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<UID>
9601210762
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
960703
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Wednesday, July 03, 1996
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1C
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1996, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
ROOT, ROOT FOR HOME TEAM -- MICHIGAN'S STRING TRIO
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
WIMBLEDON --  Oh, great. As if sitting through a week of
rain-interrupted tennis and having a match called because of darkness and
getting stuck in the hinterlands of the outside courts where  the cheers from
the big stadium erupt just as you're trying to serve -- as if all that weren't
enough for Todd Martin, today he gets to be the most hated man at Wimbledon,
and the enemy of all England.

  Great.

  "Are you aware or interested in who you're playing in the quarterfinals?"
a British reporter coyly asked Martin on Tuesday.
  "I'm aware," Martin answered. "And I'm interested -- although  not for the
same reasons as you."
  The reason for such great interest here is simple. Martin's opponent is a
21-year-old Englishman named Tim Henman, who looks like he should be rowing on
the Oxford  crew team,  all high black hair and toothy smile. Henman was a
nobody before last week, even in Great Britain, but he won his first match,
upsetting French Open champion Yevgeny Kafelnikov,  and he won his second
match and his third match, and he keeps winning and the British fans keep
leaping onto his bandwagon and one or two more victories and he can bump
Prince Charles out of office.
  You have  to understand, these Brits are so hungry for a sports hero, they
would adopt Dennis Rodman.
  "Are you worried about playing Henman and being the most hated man on
Centre Court?" Martin was asked.
  "I look at it this way," he said, "at least I'm on Centre Court."
  Good answer. How does Martin stay so calm? How does he remain so rational?
How does he keep such a huge match in perspective?
  Easy. He's from Michigan.
  Hey. If they're gonna root, I'm  gonna root.
 Martin, Washington and McGrath
  Besides, if there is any theme to the American players still alive in
this Wimbledon  Of The Small Seeds, it is our home state. I am not being
shameless here. Consider:
  Martin is in the quarterfinals. He's from Lansing.
  Mal Washington is in the quarterfinals. He went to school at Michigan.
  Meredith McGrath is in the semifinals. She's from Midland.
  In fact, the only American player left here -- male or female -- who
doesn't have a Michigan connection is Pete Sampras.  And I'm sure his plane
has landed at Metro a few times.
  By the way, as long as we're mentioning Washington, how about a hand for
the guy? He's been grappling with his enormous potential for years  now, and
there is the added burden of being one of the few blacks in a mostly white
sport. The minute he has some success, reporters start fishing out that angle,
and he has to start answering all those  questions again. 
  Washington had never been further than the second round here at Wimbledon,
and the last two years he was knocked out in the first round. Yet today he's
in the quarterfinals, against unknown Alexander Radulescu, and he has a good
chance to make it all the way to the big show on Sunday afternoon.
  "In years past, I came in with a bit of a negative attitude, because I
hadn't had  success here," Washington admitted. "I would be like, 'Jeez, we're
back on grass and it's gonna be cloudy and raining' and you know, just kind of
feeling sorry for myself. This year, I had a fresher  approach. I'm trying to
be real positive."
  Of course, we know the biggest reason he's doing well here in England: his
family is from Swartz Creek, Mich.
  Hey. If they can root, I can root.
  And let's not forget McGrath, whose performance may be the biggest
surprise of all. Here is a young woman who doesn't have a coach, doesn't even
get mentioned in the womens' tour media guide, and  was told by doctors to
retire from the sport due to a thigh injury a few years ago, and instead, she
battles on and battles back, and she is now one of the four women left
standing in the world's biggest  tennis tournament.
  "I just stopped shaking a few minutes ago," McGrath said, after her
quarterfinal win over Mary Jo Fernandez. "This is so exciting for me. I never
expected this coming into this tournament. I was just hoping to win my first
match."
  First match? On Thursday, she plays Arantxa Sanchez Vicario, and the
winner goes to the finals.
  By the way, for the last few years, McGrath  has been living with her
adopted American family in Zurich. She loves the mountains, the lakes, riding
her bike in the shadow of the Alps. But next month, the family is moving back
stateside. And McGrath  is going with them. You know where they're going?
  Michigan.
  Are you getting my drift here? . . . 
 Unfold your Michigan hand maps
  OK. Let's get back to Martin, who has to topple the  new James Bond in
order to keep his Wimbledon dream alive. Centre Court today will be like the
Boston Tea Party in reverse, with the Brits hoping to throw the American kid
overboard. Already, this place  has bent in the favor of the unknown local
guy, giving unseeded Henman (ranked 62nd in the world) several Centre Court
matches, while Martin, the 13th seed and a former semifinalist here, has been
shipped  out to the cheap courts all tournament long.
  "Will that be an advantage to Henman?" a British reporter asked hopefully.
  Martin smiled. "Did you ever see the movie Hoosiers? This little
basketball  team from Indiana goes to play the big tournament in the big
stadium, and they measure the court before the game and see that it's the same
size as the one back home.
  "All the courts here are the  same. I'll be fine."
  Ha! How about that? The Brits don't know what to make of such candid,
lucid logic. They also never heard of "Hoosiers."
  No matter. Martin is 26, McGrath is 25 and Washington  is 27. They are
united by their years of patience, by their underdog status, by the feeling
that now is the time to step up and finally win one of these Grand Slams --
and by one other thing: The hand  that they hold up and point to when you ask
which part of Michigan they come from. This may be the land of strawberries
and cream, but for the next day or so, there'll be a little Sanders Hot Fudge
in the mix.
  I'll explain that to you chaps in a second.
  And by the way, to all those Brits who'll be rooting against the Americans
today. One last question: how are you celebrating the Fourth  of July?
  Oh, that's right. You don't.
  If they can root . . .
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<DISCLAIMER>
THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED ARTICLE.
</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN; TENNIS; WIMBLEDON
</KEYWORDS>
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