The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - April 13, 1992 - Page 3 Q& f4' 8La#c~itry MacKay Former Michigan tennis champion talks about his current broadcasting career Jeff Sheran Barry MacKay was a member of the Michigan men's NCAA cham- pionship tennis team of 1957. Since then, he has played on the Davis Cup team, on the professional tour, and is currently a tennis announcer for several major television networks. MacKay also started his own sports company which now runs the annual Volvo tennis tournament in San Francisco. Daily Sports Writer Sharon Lundy got a chance to speak with MacKay recently about tennis and his career in broadcasting. Daily: What was the most mem- orable moment of your Michigan tennis career? MacKay: I would have to say it was when I won the singles NCAA Championship in Salt Lake City in June of '57. I think for sure that was the highlight. Even though it wasn't in Ann Arbor, it was a big moment for me. D: Why did you decide to come to Michigan? Was it because of the tennis program? M: Not really. I had an uncle who had gone to Michigan and lived in Chicago, and he brought me up to Ann Arbor in my junior year in high school, and it was a great fun week- end. I met a lot of pebple up there and went to a couple of fraternities, and met all the guys at the frater- nity where I ended up living. But it was just the general atmosphere, I think, and he was a big influence on my going there. D: Were you involved in any- thing else at Michigan or did tennis demand most of your time? M: No, I did a lot of stuff. I played a lot of intramural sports, '(Tennis is) much more of a business, or a "career", than it was when I was playing.' played intramural football, intra- mural basketball for the fraternity - I was a Phi Gam (FIJI). I did other activities and played all kinds of other sports. I had aspirations to be in the Glee Club, but I never quite had enough time to do that. D: What was your major? M: Economics. D: After Michigan, where did your tennis career head? M: Well, the very first year of tennis after I got out of Ann Arbor, that fall, I was chosen to be on the United States Davis Cup team. My first trip was to Australia and I ended up playing in the final round which then was called the challenge round. I beat a fellow by the name of Ashley Cooper, who was a Wimbledon champion, so that was really a big thrill for me, and that was my first year out of school. D: Are amateurs still allowed to play on the Davis Cup team? M: Davis Cup competition is now totally open, so it could in- volve amateurs as well as profes- sionals. When I was playing, it was strictly an amateur competition, but today its totally open, so you could h have an amateur play on the Davis Cup team but it's highly unlikely because most of the best players are professional. D: When did you start to play on the professional circuit? M: Well, I played amateur ten- nis from when I graduated Mich- igan, in 1957, through 1960. Three years. I turned pro in January of 1961 and I played on what was then the Kramer tour from '61 through about '66. D: Was that like what the ATP tour is now? M: I wish it had been. But unfor- tunately in those days professional tennis was strictly a barnstorming tour. And about 4-5 years into run- ning that tournament, I had my own event, and started doing courtside interviews, broadcasting, and that's how all that got started. D: From a broadcasting stand- point, what are some of the memo- rable matches you covered? M: Well, certainly the Borg- McEnroe final at Wimbledon which I ended up doing for an American radio network - that was a big thrill, a big match in 1980. I've cov- ered Wimbledon since '83, so I'd have to say the Becker win in 1985 was one of the biggest matches I've covered, because he was so voung and I still think he should have stayed in school. D: What do you think about the new ATP circuit? How do you think it is working out? M: Well, I think it is a big im- provement over the days of what was called the Grand Prix circuit. The ATP tour is run much more like a business than it was before 1990. 'When I played my first tournament it was just six of us, so it was a totally different atmosphere than the days of the tour today.' There is excellent support from the ATP organization down in Florida for all the tournaments. When I say support, I mean there is a lot of pub- lic relations support. When we have our event, they always send people to help with the pressroom and gen- eral player liaisons, and I think it is a big improvement. D: Compared to the days when you were on the professional tour, do you think tennis has changed for the better? M: I have mixed emotions about that. Obviously from an economic, dollars and cents standpoint, it's vastly improved. There are over 300 players making more than a good living playing professional tennis today, where then there were 14 or 15 guys who were barely making a living, and those 14 or 15 guys were certainly at the talent level of the 15 top players of the world today. But that's just a sign of history and the sports world. In terms of camaraderie, enjoying life and having a good time out on the professional circuit, I think in many respects we had a lot more fun. But on the other hand we weren't playing for the kind of dol- lars that the players are today. So its much more of a business, or a "career", than it was when I was playing. D: What was your reaction when you found out that Arthur Ashe has AIDS? M: I was obviously very disap- pointed and disturbed. I was proba- bly more disturbed about the pri- vacy situation. I know Arthur aw- fully well, and though he had never said anything to me directly I had heard from some other people that he wasn't well and there were some rumors circling around, but to actu- ally see him up there in front of the world explaining everything was very touching. I felt for him. I felt bad for him. D: What was the reaction among the tennis community in general? M: I think most of the people I've talked to are very upset with the whole issue of invasion of pri- vacy. That's the issue that has been jumping out in front. It's terrible that he's contracted this thing through the transfusion. In fact, I ended up going to Wimbledon in 1983 when Arthur had his first heart bypass done. I think there is a general disappointment in the press and in the media. Smith was rightto prit Ashe's AIDS condition Ethical debates about the printing of Arthur Ashe's AIDS condition have raged on since Ashe announced he has the disease Wednesday. Some claim USA Today tennis writer Doug Smith violated Ashe's right to privacy; others find no fault with Smith's decision to expose the story. I subscribe to the latter. Smith's decision was a no-brainer - once he knew it, he had to print it. My heart goes out to Ashe and his family, whose suffering will un- doubtedly increase since the announcement. Because I had spoken with Ashe just last September, during an interview about Black collegiate athletes, the news of his illness struck me more immediately than if he had been just a distant celebrity. But if there is a villain in this case, besides AIDS itself, it is not Smith, who confronted Ashe with the question after learning of his condition from a source close to Ashe. Rather, it's the source who "ratted" Ashe out. Ashe trusted this undisclosed person with information of the most sensitive nature. Going public with it was irresponsible and cruel. However, printing it was right. Cynics claim that Smith reported the news for self-advancement. That USA Today printed the story to sell newspapers. That the public's right to know is simply a principle guaranteeing that its appetite for in- formation will be satisfied. Smith didn't think about whom he'd be tour in which people would play one night stands on a roll-out court in high school gymnasiums, in small towns all over the country. When I played my first tournament it was just six of us, so it was a totally different atmosphere than the days of the tour today. D: Did the tour have the same type of rankings as it does today? M: Not really, because there were no computer systems, and in the early '60s we weren't even play- ing tournaments. It was more just challenge matches and one-night stands. So until the actual open ten- nis came about in 1968, and until '68 there were no virtual rankings at all in professional tennis. D: What did you do after playing with the Kramer tour? M: Then I came back to Northern California and settled down in 1967 and went into the investment busi- ness. I was a stockbroker for about three and a half years. D: How did you get involved with sports broadcasting? M: That all began after starting my own company in 1970. I formed my own little sports company called BMK Sports, Inc., and started running the major tournament out here in San Francisco which is now called Volvo Tennis San Francisco, the kickoff for the worldwide ATP rsn to5,- - - ~ Itutu surprised everybody. I'd have to say some of the McEnroe events at the US Open were very exciting. I cov- ered those for USA and for CBS. McEnroe's first US Open victory back in, I think it was 1979, was pretty exciting to cover. D: Have you been following MaliVai Washington's career? M: I have - he was obviously a University of Michigan student for a while. MaliVai and his dad were at a big conference for young players in New York about four or five years ago and they asked me to just come and chat with him since we had both gone to Michigan. The only difference was that I graduated from Michigan, and my whole goal was to try to get him to stay in school. So I was telling him how great it was, and how if he stayed he could play big league tennis while he was at Michigan, and then turn pro after he graduated. Well about 12 hours later, the New York Times had a big article in sports that MaliVai Washington turned pro. I was telling everybody - I was a big influence, wasn't I? He's a real nice kid, I like him. He's got a lot of talent, and he should have a big year this year. He won the tournament in Memphis against Wayne Ferreira, who got to the semifinals of the Australian, so MaliVai is really coming on strong. hurting, they say. , But he couldn't have thought about whom he'd be hurting. I don't know why Smith wrote the story, but I do know that once he learned of Ashe's condition, he had no choice. As a journalist, Smith had to print what he knew. Journalists can't speculate; they must simply abide by the rule of reporting the facts. Good, as well as bad, will come from Ashe's announcement. Just as there are reasons for not printing, there are reasons for printing. For instance, attitudes about AIDS will change. Empathy for its vic- tims will increase. The stigma that burdens them will fade. It's unfair that this must come at Ashe's expense, but then it's unfair that he con- tracted the disease. And let's be pragmatic - it would have come out. At some point, a reporter would have learned about Ashe's illness. The sooner the story broke, the more helpful the message could be. I don't know if these thoughts entered Smith's mind. Maybe none of them did. Maybe they all did. But there was simply too much to con- sider. Journalists mustn't abandon all compassion for their subjects, However, they mustn't let compassion backfire. To avoid complicating this dilemma, they must stick to their jobs - reporting the news fairly and accurately. As for readers, many of whom disapprove of Smith's action, they must understand that Ashe didn't want to keep his secret from the press - he wanted to keep it from everyone. The press is but a small minor- ity of the public. It's therefore up to everyone to try and compensate for the "rat." If people treat Ashe with the dignity and respect he deserves, as I feel Smith did in treating AIDS just like any other illness, the detriment of this incident will be limited. If people think Ashe deserved more compassion, then they should give it to him. I wish Ashe didn't have AIDS. And I wish him the least suffering possible both from his disease and the publicizing of his disease. And I wish his trust hadn't been betrayed. But it wasn't betrayed by Smith. 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