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<UID>
9101260723
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
910703
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Wednesday, July 03, 1991
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1F
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<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1991, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
PHILOSOPHIC MCENROE LEARNS FROM LATEST LOSS
</HEADLINE>
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</SUBHEAD>
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<BODY>
WIMBLEDON, England --  My old girlfriend used to date John McEnroe.
Really. Back at Stanford. That's what she said. She always would tell me how
smart he was, how sensitive he was, how misunderstood  he was by the general
public. And I would say, "Yeah, I can see why you dumped him for me."

  Actually, I was intrigued by what she said, me being a sports writer and
all. So whenever I went to tennis tournaments, I listened carefully to
McEnroe, looking for that intelligence, looking for that sensitivity, looking
for that chance to grab him in the parking lot and say, "Hey, pal, you ever
come 'round  looking for her I'll beat the crap out of you!"

  Actually, I made that last part up. But the thing is, what she said, my old
girlfriend? She was right. If you get past the temper tantrums and crybaby
garbage that always have soiled his career, McEnroe is actually a rare breed
of athlete: He has something to say -- about tennis, about life. He is smart,
believe it or not. He's going bald, and he wears  those big, stupid, paisley
headbands that make him look as if he were shot in the head in the battle of
Valley Forge, and I hope my old girlfriend has noticed this, wherever she is.
But he is smart.
  And as he gets older, he shows that more and more -- particularly after
losses, when in addition to getting angry, he now gets philosophical. Take
Tuesday at Wimbledon. McEnroe was eliminated in the  fourth round by yet
another young player who was in high school when McEnroe owned the game.  This
time it was Stefan Edberg, the defending Wimbledon champion. Straight sets,
7-6 (7-4), 6-1, 6-4. That's  seven straight years since Mac has seen a
Wimbledon final. He used to own this place.
  "Do you think at your age (32) you can ever win here again?" he was asked,
a question that was journalistic  suicide a few years ago.
  Now McEnroe sighed. "It's a long shot. Hope springs eternal. But I'm
certainly not going to bet my whole life savings on it."
  He laughed. "Or even a portion."
  He  laughed?
Other interests dulled the edge 
  This is not the same pudgy McEnroe whose face got so red when he lost, he
seemed ready to implode. Not the same spoiled kid from Queens who always knew,
 deep down, how gifted he was, and so he couldn't stand it when someone
outplayed him, McEnroe wanted to kill him.
  No, here is a McEnroe who changes diapers, and goes to bed early, who has
three  children with wife Tatum O'Neal and who realizes, because of that, he
has burned bridges and can't go back. The Maturation of John McEnroe is an old
story, everyone knows he left the game for a while,  got married, had kids and
never rediscovered the hellfire that once possessed him.
  What is new are his explanations. They get more introspective as he gets
older.
  "Sports are really selfish,"  he was saying now, scratching his forehead in
the basement of the stadium.  "Especially an individual sport like this. Years
ago, tennis was my whole life. If you beat me, you took away everything. I
could never understand how some players lost their concentration during a
match. I always thought, 'If you're a real tennis player, you don't lose your
concentration.'
  "Now, it happens to me out  there sometimes. It's so much tougher when you
have other interests. You see the world differently. I have three children
that I love, a wife that I love. . . .
  "When you're younger you take it all  for granted.  Then suddenly, you're
older and you say, 'Wait a minute. . . .' I had two years I didn't even play
here. And I was much better then than I am now."  He shook his head, as if
wondering how he could get those years back.
Even the tantrums are nostalgia 
  The answer is: He can't. Sure, he'll have splashes of the old days, days
when he was the best act in tennis. He'll have those grunting  serves, which
blister past opponents, and those volleys that fall dead in the corners or on
the lines, classic McEnroe stuff. And yes, he will continue to dump on the
umpires, he even did it Tuesday,  screaming like a teenager: "YOU'VE GOT TO BE
KIDDING ME! THAT BALL WAS OUT BY THAT MUCH! . . ."
  But even the tantrums are nostalgia now, like hearing "Thanks for the
Memories" whenever Bob Hope walks  onstage. McEnroe cannot sustain the old
stuff game after game, match after match. On Tuesday, he played Edberg dead
even the first set. The crowd was electrified. But in the tiebreak, McEnroe
slipped,  committed a double fault. Edberg won that set, and took 12 of the
next 17 games to sweep the match.
  Now, in the basement, McEnroe was wrestling with the age thing. "You feel
so close, you want to  keep giving it a shot. But there's a certain point
where you have to cut your losses. . . . "
  It hasn't come yet for McEnroe. But it is on the way. Maybe there is one
more shining moment inside that  racket, maybe not. But how ironic that, as
the years pass, we see less of the tennis that made the man, and more of the
man who made the tennis.  As he left the room Tuesday, here was the last
comment  John McEnroe made: "Life is just one long learning experience." The
reporters burst out laughing. "Hey," they seemed to say, "this guy is smarter
than we thought."
  Yeah. Somewhere, far away, my  old girlfriend was nodding smugly.
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