<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9302160549
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
931226
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, December 26, 1993
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
COM
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1H
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<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo CRAIG FUJII/Detroit Free Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


:
Winfield Henry won his fair share of trophies at Detroit
Central High, but more important, he provided direction for
hundreds of students. He suffered a  stroke nearly two years
ago, on the morning of his 54th birthday.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1993, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
A PRINCE OF THE CITY FIGHTS A NEW BATTLE
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
His old life ended in the early morning of his 54th birthday, when his
wife felt him moving in bed, woke up and saw his eyes open, but his face
frozen in pain. His right side had gone limp, and  his left side seemed to be
crawling back to retrieve it.

  "Win?" she said, calling his name. "Win! What's the matter!"

  He couldn't speak.
  The ambulance came, the paramedics took him from the  bed to the hospital.
It was weeks before he made a sound. There were tears shed, and whispered
voices in the hallway. Somewhere in the unreachable corner of his
consciousness, he knew nothing would be  as it once was.
  But know this about Winfield Henry, who survived that massive stroke and is
now working on his new life, sitting in his living room, his voice struggling
to say the next word: You don't tell him no. You don't say,
uh-uh, can't be done. They tried that when he first showed up to work at
Detroit's Central High School, back in the 1960s, and he wanted to start a
golf team. A golf  team? In the inner city? With what?
  "Didn't even have . . . no clubs," he says now, and he laughs, and his body
shakes. 
  Somehow, he made it work. The same goes for Central's dimly lit basketball
court, which was repeatedly soaked by leaks in the ceiling. They said games
should be canceled?  Don't tell Henry that. He went out with buckets and
towels, like Noah fixing leaks in the ark. He told  his kids to dribble around
the dead spots.
  "The game . . . is on," he says.
  He laughs again. With him in the tidy house on Mendota Street are his two
sons, David and Owin, who he put through college, and his wife, Ozella. On the
table are newspaper clippings, sealed in plastic, that speak of games he
played when he was younger, and teams he coached when he was healthier, and
the city championship  he won here, once upon a time.
  It is Christmas, and, truth be told, there should be hundreds of men around
him, saying thanks for keeping them off the street, for getting them into
college, for maybe,  in some cases, saving their lives.
  You may not know Winfield Henry, may not recognize the face, the thin
mustache, the laughing eyes. But you should. He is the most precious currency
in Detroit,  a prince of the city. He holds a cane now, and struggles to lift
himself up the steps.
School of hard knocks 
  Once it was a wooden paddle, which he kept his back pocket, and when kids
got out of  line, he whacked them firmly on the butt. This is old-school
coaching, it doesn't fly with modern liberal educators who talk about
children's rights and social consciousness and blah, blah, blah, but  then,
how often do those people bring their brilliance to the west side of Detroit,
near Linwood and LaSalle, Central High, where the world is concrete hard and
the odds against black males reaching  their 21st birthday are shameful?
  "Enough has been said, let's go to the woodshed," Winfield Henry would
bellow, in rhyme, as he grabbed that paddle and the players cringed. Henry
didn't worry about  theory. He had rules, and they were all about this:
character and discipline. Nobody late for practice. Nobody late for games. You
miss a class, you need a note signed by every teacher saying you had showed up
the next day, or you don't dress. That simple. Bad seeds were out. Having
grown up in Arkansas -- where his father was murdered -- and Detroit, where
the bloodshed continued, Winfield Henry  knew a simple city truth: You can't
save them all. Save the ones you can.
  He did. Year after year, without fanfare, he coached sports, basketball,
mostly, some track, some cross-country, some golf. He saw to it that kids who
could earn scholarships got them. If a kid needed clothes, somehow, clothes
appeared. Henry offered fatherly advice to his young men without fathers. "If
you walk past a bank  every day, and you don't put anything in, how can you
expect to walk in one day and take something out?" 
  He spoke like that, in little stories, in rhymes. He loved life, tough as
it was. When he  woke his sons up in the morning, he would laughingly chant:
Liza, Liza, praise the Lord!
Don't you know the day's a-broad?
You don't get up, you lazy tramp --
There'll be trouble in this camp!
  He spoke like that.
  And he coached like that. Tough. Hard. And successful. Winfield Henry was
coaching long before high schools wooed prospects from across town, like
colleges, and the whole thing became a political mess. To the day of his
stroke, nearly two years ago, he never got into that dirt. His players at
Central were the kids from the neighborhood, he took what fate gave him and he
molded  them into disciplined, defensive teams, that pressed from the minute
the game began.
  In 1980, he had his shining moment: Led by stars such as Mike Thomas and
Rodney Neeley, Central won the city championship.  Winfield was selected coach
of the year. His response?
  "We got lucky," he said. And then he added, "We were blessed."
A Detroit angel 
  When the stroke came, it shocked everyone, because Henry was well-built,
played golf, he seemed in such good shape. Doctors blamed his smoking, but who
knows? All anyone wanted then was to see him conscious again.
  They came to visit, friends, family. His  eyes were open, but he made no
sound. Dott Wilson, the girls basketball coach at Central and Henry's longtime
pal, tried desperately to say something good when he entered the room. In a
decision only coaches would understand, he choose these words:
  "Win, I just came from practice."
  Winfield lifted his left hand.
  That was the beginning. In the weeks and months that followed, he showed
the same determination that characterized his teams. Inch by inch, he moved
his body. Word by word, he learned to speak again. His days now consist of
strenuous rehab, speech therapy, checkers and, of  course, trips to games. He
can't stop. He goes to high school gyms, watches the sport he loves and
stifles the urge to cry out to the young men in the Central uniforms.
"Defense! . . . Press! . . . Run  the weave!"
  He is 55 years old, too young to be "officially" retired and living on
pension, benefits and Ozella's salary as a schoolteacher. But when you ask
Winfield Henry if he is angry about what  happened, if he feels sorry for
himself, he points, with his good hand, to his two sons and his wife.
  "I have . . . one . . . two . . . three . . . reasons not to . . . feel
sorry for myself," he  says.
  There should be more. There should be 200, 400, 700 faces around him, all
the young men he has coached the last three decades. They are out there,
alive, working, maybe doing some good, at  least partly because of him. You
think about this time of year, the goodwill, the religious symbols, and you
realize this: Not all the angels are hanging on trees. Some are right here,
with clipped wings,  just trying to get up the steps.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
WINFIELD HENRY; COACH; BIOGRAPHY
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
