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<UID>
9601220013
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
960708
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, July 08, 1996
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
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<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color ADAM BUTLER/Associated Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


:
Although MaliVai Washington of Swartz Creek lost to Richard
Krajicek in the Wimbledon final on Sunday, he captivated tennis
fans.
Katrina  Adams and Mashiska Washington, MaliVai's brother,
watch his Wimbledon final Sunday. Tennis is a family affair for
the Washingtons. A family member always travels with another to
a tournament for support.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1996, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
CHEERS FOR A TENNIS PLAYER
WASHINGTON'S SKILLS, NOT RACE, EARN KUDOS
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
WIMBLEDON, England --  When the crowd began to holler his name, and the
referee urged him to acknowledge the cheers, MaliVai Washington reluctantly
raised his silver runner-up plate and got to his  feet -- as a tennis player.
Not a black tennis player. Not a racial symbol. A tennis player. He had given
the hallowed grass of Wimbledon a tremendous show these last two weeks, coming
from the unseeded  shadows to defeat six consecutive opponents, overcoming big
serves and big pressure, whizzing shots that would make a ghost applaud. Now,
on Centre Court, a place he had never played on until this weekend,  they were
roaring his name. One Brit yelled, "We love you, Mal!"

  He smiled and gave a salute. Although the championship was lost, at 27 --
old for his sport -- Washington had achieved at least one  of his dreams: On
the last day of a Grand Slam event, he was being cheered -- not for his skin
color but for his game.

  Long time coming.
  "I could get used to this," Washington said in the tunnel afterward,
despite dropping the rain-delayed final to missile- launching Dutchman Richard
Krajicek, 6-3, 6-4, 6-3, ending a spectacular run from the unseeded pack to
the brink of the greatest title in  tennis. "All these years, I always
believed this day was coming. I never gave up."
  That took a lot of belief. How far was this from the public courts in
Flint, where he first learned to handle a  racket? How far was this from those
endless weekends with his father, a GM worker and his only coach, pounding
yellow balls into yellow lint? Back in the United States, they made a lot of
this match because Washington is black, the first black man to get this far
since Arthur Ashe won in 1975. But let's be clear about something: Washington
was not here because of his color. He didn't get some kind  of
affirmative-action boost to the final. Had he pulled off a victory -- and with
his turbocharged style of play, you were never sure until the final point that
he wouldn't -- there would have been a  media dam burst, not quite Jackie
Robinson but close to it. "First Black Man to Win Wimbledon in 21 Years!" the
headlines would have read.
  And Washington would have been uncomfortable because he does not see
himself in terms of color.
  And neither should we.
 Family values
  Did you see some of the shots he made here -- two-fisted backhands that
streaked like F16s, balls at  his ankles  that he lifted and fired in a single
blurring motion? He went five sets and three tiebreaks to win the
quarterfinals; he went five sets, two days, and one incredible comeback to win
the semifinals; and  he went toe-to-toe with Krajicek, whose blazing serve
had already knocked off the three-time defending champion, Pete Sampras.
  "Whether he's black, white, brown or green, Mal has done a great job  of
playing tennis here," said Todd Martin, his victim in the semis. "Nobody
should let the color of his skin overshadow what he's done on the court."
  Precisely. You want to know how Washington made  the Wimbledon final? Not
race. Family. He was taught by his father, William, who picked up a racket
when he was 33 and began banging balls off a wall. Soon the entire crew was
playing together -- Mal,  his younger brother, Mashiska, his sisters, his dad.
They were there for each other coming up, and they are there for each other
today. William could not be here at Wimbledon because his daughter was
playing a tournament in Mississippi. Family rule. One member accompanies
another. So Mashiska stayed with Mal at the St. James hotel, and they ordered
pizza and watched videos and kept each other company for two weeks.
  "We never go anywhere without some member of the family for support,"
Mashiska explained. "Next week, someone will go with me when I play."
  You want to know how Washington made  the Wimbledon final? Not race.
Perseverance. Hailed as a budding superstar coming out of college, he went
through a peak, then a valley. After reaching a career-high No. 11 ranking,
Mal won just two  minor titles over the last four years, and his last two
trips to Wimbledon were first-round exits.
  Perseverance. This year he came in determined to adjust his mental
attitude. "Before it was always,  uh-oh, I'm here again, what's going to go
wrong this time?" he said. "This year, I just wanted to focus on the positive.
And it worked."
  You want to know how Washington made the Wimbledon final? Not race. Skill
and courage. In the semis, he was down, 1-5, in the final set. He never
stopped trying big-gamble passing shots and rocket backhands to the shadow of
the line. Those shots unnerved Martin,  and Washington came back to tie the
set and eventually win the match. His speed and powerful ground strokes kept
him in games all tournament long. "Dazzling," the British press called him.
  Family.  Skill. Perseverance. Courage. You want to know how he got to the
Wimbledon final? That's how.
  Nothing black or white about it.
 A role model for all
  "It seems like wherever I go, people  want to ask how I made it as a
black player, or why there aren't more black players," Washington told me. We
were sitting below the main stadium, after he'd made the semifinals. All week
long he had been asked about being black, and all week long he shrugged off
the questions.
  "I'm proud, don't get me wrong. And if other young black players are
inspired by me, that's great. But I'd like to  get to the day where it's not
an issue at all."
  That day should be here. Players should be players. On Sunday, Krajicek
became the first Dutchman to win a Grand Slam. When someone pointed this out,
the new champion smiled and said, "That is a fact." Then he went to the next
question.
  Mal Washington played some wonderful, gritty, never-give-up tennis these
past two weeks, and if there are kids  out there picking up a racket because
of what they saw, it should be because of that, and those kids should be black
and white and brown and yellow. He is a role model for excellence -- and for
grace  under pressure.
  When Washington's post-match interview session was done, the Wimbledon
official sitting next to him did something I'd never seen before. He leaned
into the microphone -- normally these guys never speak -- and said, "If it's
not too much to ask, ladies and gentlemen, although he didn't win the
tournament, Mr. Washington provided us with some marvelous tennis, and I
wonder if we  could express our appreciation in a usual manner?"
  And he began to clap.
  And a room full of  reporters put down their pads and clapped along.
  It was for tennis, not for anything else,  and Washington smiled because
that is all he ever asked.
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<DISCLAIMER>
THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED ARTICLE.
</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
MALIVAI WASHINGTON; TENNIS; WIMBLEDON
</KEYWORDS>
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