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- <text id=89TT1670>
- <title>
- June 26, 1989: Youth Will Be Served
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- June 26, 1989 Kevin Costner:The New American Hero
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SPORT, Page 90
- Youth Will Be Served
- </hdr><body>
- <p>With a touch of impertinence, teens top the tennis world
- </p>
- <p> To win the French Open was a triumph. To do it at 17 was a
- wonder. But Michael Chang seemed to grasp more than just the moment
- when he beat Ivan Lendl and Stefan Edberg in Paris to join the
- company of world-champion tennis players. Chang was wise enough to
- understand, "These two weeks are going to stay with me the rest of
- my life," but excited enough to imagine, "Maybe someday I'll be
- able to achieve something greater." More than a few days later, the
- sport is still tingling with his possibilities.
- </p>
- <p> And with those of Spain's Arantxa Sanchez, also just 17, who,
- in the face of that invincible Grand Slammer Steffi Graf, took
- heart from the achievements of her American contemporary and turned
- both the female and male sides of the French Open into historic
- celebrations of youth. "When Chang beat Lendl (in the fourth
- round)," Sanchez said, "I think then I have a chance against
- Steffi. Plus, look what Monica did." Monica Seles, a two-fisted
- Yugoslav giggler, every bit of 15, terrified Graf in their
- three-set semifinal. "That gave me hope," said Sanchez, who came
- back in the championship match from a 3-5 deficit in the final set
- to win the last four games and Spain's only women's title. (Poor,
- dilapidated old Steffi dropped her first major trophy in a year and
- a half and, four days later, turned 20.)
- </p>
- <p> A theme of youthful impertinence, especially Chang's, rang
- through the tournament and carried for a distance. "It's
- embarrassing," grumbled John McEnroe all the way from England,
- where preparing for grassy Wimbledon seemed a more profitable
- exercise than adding to 34 years of U.S. desperation on French
- clay. Since Tony Trabert succeeded at Paris in 1955, not one of the
- grand Americans -- not Stan Smith, not Arthur Ashe, not Jimmy
- Connors, not McEnroe -- had ever won the French. And the brazen way
- Chang finally did it galled McEnroe, 30, who muttered the fairly
- amazing statement, "We've got to teach these kids some manners."
- </p>
- <p> This was a reference to a trick or two Chang used to upset
- Lendl, who was more than just the top seed in the tournament. For
- most of four years, the Connecticut Czech with the gloomy eyes and
- great forehand has been the finest tennis player in the world.
- After 15th-seeded Chang lost the first two sets 6-4, he won the
- next two 6-3. But in the fifth set and hour, Chang's legs began to
- complain, and the banana cure he tried during the breaks could not
- hold off the cramping. Wobbling, Chang decided the best tactic was
- to use his head to abuse Lendl's. Up 4-3 in games but down 15-30
- in points, Chang quick-pitched his opponent an underhand, if not
- underhanded, serve. From that moment to match point, the smoke
- never stopped streaming from Lendl's ears. It obscured his skills.
- </p>
- <p> Crowding the service box impudently, Chang taunted Lendl into
- double faulting away the closing point in the last 6-3 set. But the
- three-time French Open champion brought grace to the interview room
- afterward. "He showed me a lot of courage," Lendl said. "He
- deserves credit." Defending champion Mats Wilander, who has fallen
- off the charts this year, was less magnanimous. Watching Chang
- dispatch his Swedish teammate Edberg in the finals, Wilander said,
- "It just shows you that anyone can beat anyone on clay."
- </p>
- <p> Edberg took the 1-6, 6-3, 6-4, 4-6, 2-6 defeat better. "I had
- my chances, but I missed too many break points. I got a little
- tired in the fifth. Then it was too late." Edberg is only 23, but
- everyone in Paris felt a little older. "Chang's young," he said.
- "Maybe he doesn't think that much." By four months, Chang displaced
- two-time Wimbledon champion Boris Becker as the youngest major
- champion of the modern era. With his charming, sidearm delivery,
- Becker, 21, said, "Almost-the-older-ones you have to call us now."
- </p>
- <p> A 5-ft. 8-in. native of Hoboken, N.J., but a resident of
- Placentia, Calif., Chang is supervised on tour (17 months,
- $533,000) by his mother Betty, who, like her husband Joe, is a
- chemist. She prefers the chemists' word stabilized, saying, "I
- think that I stabilize him. I hope my presence makes him
- comfortable." Chang describes his calm manner on and off the court
- as a residue of his Christian faith, though he does not dispute
- those who detect some Oriental mystery. "I guess that could be
- appropriate. I am a quiet person and do not show much emotion. My
- hobby is fishing, and fishing is very tranquil too."
- </p>
- <p> Wimbledon begins next week, a tougher stop for a baseliner,
- though Bjorn Borg contrived to win five in a row that patient way,
- and Chang has that kind of dream. "I want to be the No. 1 player
- in the world and have all the best shots in tennis: serve, volley,
- base line, drop shot, you name it. I try to set my goals as high
- as I can." If he inspires Asians, Chang will be pleased. "It helped
- Sweden when Borg came along and made such a big impact. I'm hoping
- it will also happen in Asia."
- </p>
- <p> Joe Chang fled China for Taiwan in 1948, but those newspapers
- still publishing in China claimed the new champion nonetheless. In
- his victory speech, Michael also embraced them. "God bless
- everyone," he said in summation, "especially the people of China."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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