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<UID>
9002030463
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
900906
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, September 06, 1990
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1990, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
MCENROE'S SINS FADING ON RETURN TRIP TO GLORY
</HEADLINE>
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</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
NEW YORK --  Now everyone is behind him, even the people who used to
think he was a little snot. That's what happens when you get older and you get
married and you lose your hair and then some  young stud comes and knocks you
off your throne. If you're lucky, when it happens, you get to go home with
your trophies. If you're real lucky, you've got money in the bank. But if
you're truly blessed, then you get one last return ticket, one more ride for
the old kingdom. You are Elvis sliding back into the black leather, the guitar
tuned and ready, and even the kids' parents are cheering you now.

  That's what is happening with John McEnroe. He is once again the best story
in tennis, all of a sudden, thanks to what he is doing at this U.S. Open, the
same tournament where he first pushed through  the curtain 13 years ago as a
mop-headed ball of fire. He made the semifinals that year, when he was
supposedly too young to do it.

  And Wednesday night, when he was supposedly too old, he did it  again.
The guy across the net this time was a 21-year- old named David Wheaton, a
Minnesota kid who maybe once in his pajamas watched McEnroe play on TV. And
now Mac was playing Wheaton like a Nintendo  game.
  On set point in the first set, McEnroe lowered the boom and aced him.
Wheaton barely saw it. On set point in the second, McEnroe came to the net and
slammed the ball off the concrete. Wheaton  had no chance. 
  By match point, just around 10 o'clock,  McEnroe, 31, was all the way back
to his youth, he had that look, and you could hear his grunt way up in the
press box. His serve came down the line and Wheaton, totally outfoxed now,
muffed the ball into the net. McEnroe raised his fists.
  For one wonderful New York moment, it was McEnroe  beating Borg, beating
Gerulaitis, beating Connors.  Everything old was new again.
Catching his shadow 
  This was one of those great sports moments that gets you all goose bumpy.
Johnny Mac left a lot of people shaking their heads on his way up, but  now,
suddenly, those same people are sliding into his stable. They forget about the
tantrums and the racket tosses and the time he threw sawdust at a fan, they
forget or they just push those things aside,  because 1) They have Andre
Agassi to hate now and 2) McEnroe has become sympathetic, he went from one of
"them" to one of "us," somewhere, I'm guessing, around his 30th birthday. He
now suffers the one  affliction that unites the masses, rich and poor,
Cadillac  and Chevette: he is getting older.
  So he is getting human.
  "When I first won this thing, I was 19, I  didn't even know what I was
doing," McEnroe was saying after beating Wheaton, 6-1, 6-4, 6-4, to reach the
semis, something he hasn't done here in five years. "I think in some ways,
that's why I was able to do it. I didn't even  think about it. 
  "It's only now, 10 or 12 years later, you realize how hard it was to do
that. And knowing that makes it harder to do it again."
  Chris Evert is gone. Jimmy Connors might as well  be. Now McEnroe is the
last of that American trio  to chase his shadow. It has not been pretty. He
let marriage and children and boredom loosen his grip on the racket. He fell
out of the rankings. And  some of his comebacks have been like watching
Bojangles dance in that New Orleans prison cell.
  But now, in his hometown, as an unseeded player, McEnroe is suddenly
catching his shadow, who knows  for how long, maybe just one last run, like
Kareem in the 1988 NBA championships or Nicklaus at the 1988 Masters. 
  His face has not changed. It still sags around the corners of the mouth,
giving  him that petulant look. His body is still gaunt, and his shirts hang
loose, as if his shoulders were a wire coat hanger. The curly hairline has
receded over the years, like a rising curtain, and he wears  bandanas around
his forehead to suck up perspiration, although it sometimes makes him look as
if he just stepped out of "The Killing Fields."
  But Wednesday night, in the final set, he pulled off  the bandana, and let
the warm night air play on his skin. He looked younger. The field was
concrete.
  And he was doing the killing.
His is a thinking game 
  It was beautiful to watch. He was  back to his old game, the big serve, the
great net play, returning volleys with such touch, Lord, it's as if he were
catching bullets and tossing them back over the net. You watch McEnroe, and
you can  see the thinking in his game. He is like the ultimate Pong machine;
he always puts the ball where the other player isn't.
  "My style isn't popular now. But one day, someone will come along who plays
 like me. . . . I just hope it isn't while I'm around."
  And he allowed a tired smile. Two more wins, and he has the best story of
the year in his pocket -- before his most appreciative audience. 
  A few hours before McEnroe-Wheaton, Ivan Lendl, a guy who has made the
finals here the last eight years, was beaten by a relative unknown in five
sets,  a kid named Pete Sampras who is all of 19 years  old. He will be the
next cookie-eater to challenge McEnroe. Late Wednesday night, McEnroe was
asked about Lendl's now-dead streak.
  He shrugged. This is what McEnroe said: "All things come to an end  sooner
or later." 
  But once in a magical while, they start over.
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