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- <text id=93TT2594>
- <title>
- Jan. 04, 1993: The Best of 1992:Sports
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Jan. 04, 1993 Man of the Year:Bill Clinton
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SPORTS, Page 69
- THE BEST OF 1992
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>1. 43,750,000
- </p>
- <p> Sport is a story of numbers, on or off the field.
- Baseball's best player, Pittsburgh outfielder Barry Bonds, got
- the biggest ones: $43.75 million for six years in San Francisco.
- Hockey's best, Mario Lemieux, got almost as much ($42 million,
- seven years) to stay in Pittsburgh. Baseball owners cried
- poverty--and demanded to reopen their contract with the
- players' union--but, like a randy widow, couldn't help
- throwing money at those big, handsome athletes. Even the barons
- of the N.F.L. can no longer look smugly upon the agitation of
- lesser moguls; last week they acceded to the players' suit for
- free agency. Serves 'em right: let the bidding frenzy spread
- like flu.
- </p>
- <p>2. 32
- </p>
- <p> The digits on the jerseys of Magic Johnson and Shaquille
- O'Neal. Magic, who with Larry Bird made the N.B.A.'s '80s a
- decade of dazzle, brought that era to an end with his (and
- Bird's) retirement. But pro basketball soon found a figure
- worthy of Johnson's number: O'Neal, a superstar force from the
- first tip-off, and spearhead of the league's most glamorous
- freshman class since 1979. O'Neal's team: the Orlando Magic, of
- course.
- </p>
- <p>3. 64 and 172
- </p>
- <p> Number of nations competing at the Winter and Summer
- Games. Question: What if they gave an Olympics and everybody
- came? Answer, at Albertville and Barcelona: thrills aplenty. And
- spills. If the figure skaters' jitters deprived them of
- perfection, it hyped the competition, so fiercely did they fight
- just to keep on their feet. Star quality counts too. Hungary's
- Henrietta Onodi, an elf-enchantress, took silver in gymnastics
- but gold in viewers' eyes.
- </p>
- <p>4. 117-85
- </p>
- <p> Score of the Olympic men's basketball finals. The boast
- that the games showcase amateur athletics was never more hollow
- than when attached to the U.S. hoop squad. The Dream Team (the
- N.B.A. 11 best players plus Duke's Christian Laettner) naturally
- gave opponents the DTs. It was a brutal, pointless spectacle,
- akin to the Harlem Globetrotters doing their sideshow
- humiliation, for fun and profit, of a flat-footed pickup team.
- </p>
- <p>5. 3
- </p>
- <p> Joe Montana's ranking on the San Francisco 49ers'
- quarterback chart. How good are the 49ers? Montana, a great
- player in his autumnal prime, was arguably not even the team's
- best QB. While his elbow healed, his replacement, Steve Young,
- had an MVP season, while another ace, Steve Bono, occasionally
- spelled Young. This year the 49ers have the form of Super Bowl
- winners. But could they beat the University of Miami?
- </p>
- <p>6. 100, 4x100, 400
- </p>
- <p> Three Olympic thrills. Gail Devers won the women's 100-m
- race 16 months after nearly having her feet amputated. That
- ageless sprite Carl Lewis anchored the U.S. men's 4x100-m relay
- team that set a world record. And in an inspiring 400-m
- semifinal, Briton Derek Redmond collapsed with a hamstring pull,
- then rose and, aided by his weeping father, staggered to the
- finish line. Amazing feets all.
- </p>
- <p>7. 1
- </p>
- <p> Number of women who have played a game in a major league
- team sport. For one period of a preseason skirmish, Manon
- Rheaume, 20, was in goal for the N.H.L.'s Tampa Bay Lightning,
- and her bosses say she has a chance to make the team. Can her
- achievement be a harbinger of gender integration? We bet there's
- a Little League tomboy phenom who could play shortstop for the
- Yankees someday. (And soon, please!) We also bet Oprah Winfrey
- could take George Foreman. In six.
- </p>
- <p>8. 922335
- </p>
- <p> Mike Tyson wears that number now as a guest of the Indiana
- penal system, after being convicted for raping a teenage
- beauty-pageant contestant. In doing so, the heavyweight ex-champ
- forever damaged the genial stud image of star athletes and
- threatened to give boxing an even blacker eye. Evander
- Holyfield, the titleholder in Tyson's absence, had a Mr. Olympia
- physique but the charisma of a C.P.A.--until November, when
- he fought challenger Riddick Bowe. Holyfield lost the decision,
- but in standing up to Bowe's horrifying piston punches he proved
- himself the champ Tyson could never be.
- </p>
- <p>9. 0
- </p>
- <p> As in O Canada! Baseball was on the move in '92--toward
- chaos. The San Francisco Giants tried to move to Florida, then
- stayed put. Commissioner Fay Vincent tried to move the Chicago
- Cubs to another division, but instead the owners moved him out
- of his job. So it was apt that the "national pastime" look
- elsewhere for its "world champions." Canada's team, the Toronto
- Blue Jays (with, O.K., a roster of imported players), defeated
- the Braves in a six-game palpitator of a World Series.
- </p>
- <p>10. 40
- </p>
- <p> One estimate of top-level male figure skaters in North
- America who have died of AIDS-related diseases. The plague also
- hobbled tennis immortal Arthur Ashe. And Magic, whose familiar
- flair in this year's N.B.A. All Star Game and at the Olympics
- proved there is life after HIV, put off an intended comeback
- after players said they felt at risk in close contact with an
- AIDS carrier. These stories confirm that sport, once a refuge
- from matters of life and death, is now a window into them.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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