The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, September 13, 1993 - 3 P .+ a1 1 1.1,1 1 IZ I 3 Winfield As he approaches the 3,000-hit mark, the future Hall-of-Famer discusses his career Before it was fashionable to be a Yankee anda well-respected one ... but We fed them, entertained them an( . multi-sport athlete, Dave Winfield was as ablackman, you're never going to be then we convinced the ballclub to oper truly a man for all seasons. A native of a true Yankee." Did you agree with him, the park for practice the day before the St. Paul, Minn., Winfield'sathleticprow- and if so, how prevalent do you think game. They opened up the doors to th ess was so great while at the University racism is in baseball today? stadium and made it a free practice ofMinnesota, where he lettered in both W: One of the players told me that Never before hadit been available to th baseball and basketball, that he was and I understood it. I understood it public. drafted by teams in professional base- growing upin anything that you do as an I see the evolution of it now; the: ball, basketball and football. African-American, as we now call it. charge admission and then the mone But Winfeld's first love was base- You have to be atleastas good-really goes to charity in thatparticular area. S( ball. Having no minor league experi- better - than anybody competing for I think that's one of the more memo ence, Winfield made his professional the same position to really get noticed rableevents, and I've seen itevolveint *debut with the San Diego Padres in and to get the opportunity. what it is today: a big part of baseball 1973. Since then, his 19-year career Is it prevalent in baseball? It's prob- D: After playing with Cito Gaston i has taken him to four other big league ably about the same as the wider soci- San Diego, what was it like playing fo cities, including his current team, the ety. On the field, opportunities are bet- him when he managed the 1992 worl Minnesota Twins. ter. It deals with talent, not as much champion Toronto Blue Jays? While having already collectedover color. The opportunities around base- W: It was as close to an ideal situa 450 home runs, Winfield nears onefinal ball are probably the same as the rest of tion as I would get in baseball. He wa milestone that will seal his election to society. It's probably not as good as it there already, he was a veteran, but w Cooperstown-3,000hits. DailySports should be. roomed together at one time during th Writer Rachel Bachman spoke to WinfieldthissummerabouthisHall-of- Fame career. R 4 s Daily: While you were drafted out of the University of Minnesota in three Y professional sports, you said you never regretted choosing baseball. Had you not chosen to be a professional athlete, what would you have done? "." Winfield: Ireally thoughtaboutpoli- ticsaftercollege, trying to affectchange * inthecommunity.Butthen, at time, there were assassinations: Kennedy, Martin Luther King. (Politics) lost its appealtome. That'swhatI wanted todo s at the time. It's changed since then. = D: I think you can affect almost as many people doing what you're doing.. W: Yeah, and I like doing it from the ....v economic standpoint: business, creation of jobs, things like that. Helping people j ; that way appeals to me more. I try to g E influence people like that also. D: It's no secret that you and owner George Steinbrenner had a very rocky relationship when you played for the New York Yankees. How do you feel \ k =K: abouthimbeing activeinbaseballagain? "u' ° v ' W: Well, I haven't said a lot about >a x3' £s ,NMI,& ME I didn't start my career thinking about milestones and I don't play on a daily basis looking for the x milestones. I come out here each day to win and . to play up to the best of my ability, and I enjoy D: What's your most memorable year. He was a guy who knows m What I d . experience with your charitable organi- knows how Iplay. I could talk to him. zation, the David M. Winfield Founda- it wasjust the best situation I've had - that situation. It wasn't a good time in tion? manager-playersituation-in the gam my career. It wasn't warranted; I didn't W: Well ... wow. There are two or It's unfortunate I only had it one yea bring ituponmyself. That was his style. three things that really stand out. When But I'm okay here, and all the oth' There are some indications that he is the All-Star Game was in San Diego in places I've been. changing and ... it's not in my best 1978, my second All-Star Game, we D: You're currently 19 hits awa interests to use all my time and energy had a party for all of the kids of San (Editor's Note: Winfield is now 4 hit thinking about what's behind us. Diego and invited all the players and from becoming the 19th man in histo D: Inyourbook, Wnfield APlayer's some of the key people of baseball, like to have 3,000 career hits. Are mil Life, you recount a New York player the commissioner, to sign autographs stones like this important to you? telling you that, "You can be a good and meet the kids. W: They are for me and for t *Sampras smashes way to Open title id m i e e ie y y o to 1. in w Id a- as e e game, just to highlight and promote the game of baseball. I didn't start my ca- reer thinking about milestones and I don't play on a daily basis looking for the milestones. I come out here each day to win and to play up to the best of my ability, and I enjoy what I do. But, to be recognized like this with less than a score of people who have ever accomplished this feat in the his- toryofthe game? Therehavebeen some mighty fine players. It's a real honor, and I'll be really excited about it be- cause I never imagined it would happen to me. D: After receiving a standing ova- tion at Toronto during your first at bat as a Twin, you went 0-for-7 in the series.. Do fans' expectations or reactions af- fect your performance? W: They do, but I've played so long that you have to have thick skin in this game, and you have to be consistent. If you don't get it one time, you get it the next. This is one game where you learn to be positive and you still fail most of thetime. Even if you hit.300, you fail70 percent of the time. That's a bad per- centage. D: There'sbeen a lot of talk of salary caps and profit-sharing lately. Do you think the business of baseball is ruining the game? W: It'snot ruining the game, no. It's not good for it, but the game is success- ful, very successful. It makes a lot of money, brings new fans every year, attendance records are broken. Side money, merchandising ... all that's go- ing well. It's just that there's never been a relationship between owners and play- ers. It used to be very one-sided up until the 1970s. The owners had everything. Players have gained a lot, so you're close to a pretty good balance now, as you develop a better relationship. That could only help to promote the game to new heights. D: Last year you said you'd prob- ably play four more seasons. Has win- ning the World Series changed your plans? W: No. It's made baseball a very happy place for me, and I'm proud to have played in it. Whenever I quit, it's been very satisfying, gratifying to me because that's what I worked hard for. Took a long time, but I got that. But while you still have the God-given abil- ity, keep going, keep enjoying it. Every- body around me, my family, enjoys what I do, too. It kind of brings them together, and we have a lot of fun with it. KEN SUGIURA R Close -But No Sugiura What losing did for me - and can do for you, too I hope you found the game enjoyable. Yes, Michigan lost. Yes, the team could have played better - probably should have won. And yes, there most likely will not be a national title for the Wolverines. Big, fat, hairy deal. People - myself included, sometimes - are probably a little too wrapped up with the football team and fly a wee bit too much off of the o1' handle on the rare instance it loses. I guess I have this opinion because I attended numerous Northwestern games with my dad, which probably goes a long way toward explaining why losing isn't the biggest deal in the world to me. And the fact I love the Cubs. I don't think I remember ever seeing the Wildcats win. Moral victories were the only kind there were. When Northwestern did manage to find an opponent with an ineptitude equal to its own, and then found a way to not lose, the fans went beserk. Just about each win was commemorated by the student body flooding the field, tearing down a goalpost and depositing it into nearby Lake Michigan. Sure, winning was great. But losing, well, you had to live with it. What else were you going to do? Hearing the boos yesterday as the Michigan offense sputtered and seeing people truly angry and upset with the loss made me think back to those games at Dyche Stadium. But it wasn't because the fans there flipped out with each interception or called for the coach's head after questionable playcalling or became angry beyond words following another heartbreaking loss. It was because they didn't Yes, losing was disappointing, but nothing that broke that evening's plans. A trip to watch the Wildcats promised an enjoyable afternoon. If Northwestern fans became as upset with a loss as fans here do, Evanston would be little more than a pile of rubble by midseason. Perhaps we all ought to take the same tack here. So the Wolverines lost. They were going to lose eventually, weren't they? They are not perfect, or at least not Florida State. Is a national championship or a victory over Notre Dame that desparately important? Should it be? We all ought to take a step back and think about it. I know I can get very hyper over sporting events, and personally, it's pretty stupid. While admittedly, the game is the reason why we all come to the game, why should we let a score interfere with the pleasure of an autumn Saturday? During my days watching the Wildcats, part of being able to enjoy a losing day at the stadium was being able to enjoy everything that went on besides the football. This is so easy to do here. For all that is wrong with college sports, there is something special about a football game - particu- larly against Notre Dame - at Michigan Stadium. Football Saturday is a feast for the senses. Walking around the perimeter of the stadium, I saw a bagpipe band. A bagpipe band! At how many football games are you going to see guys with kilts and the whole bit playing bagpipes? And even though I'm not quite the bagpipe afficionado that everyone else seems to be, I still was able to appreciate it. And the walk down Hoover Street. This is one of the best parts of the day. Thousands of students and alumni, proudly donning maize and blue and heading toward the stadium, is always an incredible sight. Or joining 105,000 others in the Wave, or engaging in a marshmallow fight or flinging pizza box tops. And we have the marching band. Okay, so Phil Collins isn't for you, either. But you've got to admit being led in "The Victors" by a 225-piece band is spine-tingling. We shouldn't let a bonehead call by a referee prevent us from enjoying what is one of the best bands in the country. As long as we're talking about the best in the country, just try appreciat- ing the talents of this team. Tyrone Wheatley may be the best college football player in the country. He can do some things that few people can. Appreciate him. He might not be here much longer. So should Todd Collins throw an interception at a crucial point of some game, think of this and toss a marshmallow for me. ie, e. ar. er 'ay s) ry le- the s ,a r I 0 p4 1I Up to 50/ OFF on bikes, clothing, helmets, computers, shoes, and lights NEW YORK (AP) -Pete Sampras faced only two dangers in theU.S. Open final: popping the strings on all his rackets and getting whacked in the head by a wild shot from Cedric Pioline. Other than that, Sampras had little trouble beating Pioline, 6-4,6-4,6-3, to follow up his Wimbledon champion- ship with a second U.S. Open title and punctuate his ascendancy to No. 1. From the moment of Sampras' first serve, a 127 mph screamer that landed abit long but evoked knowing laughter from the crowd, there never was a doubt that Sampras would take home the $535,000 winner's check. If anything would derail him it would have to be something strange, like run- ning out of rackets. One after another, Sampras' taut racket strings snapped from his booming serves and his top- spin shots, sending him to the sideline in the second set with a couple of rackets to be restrung quickly. Pioline, meanwhile, scattered balls all over the stadium. He knocked one return in the first set 25 rows into the stands, where aman in a blue suit made a nice catch. Then in the first game of the second set, Pioline smacked a sec- ond serve to the left temple of a fan in the second row. Pioline' snext hardest shot was aball he slapped into the crowd after he double-faulted to fall behind 4-3 in the same set. When Pioline wasn't abusing the balls and spectators, he played well enough not to embarrass himself butnot enough to threaten Sampras. Pioline played almost flawlessly in beating Jim Courier in the fourth round, but Courier hit many more errors than Sampras. The speed of Sampras' serves on 12 aces and many more service winners, the power of his deep forehands and backhands, the quicknessness of his net game was all too much for Pioline. v r 4 ate" l"JC "K"t 9iY,'CS. i. "i. S' ALL '93 Final Days BIKES MUST GO! ~ Specialized Gary Fisher S Works *1 Lnivega t Trek ____________________________________ I .w.: ' :: :;.ai:{.":":{c r: iS:":aMi!ilh:::::: r. , y:;:: :;:}; "::: . 1. ..... ....1"! } tt3 ?:±52>:;: ;":">:";: <::: "::.::..:. ::::..:..:....:..:. .::.:*.*.*. ...:. ..: :. ..:..... Smto2:Oxpt S E AS.. . .T . .S : $ 7 13 f I h mn. c H Fl Id4 ..tm ) ~p y b ~ ~ M ~ i~ ~ T~ k i1po t me fixT C (IT V flA ~ J .a . vv f, : J ,, ,,.. 1 11 e: P 'AWN =