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August 04, 1989 - Image 46

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1989-08-04

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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46 FRIDAY, AUGUST 4, 1989

Detroit's Maccabi team will be searching for gold, silver and bronze
at the Regional Games this month.

MIKE ROSENBAUM

Special to The Jewish News

A

s Detroit continues to

gear up for the 1990
North American Mac-
cabi Youth Games, over 70
area athletes, ages 12-16, are
making final preparations for
the 1989 Regional Maccabi
Games in Pittsburgh, Aug.
20-24.
Detroit will compete in
seven sports: racquetball;
boys and girls track and field;
boys soccer; tennis; boys and
girls swimming; boys basket-
ball and fast-pitch softball.
Five coaches return from
last year's Chicago North
American Games delegation
— Herb Bernstein, swimm-
ing; Tony Spokajny, softball;
Gabriel Attar, soccer; Joel
Kashdan, track; and Burt
Hurshe, basketball.
Two other coaches are new
to Detroit's Maccabi program
— Susan Molino, tennis, and
Stu Gottesman, racquetball.
Alan Horwitz is heading
the delegation, replacing Jay
Robinson, whose hands are
full preparing for the 1990
games.
Karen Sklar, recently
returned from the World
Macabiah in Israel, where
she was the U.S. junior team
chaperone, will work with
Detroit's Maccabi coaches as
delegation coordinators.
Detroit appears to have a
pair of "can't-miss" winners
in swimming. Linda Gold-
stein, 15, an All-State swim-
mer from West Bloomfield
High School, should
dominate the 15-16 year age
group. Jodi Shapiro, 14, may
do the same among the
13-14 s.
Swimming coach Bernstein

loses the services of his All-
State daughter, Dena, a gold-
medalist in Chicago. But the
team remains strong and
could duplicate its 1987 ef-
fort, when it took 57 medals
at the Regional Games in
Ceveland.
However, Bernstein cau-
tions, if cities such as Miami
and Montreal send teams, the
competition could be stiffer
than at Cleveland. Even so,
he sees several Detroiters as
strong contenders.
"Robbie Kamins (15-16)
should win some medals for
us,"he said. "And I think Seth
Hitsky, in the 12-year-olds,
should win medals."
He said Rhondi Keller
should do well in the
15-16-year-old girls, if she
doesn't swim against Golds-
tein, and Lauren Dworkin
also should do pretty well in
that category.
Tennis coach Molino is new
to Detroit's Maccabi family,
but not to the Maccabi pro-
gram. She played tennis in
the 1975 Regional Games in
Miami. "I loved it. It was a
great experience," she said.
Molino, a junior tennis in-
structor at Centaur Racquet
Club, is not holding Maccabi
team practices, choosing in-
stead to let individuals work
with their own coaches.
Although she has not seen
the team work together since
the April tryouts, she has
several top contenders.
"Danny Friedman will
bring home the gold in his
age group (15-16)," she
predicted. She also sees David
Goldfarb and Jared Miller
battling for supremacy in the
13-14 group. "David and
Jared have a good rivalry go-
ing . . . They play neck-and-
neck." The rivals will team up

in the doubles competition.
Sisters Lisa and Danielle
Garber should be a strong
15-16 doubles team, despite
Danielle's moving up one age
group to join her sister.

Molino says Maccabi corn-
peition has special meaning
for tennis players. "They're
doing it to represent
something," she said. "They
have something to play for.
They really like that. They're
playing for their team;
they're playing for the Jewish
Community Center. They
don't get to experience that,
except on a high school or col-
lege team."
Racquetball is Detroit's
smallest team, with two
players, David Gottesman
and Neil Brand. Stu Gottes-
man, David's father, is the
new coach. He assisted last
year's team.
The coach said the players
practice two or three times a
week. "They look pretty good.
They're learning the fun-
damentals; they're learning
court-sense. They're learning
it's a mental game, com-
pounded with the physical
game."
The elder Gottesman, a
spectator at the Chicago
Games, is looking forward to
the 1990 games. "I love it. I
like the camaraderie. I love
the Judaism, the being part of
a group. It's a good feeling
watching the kids mature
athletically and also wat-
ching them become good peo-
ple," Gottesman said.
The softball team, silver
medalists in 1987, should be
solid all around, according to
Coach Tony Spkajny,
although he has not set his
lineup. "I have more in-
fielders than I do outfielders,"

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