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<UID>
9501250380
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
950707
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, July 07, 1995
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1C
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

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<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1995, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
WITHOUT SELES, STEFFI UNBEATABLE
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
WIMBLEDON, England --  You can't play tennis against a mirror, so Steffi
Graf must settle for the women they put in front of her. They are not as good
as she is. They are not as haunting as her lonesome  quest for perfection.
They do not spook her, or cause her to lose sleep. She can beat them all, even
when she stumbles.

  She stumbled often against Jana Novotna in Thursday's semifinal. Graf
double-faulted.  Graf foot-faulted. Graf hit long. Graf whiffed at Novotna's
serve. Whiffed? As in "swing and a miss"?

  Yep. And she still won.
  "I honestly felt great today," said Novotna, who lost in three sets.  "I
was good at the net, good at the baseline." She smiled and sounded proud of
herself. "If I played this good against anyone else, I would have won."
  Steffi Graf is not anyone else. And when your  semifinal opponent at
Wimbledon is  just happy to make a decent showing, there is something missing
from the field.
  Which is why Graf needs Monica Seles the way fire needs oxygen. Seles was
the last  person to truly threaten Graf's dominance. Without her, Steffi is
almost too good for her own good, stitching a streak that makes Cal Ripken
look like part- time help. She has not lost a match. Not this  week. Not this
month. 
  Not this year.
  Steffi Graf is perfect for 1995 -- 31 matches, 31 victories, including the
French Open and soon to include -- if she can beat the clay-loving Arantxa
Sanchez  Vicario on grass -- her sixth Wimbledon. And yet you listen to Graf,
you read the in- depth interviews, and you sense a troubled soul, restless,
agitated, in need of something more.
Dark personal life  her business 
  Now, I am not in the business of psychoanalyzing Graf -- the way Sports
Illustrated enjoys doing, opening a profile story with "Torture and boredom,
boredom and torture," as if it's just lie down on the couch, Steffi, and let
our experts dissect your soul -- and to be honest, I don't really care if her
bedroom is black and her furniture is black and she describes herself as
"emotionally dark." She wants to be Morticia Adams, that's her business.
  But I have watched enough sports to know when someone is missing a
challenge. And Graf, who was given a tennis racket in the  crib, can only
thrive against a foe who is living and breathing and daring her to win.
  Besides the one in the mirror.
  A healthy Seles is the best hope. People forget Seles -- not Graf -- was
on top of the tennis world two years ago when a lunatic jumped from the stands
and put a knife in her back. A few months earlier, Graf and Seles had met in
the Australian Open final; Seles, who is five  years younger, won in three
sets. The year before, the pair went overtime at the French, producing one of
the most compelling finals ever at Roland Garros -- with Seles finally winning
the last set,  10-8.
  You don't see anyone beating Graf, 10-8, these days, unless they're playing
gin rummy. Sanchez Vicario is the toughest of the bunch, but her overall game
still doesn't equal Graf's. In fact,  Graf's toughest opponent seems to be her
compulsion with fitness. Last spring, as the undisputed No. 1, she went on a
inexplicable three-week training binge that left her rubber- legged for the
French.  Just before this Wimbledon, she had to sit a few days after straining
her wrist on the last serve of a grueling practice.
  It's almost as if she needs to make it difficult -- the way Larry Bird of
the Celtics used to fight the boredom of regular-season games by passing up
easy shots and creating harder ones. That's OK for Boston in February. 
  It is not OK for London in July.
Monica's return  would end debate 
  When Seles was stabbed, Graf's first reaction was, "Oh, God, I hope
it's not one of my crazy fans."
  As it turns out, it was. Guenter  Parche, an unemployed German machine
operator, said he stabbed Seles to restore Graf to her No. 1 ranking. And sick
as it may be, that is exactly what happened. Graf has pretty much been No. 1
since (except for a brief injured period).  And women's tennis has been
without its marquee matchup, and consequently, its rainbow's end of drama.
  Here is just one reason Steffi needs Monica: to prove that her current
status didn't come at  knifepoint. There has been a hot debate about where to
rank Seles should she return -- which seems likely, considering her upcoming
exhibition against Martina Navratilova -- and as  WTA officials favor
restoring Seles to her No. 1 status, Graf balks.
  "I don't agree with the proposition," she said.
  She should. Seles didn't pull a hamstring -- she was stabbed at a WTA
event, and, to a certain  degree, tennis is responsible. As such, it cannot
justify taking anything from Seles that she had before that day.
  Besides, making her No. 1 simply gives her easier matches in the earlier
rounds  of tournaments, and thus boosts her return, which can only be good for
the sport. If Seles has truly lost her talent or drive, she won't stay No. 1
long.
  But it's good that Graf objects. It shows  some fighting spirit. If she's
jealous of Seles, good. If she doesn't like her, fine. Over the years, Graf
has wrestled with paparazzi, a tyrannical father, even the horror of a
lovesick fan who committed  suicide in front of her. No wonder when she
mumbles, "I'm very happy to make the Wimbldeon final," she sounds as if she's
being gutted.
  Enough. Her opponent should not be horror, or injury, or lesser  players
who congratulate themselves for losing well. Her opponent should be someone
who, when swords cross, makes Graf's heart race. The last woman to do that was
Seles. And if any of that talent is  still inside her wounded body, she cannot
come back fast enough.
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