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- <text id=91TT0853>
- <title>
- Apr. 22, 1991: It's Coming Back To Me Now!
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Apr. 22, 1991 Nancy Reagan:Is She THAT Bad?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SPORT, Page 78
- It's Coming Back to Me Now!
- </hdr><body>
- <p>At 42, George Foreman is duking it out for the heavyweight boxing
- crown with a much younger man, and middle-aged wheezers everywhere
- are following his lead
- </p>
- <p>By John Skow--Reported by Sally B. Donnelly/Los Angeles, Joseph
- J. Kane/Marshall and David E. Thigpen/New York
- </p>
- <p> Who's heavyweight champ?
- </p>
- <p> Dunno. Muhammad Ali. Aren't the Celts on TV?
- </p>
- <p> O.K., a hint: not Spinks.
- </p>
- <p> Not which Spinks? There was Leon and there was Michael.
- How about Women's Full Contact Pro Beach Volleyball?
- </p>
- <p> No, look. There's a war; the sentry asks you a question to
- prove you're American. Who's heavyweight champ?
- </p>
- <p> Right. I got it, Mark Tyson.
- </p>
- <p> It's Mike, and no. Bang, you're dead.
- </p>
- <p> Nah, it's boxing that's dead, has been since Primo Carnera
- retired. It's a sham and a shuck, lacking the je ne sais quoi
- of monster-truck racing and the visual appeal of a carton of
- eggs falling off the kitchen counter. Nobody cares except a
- couple dozen middle-aged sports editors. If those guys would
- unplug the publicity tubes...
- </p>
- <p> Hey, check this out. Here's a guy, Evander Holyfield, nice
- fellow, good manners, says he's heavyweight champion.
- </p>
- <p> What's he look like?
- </p>
- <p> Like he delivers for Federal Express. No one believes he's
- a killer, El Supremo, Dr. Death. So this week Holyfield, who's
- 28, is going to bop this 42-year-old fat guy, George Foreman, on
- the beezer in Atlantic City. When Holyfield was in fourth grade,
- Foreman was heavyweight champ.
- </p>
- <p> What's the problem?
- </p>
- <p> Well, Foreman won his title by flattening Joe Frazier, who
- was no joke. 'Course that was back in '73, and the next year
- Foreman lost to Ali in Zaire. Then he lost to Jimmy Young, who
- wasn't a joke but wasn't Godzilla either. Foreman quit fighting
- for 10 years and took up preaching. And eating. But then four
- years ago, he started fighting again. He beat 24 stiffs in a
- row, 23 by knockouts.
- </p>
- <p> So you're saying...?
- </p>
- <p> The fat old guy could win.
- </p>
- <p> Sure. So could George McGovern in the '92 presidential
- election. How about a two-George parlay? Giggles or not, jiggles
- or not, a lot of comebacking is being attempted at the
- world-class level in sports. A reasonable citizen may wonder
- what Foreman, Bjorn Borg, Larry Holmes, Sugar Ray Leonard, Nancy
- Lieberman Cline, John McEnroe, Jim Palmer, Mark Spitz and Jill
- Sterkel have in common. A reasonable answer might be they're
- nuts. They're all trying, or trying to try, or have recently
- tried, comebacks, holding high the torch for middle-aged
- wheezers everywhere.
- </p>
- <p> Doubters generally mention money in a disparaging way when
- the comeback phenomenon is discussed. Certainly there was a
- Dead Whale on a Flatcar quality when lardy ex-champ Larry
- Holmes, 41, TKOed unranked opponent Tim ("Doc") Anderson a
- couple of weeks ago in Florida. Later that night, perhaps to
- demonstrate unchainable ferocity, Holmes scuffled with fighter
- Trevor Berbick in a hotel driveway. Cameras running, of course.
- He got a scrawny $150,000 for the evening and bellyached about
- it.
- </p>
- <p> Foreman has no reason to grumble. He will get $12.5
- million in pay-TV loot. It will take Roger Clemens, the mannerly
- Red Sox pitcher who is baseball's highest-paid player, more
- than two years in the whirlpool to earn that much. But Foreman
- gives funnier interviews. He claims to have three sons, or five
- sons, named George Foreman, which is not just funny. It's eerie.
- </p>
- <p> Not everyone agrees that money is dominant in the comeback
- phenomenon. Sugar Ray Leonard, 34, the gifted middleweight who
- lost badly to Terry Norris last February at the end of his third
- comeback, said flatly, "I needed the arena." Not the money. What
- he describes is not just being recognized by headwaiters. It is
- the sense of being regarded with awe, almost as a messiah
- figure. Missing that feeling during three years out of the ring
- was what led him to recently revealed excesses with drugs and
- booze. No more. Now, "I'm ready for middle age."
- </p>
- <p> Not everyone is. Mark Spitz, 41, now a businessman in
- Beverly Hills, is the marvelous sprint swimmer who at the '72
- Olympics in Munich won seven gold medals in world-record time.
- Spitz had a world-class mustache and was smashingly handsome.
- The only knock against him was that he projected the
- personality of a 22-year-old who had spent a lot of time in
- swimming pools.
- </p>
- <p> Spitz retired, posed for a poster and got on with his
- life. He seldom swam the length of a pool. Then a couple of
- years ago, he began to toy with a goofy idea: that he could make
- the U.S. Olympic team next year and win a medal in his best
- event, the 100-m butterfly. It is the one men's event in which
- times haven't dropped dramatically. Pablo Morales, now retired,
- holds the record of 52.84 sec., and Spitz's '72 time of 54.27
- sec. would have put him seventh at the Seoul Olympics. To make
- the team next year, Spitz figures, he'll have to swim in the
- low 53s. He seems keyed up, and, he says, one reason he decided
- to come back was that "I missed the feeling of being nervous, of
- having to go out there and perform." At week's end, in a $30,000
- match race in the 50-m fly, he lost to freestyle sprinter Tom
- Jager at Mission Viejo, Calif., 24.92 sec. to 26.70 sec.
- </p>
- <p> Tennis players compete nearly every day and wear out
- early, but here is Bjorn Borg, 34, the five-time Wimbledon
- champ, beginning a comeback. There seems to be no physiological
- reason that Borg, a burnout case at 26, couldn't rank in the Top
- 10 again. Tennis is much faster now, mostly because of big,
- composite rackets, and so far Borg intends to use his old wooden
- relics. But doubters may recall that he re-made his game once
- before, when he added a big serve in 1978 after he had won
- Wimbledon a couple of times. Tennis comebacks aren't unknown;
- John McEnroe, 32, who was one of the reasons Borg burned out,
- took a furlough from the game for several months in '86, came
- back, left again in '87, came back once more, and last fall
- reached the semi-finals of the U.S. Open.
- </p>
- <p> Still, are most comebacks simply arena addiction? Not in
- Borg's case. He seems to be back now because he needs the money.
- But the others? Publicity is, of course, a renewable resource,
- but did Hall of Fame pitcher Jim Palmer really gain any
- bankable ink this spring by trying a comeback with the Baltimore
- Orioles at age 45? Palmer made the right jokes but not the right
- pitches. He was stopped almost instantly by a torn hamstring.
- Doesn't he look a little silly?
- </p>
- <p> Or could it be that Palmer, Spitz and the others aren't
- being unrealistic? "We've always had this dogma that the human
- body peaks at age 26 to 28 and then goes into a slow decline,"
- says Rick Sharp, a professor of exercise physiology at Iowa
- State University. "But in fact, what we were seeing was not the
- effects of aging per se, but of increasingly sedentary
- life-styles." When 50-year-old men and women began running
- marathons in times that once would have been records, experts
- began to rethink old ideas about middle age.
- </p>
- <p> According to Dr. Robert Cantu, a Concord, Mass.,
- sports-medicine specialist, athletic ability consists of three
- elements. Endurance generally peaks in the late 20s and is
- sustainable into the mid-30s, then deteriorates slowly, at about
- 1% a year. Strength peaks later, perhaps not until the 40s, then
- deteriorates even more slowly. Coordination, including reflexes,
- can be maintained at nearly 100% capability until 50.
- </p>
- <p> Not all the news is good. Recovery time lengthens as the
- metabolism slows. Arthritic changes wear at joints. Loss of
- conditioning because of injury or off-seasons creates bigger
- setbacks for older athletes. Nolan Ryan, the 44-year-old
- flamethrowing pitcher for the Texas Rangers, doesn't allow
- himself an off-season, and is said to have perfect mechanics,
- meaning not just that his arm leverage lets him throw smoke but
- that his joints don't grind themselves to powder. This makes
- Ryan, who shows no sign of retiring, an unlikely prospect for
- a comeback, but never say never.
- </p>
- <p> Women athletes are no less susceptible to ego and
- endorphins than men, though their comebacks tend to be no-bucks,
- low-publicity events. But Nancy Lieberman Cline, 32, arguably
- the best woman basketball player ever, is working out several
- hours a day to make her third Olympic team, and sprint swimmer
- Jill Sterkel, 29, hopes to make her fifth. Why do it? Says
- Lieberman Cline: "As world-class athletes, we are treated
- special. Since the first moment anyone recognized we had an
- ounce of talent, we've been stroked. We're spoiled."
- </p>
- <p> Is George Foreman spoiled? No, folks, just nicely ripened.
- He is a huge man, 6 ft. 4 in. and something like 250 lbs., with a
- shiny, shaved skull and a neck wider than his head, including
- his ears. He says coming into the ring too slim would be a
- mistake. He's teasing. He does that a lot, making it easy for
- reporters to laugh. Call him a fatted calf, call him a freak
- show, and he chuckles. "I like being me," he says now. "I have
- gotten rid of all problems like leaves hanging off a tree. If
- an old man like me can come back from the dead, then that is a
- victory for mankind."
- </p>
- <p> He trains hard. Former light-heavyweight Archie Moore, the
- old mongoose, who fought his own last pro fight in 1965 at 52,
- helps inspire him to do it. Foreman straps himself into a
- harness and pulls a three-wheeled all-terrain vehicle around
- while a trainer steers. He jogs behind a flatbed truck, whacking
- at a heavy punching bag tied to the back. More impressively,
- Foreman spars with four partners in succession for 21
- consecutive minutes, pushing, slogging that thunderous right
- hand, crowding.
- </p>
- <p> He is transforming himself. He's done it before. As a
- teenager in Houston he was a strong-arm street thug. Then he
- stumbled into a Job Corps program and turned into a wholehearted
- achiever. Two years later, at 19, he bludgeoned a Soviet
- heavyweight for an Olympic gold medal at Mexico City and waved
- an American flag joyously. He was an oak of a man, with a
- knee-weakening scowl, when he brutalized Joe Frazier in 1973,
- and an oak-and-a-half when he lost to Ali in Zaire, 19 months
- later. He spent money crazily, gave it away, acting the fool,
- the ex-champ. Then he lost to Jimmy Young in 1977, found God in
- a haze of heat prostration, and retired.
- </p>
- <p> If Foreman escapes the Parkinson's syndrome that afflicts
- Ali and some other old fighters, it may be because for 10 years
- thereafter nobody punched him in the head. In a rough Marshall,
- Texas, neighborhood of open drainage ditches and rusted trucks
- up on cinder blocks, he built an eight-pew, corrugated-steel
- church and a youth center. He turned to fighting again to keep
- both running.
- </p>
- <p> Angelo Dundee, Ali's old trainer, predicts that Foreman
- will win. "Before, he was a tough guy. Now, he's a sweet
- individual. So it'll be a good fight. You always gotta have a
- mean guy and a sweet guy."
- </p>
- <p> The designated mean guy is Holyfield, 6 ft. 2 1/2 in.,
- lean and quick at about 210 lbs. Holyfield doesn't say much.
- He's a boxer, not a slugger, a patient man. He won the title
- from Buster Douglas, who took it from Tyson when Tyson was
- thinking about something else. The new champ has seen the film
- of Ali dancing, cliiching, ducking in Zaire, letting the
- 25-year-old, 220-lb. Foreman punch himself out. He's no Ali, but
- he has trained aerobically and anaerobically, as modern fighters
- do. As he punches, an aide with a computer tallies each jab and
- uppercut. The computer appears to be well-conditioned, and
- lightning fast.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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