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Regarding the NFL Detroit Lions, Balzer sees improve- ment but notes most of the other teams in the National Football Conference Central Division with the Lions also are better. "The toughest thing with the NFL is, you can be an im- proved team and sometimes it doesn't show up in the stan- dings." But, he says, "The Lions are on the right track; they've got a lot of good, young people. They're an exciting team to watch with running back Barry Sanders:' In addition to his Sporting News and Arena football duties, the St. Louis-based Balzer, a Long Island, N.Y., native, writes freelance col- umns, does a daily radio sports call-in show and has been a regular commentator on ESPN's coverage of the NFL college draft. But getting to this level of his career was not a straight line. After graduating from Hofstra University in New York in 1974, Balzer bounced around in sports public rela- tions jobs before becoming an editor at College and Pro Foot- ball Newsweekly in 1976. He was married and had two children, sons Keith and Jared, by the time he joined the Sporting News as book editor in 1977, working on its Baseball and Football Register books. Noticing a dearth of in- formation at the paper about pro-football, he drew on newspapers from around the country to supplement the statistics. From these gleanings, Balzer added notes and tid- bits to the football columns which the Sporting News ran for each NFL division. When the Times Mirror Co. of Los Angeles bought the Sporting News in 1979, changing it to an all-sports paper, Balzer was named its first football editor. "I always volunteered to do different things," Balzer says of his rise at the Sporting News. "I once was the main proofreader. And even while I was doing the football stuff, I kept doing the Baseball Register. There was a period there when I was doing so many different things, I couldn't even see straight. Balzer is active in St. Louis' Jewish community. The fami- ly belongs to a Reform temple, at which Balzer served as brotherhood president. Astrid, his wife, is assistant director of services for the disabled at the St. Louis Jewish Community Center and has been a B'nai B'rith Women officer. Their oldest son, Keith, will be bar mitz- vah this year. Balzer's job gives him a built-in excuse to watch as much football on TV as he wants. But, he notes, he does get burned out a bit. "I watch a lot less than the 'sports fanatics.' " ❑ Windsor Sending 20 To Detroit Maccabi RICHARD PEARL Staff Writer W indsor will be seek- ing its first-ever Maccabi basketball victory in the Aug. 19-26 Jewish Community Centers — North American Maccabi Youth Games. The nine-man cage crew will be part of the 20- member Windsor delegation to the Games, which will be based at the Maple-Drake Jewish Community Center campus. "We're small and not very deep," said Windsor Maccabi delegation co-leader Ron Polsky in speaking about the basketball team. The tallest player is 6-foot-2 Theo Schen. The team also is young, with only four players, in- cluding Schen, in the 15-16 age-range. But the four — the others are Mike Rosenbloom, Micha Wagenberg and Mark Lieber-man — do have some experience with winning. All are members of the Herzl AZA team which won its first-ever Great Lakes AZA Council cage title last sea- son. However, cautioned Polsky, "We're sure not like Los Angeles, which has about 300 kids try out for 12 positions. Our goal is to win a game. It'll all depend on the luck of the draw." Windsor has had its share of near-misses, Polsky said. "We lost to Memphis by two