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<UID>
9601240012
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
960725
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, July 25, 1996
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>



Janet  Evans: Before and after her disappointing heat.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1996, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
TURN OF EVENTS
JANET EVANS WILL SWIM THE FINAL RACE OF HER CAREER
TONIGHT. WITH A BROKEN TOE.
AFTER BARELY QUALIFYING FOR THE FINAL.
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
ATLANTA --  Janet Evans is a better story than a swimmer these days. That's
fine if you're retired. Hank Aaron is now a better story than a home run
hitter, and Joe Frazier is a better story than  a boxer.

  The problem is, Janet Evans is still in the water.

  She was there again Wednesday, first in the big pool, in front of a
cheering Olympic crowd, and then in the practice pool, where she  cooled down
and waited for the other swimmers to finish. She needed to wait, because their
times would determine whether she'd even make the final of her last Olympic
event. She reached for her foot  and rubbed it. She had banged her right toe
before the race and it was killing her. It was broken. "I can't do anything on
dry land," she would later groan.
  This was hardly vintage Janet, all this  gloom and disaster. In the glory
summers of 1988 and 1992, making finals was never an issue for the California
kid. But this is 1996, and Evans had swum a slow 800-meter freestyle,
finishing third in  her heat. And while you're not supposed to use up all your
energy in these races, you are supposed to go fast enough to advance. Evans
wasn't sure she had.
  So she stretched in the water and she floated  back and forth and she tried
to pretend that it didn't really matter if she bombed out -- "I was kind of
like, whatever happens, happens," she would later say -- and that of course is
as big a lie as  they come. It matters. It always matters. You don't get to
these Olympics if it doesn't matter.
  But swimmers are mechanical, they train thousands of miles, they measure
their strokes, they taper  to a peak until they are finely tuned machines, and
all the evidence suggests that 24-year-old Janet Evans is simply not as fast a
machine as the people she is up against.
  But no one wants to believe  it.
 

The next generation

  "I just want to go out and do what I can do," she would say. "That's all I
can ask of myself. To do my best."
  She had said similar things two days earlier, when she finished ninth in
the 400-meter qualifying and didn't even get to swim in the final. Forget the
gold that NBC kept talking about. Forget silver or bronze. Evans' name
wouldn't even be listed in the history  books. And she is the world record-
holder in the event.
  Ah, but that record -- and others in the 800 and 1,500 meters -- were set
years ago, when time was on her side, when her body came back strong  and
tight after difficult workouts, when practices were not yet drudgery and kids
five years younger were still splashing in junior high, instead of looking at
her and thinking, "Move over, old girl,  I'm coming."
  There was someone like that in the pool Wednesday. A small, perky Florida
kid named Brooke Bennett. She just turned 16. She won her 800 heat easily. She
is aggressive and she is a medal favorite tonight and she already has warned
that "someone is coming up to take Janet's place." 
  That someone would be her.
  Cocky little thing, isn't she?
  Well, wasn't it just a blink ago  that Evans was the cocky kid, all
colt-like teenage motion, big teeth, twinkling eyes? She went to Seoul in 1988
-- she brought her homework with her -- and won three gold medals from the
clutches of  the East Germans. She met President Reagan. She was grand marshal
of parades. You could argue she was the biggest American star of those Games.
  Then, in 1992, she went to Barcelona and took a silver  in the 400. She
wept at her defeat. Recently, she said, "I hate that day now. I was so
disappointed in myself when I should have been proud."
  Evans was getting a taste of life as a performer, where your existence is
no longer your own, but the expectations of your audience. So even when she
took a gold in the 800 at Barcelona, her time was nothing compared to years
ago. "What's wrong, Janet?" they  asked. 
  Weary of the pressure, she retired from the pool. But boxers box, divers
dive and swimmers swim. She missed the water. Eventually, she came back.
  And her story came with her, like a shadow.
 

The  final chapter

  Evans was standing now behind the stands at the aquatic center. She wore
flip-flops and a white T-shirt and her hair was still damp. The heats were
over. She had qualified for tonight's  final -- barely. The top eight times
make it; she was sixth. "I'm just happy to make it back to a final," she said,
looking down at her injured toe. "That was my goal."
  Read between the lines. Here  is what she's saying: I may be done here,
folks. I may not be fast enough. I may have to settle for reaching the stage,
not the spotlight. Can you deal with that?
  Can we? Evans was chosen from among  all the American athletes to run the
torch in the opening ceremonies up the ramp to Muhammad Ali. That is how much
the Olympic community thinks of her. That is how much the TV people think of
her. Evans was, in her prime, the ideal American Olympian, well-scrubbed,
happy, patriotic and invincible.
  But the other day, Evans was telling reporters how she can't wait to stop
swimming. How she wants her  shoulders to shrink "so I can finally buy a
sundress and not look ridiculous." How she hopes to fill the days "shopping
with my mom."
  To me, these are the words of someone who has mentally checked  out of
battle. And if so, I say let her go. Tonight, NBC will use the dramatic music
and the old footage to try to whip up another wounded hero story. But that's
not fair -- because her times in the  water suggest a fading swimmer. No shame
in that. We just need to tell the truth. Janet Evans has given enough to the
American legend, and she needn't be anybody's story but her own now.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>
THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED ARTICLE.
</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
OLYMPIC; SWIMMING; JANET EVANS
</KEYWORDS>
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