SPORTS Playing On Yom Kippur: An Athlete's Dilemma HARLAN C. ABBEY Special to The Jewish News May The Coming Year Be Filled With' Health And Happiness For All Our Clients, Friends & Family PROTECTED ACCESS SECURITY SYSTEMS, lila Happy New Year! from the Sales Staff of VOGUE FINE MEN'S EUROPEAN FASHION 18 29475 Northwestern Hwy. Southfield, MI 48034 (313) 352-7660 S hould a Jewish pro- fessional athlete com- pete on Yom Kippur? Ideally, no. But this isn't an ideal world. Although there probably are more Jewish athletes at the professional level now than ever before and more Jewish coaches at the profes- sional and major college level, the probability is that most of them will be on the field or the court rather than in the synagogue on their religion's holiest day. Much depends on their sport and their rank among their peers. As Steve Richmond, a journeyman hockey defenseman told me, "If you're a 'Sandy Koufax' you don't have to pitch on Yom Kippur." Which means that if you're a star player, you get treated one way. But if you're a fringe player on the roster, one who can easily be replaced, you'd better not ask for any special favors. Most of today's Jewish team sport professionals, un- fortunately, are fringe players. It also depends on the sport the Jewish athlete/coach engages in. Football, with its shorter season magnifying the impor- tance of every game, is the sport which probably has the hardest games for the Jewish coach or player to miss. The most visible Jewish sports figure today is Mary Levy, coach of the Buffalo Bills, who have advanced (and lost) to the past two Super Bowls. Because of the pressure-packed routine of practices, strategy sessions, and analyzing game films and all the rest, Levy cannot take Yom Kippur off. Of the four Jewish NFL players, only offensive lineman Harris Barton of the San Francisco 49ers is close to being a "star" — if any offen- sive lineman can be called a star — and getting special treatment. An All-America at North Carolina, Barton has been a starter since he was a rookie and already has two Super Bowl winners' rings. Barton led a B'nai B'rith tour to Israel this past summer; his housemate, 49ers quarter- back Steve Young, also made the trip (Young is not Jewish). The other NFL players are offensive linemen Ariel Solomon of Pittsburgh, Alan '- Veingrad of Dallas and tight end Brent Novoselsky of Min- nesota. None is a consistent starter. Novoselsky said he'd prefer to be in temple on Yom Kip- pur — given the choice — but c probably would play if the 1' Vikings had a game. "Sad to say, the game must take precedence," he admitted. "If you're not a star, the coach won't say, 'Don't play.' " Solomon, who battled his way onto the regular roster and then started two games in his rookie season with the Steelers last year, reasoned if—, this way: "I don't feel I do everything else that religious- ly, so I would play on Yom Kippur. Our coach at the University of Colorado was very religious, and we practic- ed on Christmas Day. "You don't want to jeopar- dize your spot on the team. In football you don't play that many times; every game is important. In some of the other team sports, one game Much depends on their sport and their rank among their peers may not be that important." Importance may also change as the athlete moves ahead in his sport. Stan Noskin didn't play on Yom Kippur when he was a high school star in suburban Chicago in the mid-1950s. When he was the University `:--) of Michigan's starting quarterback, he did. In addition to the "impor- tant game" pressure, the Jewish athlete also is con- fronted with the lessons he has been taught by every coach starting with the little league level: The team ethic, all for one and one for all; sacrifice individual glory for the team's benefit; don't let the team down, and so on. Bruce Mesner, a reserve defensive lineman for the Buffalo Bills in 1987-88, recalls the peer pressure put on him by his University of Maryland teammates, which was greater than that of his coaches. He and his room- mate and back-up missed Maryland's 1984 game against arch rival Penn State, and Maryland lost by 2 points. "The year before (1983), we also played Penn State on