<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9002040599
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
900913
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, September 13, 1990
</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) 1990, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
HEARTS TAKE A BEATING IN BUSINESS OF SPORTS
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
Maybe the Godfather had it right. In his regime, the rules were clear. If you
were family, you were safe. If you were family, there was an obligation.
Family meant loyalty. You knew where you stood.

  We look for that in business, a family loyalty. We rarely find it. Oh, we
think we do.  Emanuel Steward thought he'd found it. He took a skinny kid from
the streets of Detroit and handed him boxing  gloves and gave him a home and
taught him how to write his first check, just like a son. The name goes here,
Tommy. The amount goes here, Tommy. And when the kid had his high school prom,
Steward  loaned  him his gold Cadillac so he could impress his friends. And
when the kid became famous, Steward, his manager and trainer, was always
alongside him, in Las Vegas, in Atlantic City, wiping the blood away,  hugging
him after the wins, booking the biggest boxers and teaching the kid how to
whup them.

  There were a million midnight phone calls. A million pats on the back, a
million forgivings. Just like  a son. "That's all right, Tommy. I understand.
That's all right, Tommy, just don't do it again, OK?"
  It felt like family.
  But it wasn't family.
  Eric Williams thought he was in a family,  too. He thought that for
slamming his huge body against blood-spitting linemen, Sunday after Sunday,
for six years,  he had won some sort of love for this, something that would
protect him from evil. When he had contract problems last year, he finally
signed but went to his coach Wayne Fontes and said, "Wayne, I don't ever want
to go through this again." And Fontes said, "Don't worry. You won't."
Williams smiled. He was a Detroit Lion. Since leaving college, he had only
been a Detroit Lion.
  It felt like family.
  It wasn't family.
What have you done for me lately? 
  Today, Steward  and Williams find themselves with that stunned feeling of
desertion, as if they'd just  awakened on a desert island, and everyone they
knew was on a ship disappearing into the sunset. Tommy Hearns, after  15 years
with Steward, announced he was leaving, going to manage himself, thank you,
with the advice of a convicted embezzler named Harold Smith. Steward got the
news from a reporter while eating dinner.  Tommy never called. "And he
probably won't," Steward sighs.
  Eric Williams saw his cord severed on the same day. He had held out from
the Lions -- or, as he puts it, "was never offered anything"  -- until last
week. He says Detroit management (read: Chuck Schmidt) told him forget about a
raise, he was overpaid to begin with. Meanwhile, Williams had heard all sorts
of trade rumors. So when he  finally signed, at a slight increase, he wanted
to know whether he was safe. They weren't just signing him to trade him,
right? "They told me all the trade talk is dead. Don't believe any rumors," he
 says.
  On Tuesday, he was traded. To Washington.
  See ya.
  Blood might be thicker than water, but blood was never a substitute for
money or success. These sports relationships, you hear the  coach say "He's
like a son to me" and the player say "He's like a father to me," but in the
end, the father gets fired, the son gets traded. It's about money. Always has
been.
  So Tommy Hearns, who  is getting too old for his job, suddenly wants his
youth back, he wants big purses, big glory, he wants people to tell him he's
great again. And rather than look at his uninspired training habits, or  his
lousy performances against everyone but Sugar Ray Leonard, he starts listening
to the praise of buzzards and he nods and says yeah, the old man must be the
problem. The old man is so critical. Why  should  Emanuel get 35 percent of me
anyway? What has he done for me lately? 
  And Eric Williams? To the Lions, he's just another piece of football meat.
They don't think he's so great at his position, they have a few young kids,
and besides, he's a holdout type. Someone else wants him? How much? Do it.
Williams gets the phone call Tuesday afternoon. He is on a plane Wednesday
morning, out of their  lives.
They were connected only at the wallet 
  You feel sorry for Williams and Steward. But you also know that this is
their mistake. They somehow confused money with emotion. They don't mix.
Steward got rich from his association with Hearns, and Williams was paid for
his bruises with the Lions. And whether the amounts were fair really doesn't
matter. What matters is the idea. It was a business relationship,  and
business relationships, stripped naked, are never about heart. They're about
dollars.
  "I thought I paid some dues playing for the Lions, but they showed me no
respect," Williams says. "They're  petty. You have an accountant running the
team, what do you expect? They beat you down. They kick you, then throw salt
on your wounds. All that matters is the bottom line."
  "The sad part of about  me and Tommy," says Steward, "is that this goes on
so much in boxing, people switching managers and fighters. But we never did.
For 15 years, people in our business pointed to us as an example, they  said
you see how Tommy Hearns and  Emanuel Steward stay together? That's what we
want. That's loyalty."
  It wasn't loyalty, not really. It was business. And business can be nasty
-- even between  family. As I now recall, at the end of "Godfather II,"
Michael Corleone has his own brother killed because he double-crossed him in a
deal. So even blood has its limits. Greed, it would seem, does not.
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