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- SPORT, Page 86BEST OF 1991
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- 1. WORLD SERIES
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- In a year of glory for unknowns and has-beens, baseball's
- 1991 finale matched the Minnesota Twins and the Atlanta Braves,
- last-place teams in 1990. Lads fresh off the farm, like
- Atlanta's Mark Lemke, showed manful poise; geezers like the
- Twins' Jack Morris pushed guts and wiles past exhaustion. For
- once, the "fall classic" really was.
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- 2. MIKE POWELL
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- When Everest was scaled, man had no higher mountain to
- climb. But in sport one can dream of jumping over the moon. This
- summer in Tokyo, Powell just about did it, though few dreamed
- he'd even come close. The unheralded American spanned 29 ft. 4
- 1/2 in., eclipsing by 2 in. one of the few sports standards
- thought impregnable: Bob Beamon's long-jump record, set in
- Mexico City's thin air in 1968.
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- 3. MICHAEL JORDAN
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- Record-setting long jumps and high jumps are no problem
- for the world's most astonishing athlete; he makes them 82
- games a season. Also quadruple back-flip dunks with his eyes
- closed. But the man had never won it all until his Chicago Bulls
- captured the N.B.A. crown in a clinic of Jordan aerobics and
- cagey teamwork against the Los Angeles Lakers. Now will all
- those who scorned him as a great but selfish showman -- a
- one-man Harlem Globetrotters -- please shut up?
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- 4. GEORGE FOREMAN
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- In the ring he is a joke, standing there like Buddha,
- hoping some galoot will walk into his earth-orbiting fist. But
- Foreman, 42 and gaining, laughs as much as anyone. Along with
- other grand old fogies, like baseball's Nolan Ryan (who at 44
- pitched his seventh no-hitter), Foreman answered the sports
- fan's need for father figures who can still play with the kids.
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- 5. JIMMY CONNORS
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- And the Best Bad Actor (Senior Division) showed that an
- aging tennis ace can climb into a semifinal slot at the U.S.
- Open by behaving like a colicky two-year-old. Gentleman Jim,
- 39, disputed an umpire's ruling with such epithets as "son of
- a bitch" and "an abortion." Some spectators guessed that
- Connors had seen too many Robert De Niro movies -- or too many
- John McEnroe videotapes.
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- 6. SEXUAL DISCLOSURE
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- Which news item from the shadow world of basketball
- stardom was more poignant: Magic Johnson's announcement that he
- had contracted the HIV virus, or Wilt Chamberlain's boast, just
- days earlier, that he has had sex with more than 20,000 women?
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- 7. MONEYMEN
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- What recession? Not in the prime-beef market of pro
- sports. Jordan will reap about $25 million in 1992, most of it
- from product plugs. Evander Holyfield earned $20 million
- waltzing with Foreman. Bobby Bonilla signed with the New York
- Mets for $29 million for five years. And
- Minnesota-Twin-for-a-year Morris, 36, whose won-lost record for
- the past four seasons is 54-57, rented his right arm to the
- Toronto Blue Jays; the two-year deal is worth $10.85 million.
- That's about $1,500 a pitch, for those of you who couldn't
- afford a pocket calculator this Christmas. (But these are still
- middle-income entertainers. TV's Bill Cosby earned $60 million
- in '91.)
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- 8. JERRY TARKANIAN
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- To rivals of Tark the Shark's dominant, scandal-plagued
- basketball teams at the University of Nevada at Las Vegas, UNLV
- stands for UNLoVed. So not many cried when his 1991 squad, 30-0
- in the regular season, lost an NCAA semifinal game to the
- scholars of Duke. The coach's defenders aver that his rehab
- program for inner-city tall guys is affirmative action at its
- most productive. Others, spotting the athletes' BMWs in the gym
- parking lot, see another moral: it's not whether you win or
- lose, but how much you make on the side.
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- 9. FLORIDA FOOTBALL
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- When the N.F.L.'s Miami Dolphins may only be the state's
- fourth best football team, you realize that the college game has
- become pro ball by other means. At season's end Miami
- University, the University of Florida and Florida State
- University were at or near the top of the rankings. Michigan and
- Washington fans might disagree, but how about a national playoff
- for the state championship?
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- AND THE LOWEST BLOW . . .
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- Mike Tyson's alleged "serial buttocks fondling." If the
- charges are correct, this walking keg of testosterone was doing
- at an Indianapolis beauty pageant what he does in the ring:
- mauling the competition. Tyson's troubles spotlighted the threat
- behind many an athlete's swagger: he may think the world is his
- for the taking, with one swift punch or pinch.
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