UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA Greater breadth and depth: NCAA tournament play at Georgia's Henry Feild Stadium, coach last December, Eric Hayes installed a demanding workout routine known as "morning madness" at his first practice on New Year's Day. "I hate him at 5:30 in the morning, but it's a great feeling to win and to have a good attitude," says senior Tracy Treps. Nor are most players rewarded with fame, even on campus. The SMU men's team, for one, has finished in the top 20 for the past 18 years, but at a recent match it drew a crowd in the single digits. Kansas, which has skyrocketed from no- where to Division I contender since 1982, is an example of those universities that are quickly building powerhouse programs. "To establish a national-level tennis pro- gram, you have got to recruit at least one great player a year, says Scott Perelman, director of men's and women's tennis at s Kansas. Freshman John Falbo, for example, was a three-time junior national champion and 's it played for the U.S. Junior Da- sor? vis Cup team last summer. "If a derin player is serious about turning Boar pro, this is one of the best places ed he in the country to come because athle of coach Perelman and his pro- rill " gram," says Falbo. "I was with physically ready to play pro, actio but I wasn't mentally mature set of enough. The mental toughness minis separates the great pros from the B the average ones." Pre More established programs, ver, such as Stanford's, continue to point attract good recruits because symb former players like Fendick butio and Kathy Jordan are success- Unde ful. "When girls see [Fendick group and Jordan] on television, word gets out that this is the place to be," says coach Brennan. Stanford players pride themselves on being able to handle academic as well as athletic pressure. Sophomore Jeff Tarango is a double major in philosophy and creative writing. "I didn't want to be labeled as [just] an athlete all my life," says Tarango. "When you get to Stanford you're looked on as an intellec- tual as much as anyone else." Not every college tennis program is fiercely competitive, of course. At Tufts near Boston, for instance, team members insist they play to win their Division III title-but most can't help calling tennis an "outlet." Tufts plays only 12 matches per year, compared to the two dozen or more SOUTHERN METHODIST UNIVERSITY SMU's Richey Renenberg that larger schools schedule. "They play a very good brand of tennis, but their priori- ties are different," says Tufts coach Jim Watson. Watson has no problems with that philosophy. An All-American tennis play- er at San Jose State, he earned a Ph.D. in Spanish literature from the University of Missouri. At Tufts, he teaches Spanish and Latin American literature in the mornings and relegates tennis-practice sessions to a couple of hours in the afternoon. Call his players a bunch of amateurs, and he'd no doubt take it as a forehanded compliment. CONNIE LESLIE with TOM STINSON in Lawrence, EDWARD DEM A RCO Jr. in Athens, MARCUS MABRYinPloAlto and SUSAN EVANS in Dallas the Football Coach Really a Professor? coach or is it profes- Aggies have been won- g since the Texas A&M I of Regents appoint- ad football coach and tic director Jackie Sher- professor of athletics"- "tenure." The board's n-and the debate it has f among faculty and ad- trators-is as clear as razos. sident Frank Vandi- who instigated the ap- ment, insists the title olized Sherrill's contri- ns to A&M academics. r Sherrill, athletes as a are nowgraduatingata rate comparable to the rate of the entire student body. Still, angry members of the facul- ty senate passed resolutions which, after praising Sherrill personally, declared his new title to be strictly honorary. It "carries with it no real or pre- tended entry into the Texas A&M faculty of scholars, nor any supposed establishment of any academic entity called Athletics," the faculty group said. By giving Sherrill the highest academic rank with tenure, says faculty senator David Anderson, the Board of Regents has reduced it to "something that you can find in the bottom of a box of Cracker Jacks." Tenure, of course, protects the teaching position when granted by an academic de- partment. Since the coach's special "Department of Ath- letics" is a creative fiction, however, it carries no add- ed job security, according to faculty and administrators. That won't lessen the real val- ue of Sherrill's job: he has a five-year contract that pays $110,865 ayear in salary, plus an additional $130,000 in tal- ent fees for the "Jackie Sher- rill Show" on local television. TRICIA MORGANinCollegeStation MAY 1988 NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS 35