Shvitz game improved, as did his fan support. A Gilbert rooting section — all female, apparently — began yelling "Go, Brad!" before he served. Gilbert would hear them, look in their direction and, hand cup- ped around his ear, would mo- tion them to pump up the volume. His new-found fans didn't spur him to victory, but his good-natured kidding and play no doubt earned fans' respect. Next is Gilbert's return to the Davis Cup, where he holds a career singles mark of 4-2. His singles teammate will be Aaron Krickstein of Grosse Point Woods, giving the U.S. an all-Jewish front line. The pair will play two matches apiece against Mex- ico's best, with a doubles match rounding out the best- of-five event. Giblert has known Krick- stein since the latter was 14 years old. "I think Aaron's enjoying himself a little more now," Gilbert says. "I think he's grown up a little bit. "I think when he was 16, he was put right in the spotlight and I don't think that, emo- tionally, he was ready for that. And as he started to grow up a little bit, he had a few injuries. "Part of the reason why he's playing a lot better is, he's en- joying himself. I think that when he was 16 or 17, he was trying to fulfill a lot of peo- ple's expectations. You kind of lose sight of what's really at hand." Gilbert, a native of Oakland, Calif., did not have high expectations as a teenaged player. Unlike most of today's phenoms, such as Agassi, Chang and Kricks- tein, Gilbert was not even close to professional-caliber tennis until he was an "old man" of 20. "I didn't get really serious about tennis until I was 18," he explains, "because my junior career wasn't that good. My game just didn't develop from the time I was 15 to 18. "I was real good when I was 12, and then by the time I was 14, I was a has-been. By the time I was 16, I was a never- was-been. But I kind of turn- ed it around a little bit when I was 18." Gilbert said his physical growth was stunted. "Then, all of a sudden, my freshman year of college I grew from 5-foot-6 to 6-foot-1. And then, all of a sudden, I grew into my game a little." Gilbert stuck with tennis, but only because he felt he could earn a college athletic scholarship with it. "I wasn't really that en- thusiastic when I was 17," he recalls. "I was just going through the motions, I was just kind of trying to get a scholarship." He got a scholarship to Arizona State, but his attitude did not im- prove and he left Arizona State after one year. The move became a turning point in his life. He enrolled at a junior col- lege, "and that turned out to be the best move of my career; I met my present coach, Tom Chivington, and I've been with him for 10 years. "He saw some potential in me and said, 'Listen, it's either now or never. That was the first time that I'd ever worked hard and it paid off." Gilbert transferred to Pep- perdine College, achieving a ranking of 282 at the end of 1981. The next year, he finished second to the Univer- sity of Michigan's Mike Leach in • the NCAA singles championships. JCC Men's Health Club Membership $150 off in January! (Now that's something to Shvitz about!) • must not have been a health club member in past year. • 1/2 down, balance in 90 days. • good January 1990 only. For more information contact the Membership Office 661-1000 ext. 265, 266 Then Gilbert turned pro and scored a victory in the Tapiei International tourna- ment. His world rating zoom- ed to 54. His ranking fell to 62nd in 1983 but improved to 23rd in 1984 on the strength of two tourney victories. Gilbert made his mark in Israel in 1985, when he won both the Maccabiah and the Israeli Tennis Center professional tournament. He's since won the ITC in 1986 and 1988. He won the ITC doubles with Ilie Nastase in '85. Entering 1990, Gilbert had 16 pro tourney victories. He also has a bronze medal from the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul — earned despite his playing on an injured ankle. Off the court, among his fellow pros, Gilbert is con- sidered one of the prime wits of the tour. On the court, however, he lacks notoriety. "Maybe I don't have the personality on the court, like Agassi or Chang or McEnroe," he says, adding the facts he's a little older and didn't have a meteoric rise also may have kept him from the limelight. "I've kind of been steady my whole career and I've been getting better with age." Gilbert owns four victories over Boris Becker in six career meetings, but says, "I haven't had such good luck with (Ivan) Lendl. "I need to play better in a major, but also I need to play a little more agressively and I need to take a few more chances,"he notes. "I have a very relaxed game (verb, noun) . . . Sounds like it's spelled (Sh...viz) . . . The act of sweating during all areas of fitness offered at the JCC Men's Health Club. A place to sit and sweat and shmooze after a game of tennis or racquetball, squash, walleyball, swimming, jogging or just to relax. SAVE FROM 20% TO 50%* MARV SAYS T O GO A DIVISION OF I RADER ELECTRIC CO., INC. FLUORESCENT FLOODS-SPOTS HALOGEN NAME BRANDS SPECIAL ORDERS COMPETITIVE PRICES HOME DELIVERY 661-4400 Mon-Fri 9 am-5 pm, Sat 9-noon Lam 1 grd‘11 z ' CLASSIFIEDS GET RESULTS! Call The Jewish News 354.6060 CUSTOM WALL MIRROR" SPECIALISTS TUB & SHOWER ENCLOSURES MIRRORED BIFOLD OR SLIDING DOORS) INSULATED I GLASS REPLACEDJ MOBIL AUTO GLASS SERVICE TABLE TOPS STORM DOORS & WINDOWS PATIO DOOR WALLS REPLACED • STORMS & SCREENS REPAIRED se VISIT OUR SHOWROOM 'Suggested List Price III p GLASS & AUTO TRIM CUSTOM WALL MIRRORS TIRES ACCESSORIES & SOUTHFIELD: 24777 Telegraph 353-2500 Other locations: Wayne and Lincoln Park YOUR EXERCISE CONNECTION • TREADMILLS-Electric/Manual • STAIR CLIMBERS • HEALTH BIKES Manual/Dual Action/Electric • ROWING MACHINES • MISC. 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