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<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9601240514
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
960730
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Tuesday, July 30, 1996
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo DIETHER ENDLICHER/Associated Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>



With a leap of 27 feet, 10 3/4 inches, Carl Lewis wins the long
jump in his fourth straight Olympics. Story, Page  1D.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
ATLANTA '96; DAY 11
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1996, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
THE GREATEST EVER
CARL LEWIS SOARS TO HIS PLACE IN SPORTS HISTORY
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
ATLANTA --  The bright lights were waiting, a stadium full of
flashbulbs, and Carl Lewis is not one to shy away from the heat. His routine
-- which never varies, not this week, not this year,  not this Olympics --
began anew at the far end of the long jump runway. He stood there, mumbling a
religious mantra, and then he began to move. He picked up speed, faster,
faster, and soon his hands  were slicing through the air like bread knives,
and his eyes were locked on the takeoff board. He slammed that board at full
throttle and ran up into the air, legs still churning, arms windmilling like
a bird fluttering toward a ledge. Then, as gravity took him down, he kicked
out for a landing, splashing into a pit of sand and a sea of white flashes,
snapshots for history.

  Starry, starry night.  In his final Olympic moment, Carl Lewis was
everything people wanted him to be -- happy, appreciative, and yes, even
surprised. He glanced at his mark in the sand, measured it with his eyes
against the  board, then fell to the ground as the crowd erupted and the
scoreboard flashed what he had been waiting for: He was in the lead.

  And when Lewis leads, nobody catches him.
  Not this week. Not  this year. Not this Olympics. Not ever. At 35,  Lewis
might not be the athlete he once was, but in many ways, he is more, the sum of
all he has done. We will no longer measure him one Olympics at a time,  but
all Olympics put together. Four Summer Games. Four straight gold medals in one
event -- the only man to do that besides the indefatigable discus ace, Al
Oerter. And Oerter didn't also win gold medals in the 100 meters, 200 meters
and relay sprints -- and, believe me, Al was never called "fastest man in the
world."
  Lewis did all that. He is the greatest athlete in track and field history,
arguably  the greatest athlete America has ever produced. And lest anyone
think he lacks the quality that defines champions like Michael Jordan and
Reggie Jackson -- the ability to step up when it most matters  -- consider
this:
  Lewis only made this Olympic team by an inch.
  He won the gold by more than eight.
  Starry, starry night.
He leaps ahead of the crowd
  "How did you all get into my dream?"  said a grinning Lewis, greeting the
press after his victory lap with an American flag, a lap that was met with
only cheers -- unlike the cynical response that greeted him 12 years ago on a
similar lap  in Los Angeles. "I still don't feel like I've woken up. I won
tonight by doing it the only way I know how to do it -- full speed ahead."
  And, for everyone else, anchors down. This was not, in truth,  the world's
greatest long jump competition. The evening wind was blowing into the jumpers'
faces, and every time you looked up, someone was fouling, passing or lying
dejected in the dirt. Lewis won the  gold with a leap (27 feet, 10 3/4 inches)
that was shorter than his winning jumps in Barcelona, Seoul and LA. Truth is,
Lewis jumped farther than 27-10 3/4 in college. His golden leap Monday night
would  only have earned him a bronze medal four years ago.
  Aren't the numbers supposed to improve as time goes by?
  Well. You have to factor in the Lewis effect. Once Carl puts a big jump
out there,  at least in the Olympic Games, other competitors tend to wither.
Remember:
  In 1984, Lewis won with his first jump. No one else came close.
  In 1988, he was ahead from the start and demoralized  the field with an
even better jump on his fourth attempt.
  In 1992, his first jump was never equaled.
  And here, back on American soil, where he began his Olympic career, Lewis
once again laid  a big hurt on the field, this time on his third jump, putting
the bar out where others were capable of reaching physically -- but not
mentally. Let them say what they will. Other jumpers are still in  awe of
Lewis at the biggest events -- the way defenders gape at Michael Jordan as he
scores over them in the fourth quarter.
  "I'm only 29, and my body feels like it's 60 years old," admitted bronze
medalist Joe Greene. "Carl is 35. I don't know how he does it."
  Added silver medalist James Beckford of Jamaica: "It's an honor for me to
jump against Carl Lewis."
  So, in truth, once he went  ahead, Lewis was competing against himself. As
he sat on the infield, watching his competitors fall, he reflected on the
unusually bumpy road his final Summer Games had demanded.
  He had been terrible  at the Olympic trials, having earned the third and
final spot on the team by a mere inch. And Sunday night, he needed his third
and final jump just to get to the finals on Monday. Yet, in an odd way,  this
made Lewis that much more human -- and that much more attractive to fans.
  "You know, I've been on the circuit since 1981," he said, "and it's been
like 15 years since I've felt like a regular athlete, where if you win people
say,  'Great,' and if you lose people say, 'Well, he wasn't supposed to win.'
"
  He said this as if he were surprised.
  "What are you going to do now?" someone  asked.
  "Well," he said looking at the Olympic officials, "they may not like this
very much in security, but for the first time since I've been coming to the
Olympics, I'm gonna go see some other  events. I want to see other athletes
for a change."
  Carl Lewis? Watching other athletes?
  Starry, starry night.
He was the best ever
  Now, it's true, Lewis has made a lot of enemies over  the years. One of
the first was a guy named Larry Myricks, who was also a long jumper, an
awfully good one. In fact, Myricks was the best America had until Carl came
along.
  Then Myricks began losing  to the kid. And soon, he was the bridesmaid of
the sand pit, always No. 2. Lewis would not lose a long jump for a decade.
  This, of course, was during the time when Lewis was bragging about how big
 he would be, how much money he would make, how he was taking acting lessons,
and his agent had predicted: "Carl will be bigger than Michael Jackson." Other
track athletes couldn't stand Lewis' preening,  his brashness, his aloof
manner with them and his calculated manner with the media.
  "One day, Carl's gonna lose a long jump," Myricks said, "and there's gonna
be some serious celebrating."
 Guess again. Lewis has dropped long jumps and sprints in lesser meets. But he
has raced two Olympic 100s, got gold in both, raced two Olympic 200s, got gold
in one, silver in another -- and won every  Olympic long jump he ever tried.
Four up. Four down. 
  He will try no more. The book is closed. No one will get to laugh. Not
this week. Not this year. Not this Olympics. Not ever.
  So whether  he is embraced by the public now, whether he gets all those
endorsement deals he missed and his face is plastered everywhere you look --
it doesn't really matter. Track and field is about time and distance,  and the
numbers on Lewis will never lie. The best there is. The best there ever was.
  On Monday night, when the last challenger landed short in the pit, Lewis
raced down the runway, his hands over  his head, waving to his family, then
took off for his victory lap.
  Few people realized he still had one jump left. He never took it. It sits
there forever, in an empty stadium, the only thing he  ever left behind at the
Olympics. The mind dances with the possibilities.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>
THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED ARTICLE.
</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
OLYMPIC; CARL LEWIS; LONG JUMP; RECORD
</KEYWORDS>
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