrom lost in straight sets.
  Sounds like he needed Boris to  keep more than his hands down.
  Funny, that's what Becker said. He said, "Maybe the reason all these
players speak out is because they lost. Nobody likes losing." 
  This Becker kid makes a lot  of sense.
  But he cheats! The papers here say so!
  Listen. Cheating is using a corked bat. Cheating is shaving a stroke off
your golf score, or putting nails in your boxing glove. Cheating is  entering
a marathon a half-mile from the finish line. 
  Taking your time or getting a quick rub during a break shouldn't be
cheating. Golfers do the former, and even boxers do the latter. Besides,  if
tennis didn't pamper its players with limos, Lear jets and press agents, maybe
they'd toughen up a little. And people would like their sport more.
  Hmmph. Is that all you have to say?
  Just  about. Now. If you'll excuse me.
  Where are you going?
  To the bathroom. I need to stretch.
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