SPORTS Pigskin In The Promised Land? It is difficult to imagine NFL football in Tel Aviv, but promoters are trying to put together a deal for an event they're calling the Holy Land Bowl ARYEH DEAN COHEN Special to The Jewish News p igskin in the Promised Land? That seemingly blasphemous thought may soon be a reality if the Committee for the Holy Land Bowl gets its way. A coalition of American and Israeli sports agents and figures, the Committee is hard at work to bring the spectacle of NFL football to Israel as early as 1990. Unlike the Middle Eastern football debacle depicted in the 1964 movie John Gold- farb, Please Come Home," which saw the Notre Dame football team (and Shirley MacLaine) visiting a mythi- cal Arab sheikdom, the planned Holy Land Bowl, as it is being called by pro- moters, is very much for real. In fact, it is the seriousness of the endeavor and its possi- ble political implications and use as a public relations ploy for the State of Israel that is making promoters like Natan Amir so nervous about get- ting the Xs and Os of the deal just right. The kickoff for the idea came to Amir in January of 1987 as he watched throngs of American immigrants, con- sular personnel, and native Israelis exposed to football during trips to the States crowd the Tel Aviv Hilton's lobby in the wee hours of the morning to watch the New York Giants devastate the Denver Broncos in the Super Bowl. Amazed by the numbers who descended on the 1 a.m., big-screen telecast, and the even greater number that had to be turned away both in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, Amir de- cided that big-time football was a sports promotion idea he should look into. Little did Amir know that the seeds for his venture had been planted a few years earlier when Avi Pazner, media advisor to Yitzhak Shamir, became what Amir calls a "Redskins fanatic" during his diplomatic service in Washington. So when Amir and Don Smith — former director of public relations for the Giants and the man who coordinated the first 12 Super Bowls — met with Pazner, they had an open ear and im- mediate cooperation. Amir had previously dis- cussed his plan with Sports Group, a promotion team made up of television people and promotions. Headed by Thrry Lazin, who had worked in the office of the governor of Pennsylvania the group formed the Committee for the Holy Land Bowl. They started to run with their idea to bring an NFL pre-season game to Ramat Gan stadium, which is on the outskirts of Th1 Aviv and seats some 47,000 fans. The promoters expect the game to be a sell-out, and Amir hopes it will be picked up live by one of the net- works. The game has been scheduled for 8 p.m. Israel time to meet the 1 p.m. local football broadcast schedule on the East Coast. While the idea looks great on the chalkboard, Amir ad- mits that it will take the equivalent of an administra- tive flea flicker play to pull it Seniors Score In Southfield Olympics MIKE ROSENBAUM Sports Writer hree local competi- tors won gold med- John Marcosky displays his medals. A A rninAv rvYrno_co_7 too° als in the recent Olympics in Southfield. That's right, Southfield. , John Marcosky, 56; Phil Kovsky, 65; and Julius Spielberg, 85, all won golds in the Michigan Senior Olympics in August. Marcosky, of Farmington Hills, swam to first-place finishes in the 100-meter backstroke and 100-meter breaststroke. He took silver medals for second place in the 200 backstroke, 50 backstroke and 50 freestyle. Kovsky won the 65-69-year- old table tennis gold medal, while Spielberg triumphed in the 1500-meter race-walk in the 80-and-over division. All three are eligible to compete in the national Senior Olympics in St. Louis next June. Unlike the younger win- ners, Spielberg, from Southfield, was not active in sports until his retirement. The former pharmacist began working out 10 years ago because he had "more time to devote to it." Now he walks four-to-five miles a day and works out on nau- tilus equipment at the Maple/Drake Jewish Com- munity Center. Despite his gold medal, he does not consider himself a competitor, but rather a sports participant. He parti- cipates because "I assume I'll feel better, I think I'll last longer." He adds, "I feel like 55." Other race-walk medalists included Louis Casden, who won a silver, and bronze-medal winner Max Nasanchuck, both in the over-75 age group. Kovsky won Philadel- phia's recreational table tennis championship, at age "18 or 19." At 20, Kovsky "went out in the world to work, raise a family, all that good stuff." He did not compete in table tennis again until he retired at 65. The former metalurgist says, "After I retired I decided to pick it up again. I joined the Clinton Township Senior Center. They have a club there that plays twice a week. So I was able to get back some of my skills." Kovsky, of Mt. Clemens, won five matches at the Senior Olympics. Marcosky, an engineer with a Southfield firm, was a high school swimming champion in Pittsburgh and a varsity swimmer at the University of Pittsburgh. He continued to swim "off and on" but stopped competing after graduating from college. Recently, he changed his mind. "I thought I'd get in shape and swim again," he explains. Winning a backstroke race was a particular thrill for Marcosky, who was never strong in that event. The Senior Olympics "was a lot of fun. I really enjoyed myself that day." Consequently, he may begin competing regularly with a Farmington Hills master's team, as several other Senior Olympic participants urged him to do. The squad would meet other master's teams on a regular schedule. "I like to compete," says the former Southfield city councilman. "I really missed competing athleti- cally. I think swimming is the best physical fitness program you can enter- tain." ❑