SPORTS Laker Success The West Bloomfield High soccer program has enjoyed a winning season MIKE ROSENBAUM Sports Writer IN ith a first-year coach and some seemingly large holes on de- fense, the prospects for West Bloomfield's soccer team were not bright this season. However, the Lakers have held their own in the tough Metro Suburban Athletic Association, which includes state powers Rochester Adams and Troy Athens. Through 16 games West Bloomfield was 6-5-5 overall, 3-4-5 in the MSAA. Sparking even greater hopes for the future, the junior varsity squad was 10-4 with six shutouts. One of the reasons for West Bloomfield's winning campaign is their surprisingly strong defense. They allowed as many as three goals in a league game only once. Before the season, coach Mike Sopko - "filled those apparent defensive holes suc- cessfully. One of the holes was filled by sophomore Emily Fishkind. Fishkind played forward on the junior varsity last season, and prefers that position. But the team has experienc- ed forwards and, it seemed, a weaker defense, so Sopko tried Fishkind in the area which needed the most help. "She's disapponted that she's not playing offense this year. But she can best help the team this year on defense . . . The good ones can go anywhere." Sopko continues, "She likes to play the forward position, but we have a need for some good defenders and she's really filled in well on defense. A really good ballhandler. A gutsy kid. She's only 5-2, yet she really plays cD a) Forward-turned-fullback Emily Fishkind. Walter Blum, The Jewish Jockey HARLAN ABBEY M iami (JTA) — "I've won every derby there is except the one I wanted to win the most, the Kentucky Derby," admits Walter Blum, the most successful Jewish jockey in recent years, who was inducted into racing's Hall of Fame in Saratoga last August. Blum, who rode winners in the Michigan, California, Santa Anita, Louisiana and New Jersey derbies during a 22-year career that totalled 4,047 wins, now is a racing official in Florida. His biggest win was the Belmont Stakes, the one-and-a-half mile race that completes the Triple Crown for three-year-old horses. The Triple Crown includes the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness Stakes. Blum won the Belmont aboard Pass Catcher in 1971. Although the million-dollar purses of the Breeders Cup races in November may be the most sought- after by horse owners, that is not the way the fan sees it. "If I meet anyone," reports Blum, "as an ex-jockey the first thing they ask is 'Did you ever win the Kentucky Derby?' " 48 FRIDAY, JUNE 3, 1988 Blum, champion jockey many times at the Garden State Park and Atlantic City race tracks in New Jersey, rode in the Kentucky Derby three times. His best finish was fourth, aboard Reason to Hail in 1967. Proud Clarion was the winner. "But I really thought I had a good chance in 1973, when I was riding Royal and Regal, who won the Florida Derby:' he recalls. "I was in a good spot and then a horse I hadn't really heard much about went by me like a streak of lightning." The "streak" was eventual Triple-Crown winner Secretariat. Blum, who rode from 1953 to 1975, piloted the top sprinter Mr. Pro- spector, the great Kelso and also rode Gun Bow in some memorable duels against Kelso. Surprisingly, the person most responsible for the Brooklyn-born Blum's career was his high school principal. "I'd ridden horses at riding stables and I enjoyed that. I was small and everyone was always telling me, `You should be a jockey! "A fellow student, Anthony Falco, was exercising horses 4 the old Jamaica track and took me with him. I walked horses and groomed them for three months before I was allowed up on one — a race horse isn't like a rented riding horse. "I guess I had some natural abili- ty because I took to it quickly. Then I wanted to leave school at 16 to go to the track full-time. "I wasn't a very good student by then because I wasn't interested in school. My parents thought the race track was a strange place populated by gangsters. My principal said, `Look, he won't be a doctor or lawyer. If he's successful as a jockey he could make a lot of money." Reluctantly, Blum's parents agreed. Blum began working for a leading trainer, Hirsch Jacobs, who was also Jewish, "but truthfully, neither of us was very religious — although never ride on Yom Kippur. I think Hirsch gave me a break because I worked hard and was dedicated. He'd do the same for anyone, no matter what their religion or color or na- tionality." Blum says there are two kinds of jockeys. 'There are those with a natural rapport with the' horse because of their touch on the reins that makes the horse realize what the jockey wants it to do. Horses run for riders like Willie Shoemaker and myself. "Then there are jockeys like Ed- die Arcaro and Lafitt Pincay, who make horses run for them." With weight a constant concern, Blum admits to not eating "too many bagels with cream cheese" or "Mom's cooking" during his riding career. "I weighed 105 to 106 pounds with riding equipment when I started;' he says. "Gradually I went up to 110, then 112 and finally 114 when I retired. Now I weigh 128 but my eating habits haven't changed: very little breakfast, maybe a sand- wich or cup of soup for lunch, and a good dinner. I've never had much of a sweet tooth." In addition to his many racing wins, Blum was highly regarded by his fellow jockeys, being elected presi- dent of the Jockeys Guild in 1969 and holding that post for several years. He also received the George Woolf Memorial Award by California racing journalists in 1965 for bringing uni- que distinction to his profession. At the time he retired, only Shoemaker, Continued on Page 50