The Michigan Daiiv -- Friday. September 8. 1995 -- 23 ' .. -. M.v hi~cn vD~i .. - riday. S .ntem yr. 1a 0 Bolter Mathis dies of heart failure ~tEkAD 'IDS,, ich. (A P) - er Mathi who lost a 1968 heavy- htchamionshipbouttoJoe Frazier 086' I th-roundinockout, has died of Srt failure. -Ie was 511 athis, fatfie'of fighter Buster Mathis Jr. was found unconscious by his wife at t home Wetnesday afternoon..Fam- ii members andemergencyworkerstried evive hinr but he was pronounced at Butterworth Hospital. Ps death cois less than two months b re his soi is to fight forfner heavy- , ht champion Mike Tyson. Mathis I.Sid his fatfi 's death will not affect )As for the N6,v. 4 bout in Las Vegas. 11 take a gouple of days off, do my rn ng and 'everything I have to do, then I'll be batk in the gym,' Mathis Jr. said. "I've had 25 years of teaching roini this mari so I've just got to put everything to work." Mathis' health problems began after he ballooned to as much as 550 pounds after his retirement in 1972. While a national amateur champion and profes- sional heavyweight contender, he fre- quently weighed in at more than 260. pounds. Mathis was diagnosed about five years ago with high blood pressure and diabetes. Two strokes left him with limited motor control on his left side and forced him to use a walker. He also suffered kidney failure three years ago and had a pacemaker installed after a 1993 heart attack. "He always said that he wasn't afraid of dying," said his wife, Joan Mathis. "And he had come so close to death so many times. "I think the fear of death in boxing is different. He always said that ifyou had no fear in boxing, you would not have the protection. He understood death from a biblical point of view. He under- stood the Bible more than anyone ever realized." In 1968, Mathis challenged for the heavyweight championship, losing to Frazier on an 11 th-round knockout. Mathis never challenged for the title again. In a 1971 comeback bout, he lost a non-title decision to Muhammad Ali. Mathis fought twice in 1972, then re- tired with a 30-4 professional record. Mathis Jr. said his father's declining health in recent years made death a periodic topic of conversation between them. "He said, 'Bus, when I die,just go on - but nothing changes,"' he recalled. Buster Mathis challenged Joe Frazier for the heavyweight title In 1968. Vildngs must deal . With Lions Sanders MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Wayne Fontes and Barry Sanders were rook- ies together back in 1989, a head coach and his first draft choice trying to rebuild the Detroit Lions. Since then, Sanders has become one of the greatest runners of all time, and Fontes has become one of the most maligned coaches of his time. His job security seems to be in question a- most as regularly as Sanders plays jo the Pro Bowl. If it weren't for Sanders, Fontes might have been fired long ago in- stead of getting a two-year contract extension after last season. So when Fontes said Sanders "is nowherenea" his level of a year ago, when he *as voted Associated Press offensive player of the year, it was no surprise to hear dejection in Fontes' voice. "I just hate to say it," he moaned. "Barry Sanders is nowhere near what he was." Fontes, of course, was kidding. "I think he's a lot better. Barry gets better with age. He's like wine. "You get that bottle and you're sit- ting home by the fire. You get one of those cold Minnesota evenings, and you get that wine glass and that chilled wine and you open it and out co* that aroma. That's Barry." And that's what the Minnesota Vi- kings are most worried about as they prepare to host the Lions on Sunday in an important early-season matchup of NFC Central rivals who lost their season openers. The Chicago Bears ran for 143 yards in a 31-14 victory over the Vikings last week, the most rushing yards against Minnesota since 1993. The Bears did it with rookie Rashan S- laam, Lewis Tillman and Robert Green, none of whom compare to Sanders, who opened the season with 108 yards on 21 carries against the rugged Pittsburgh defense. But Minnesota has done well against Sanders the past six seasons, holding him under 100 yards in eight of 11 games. Doing that again will be harder this year without defensive tackle Henry Thomas, who will return to the Metrodome with the Lions, but the Vikings know they must be better this week. "Everybody knows about Barry, it's no secret," said safety Harlon Barnett. "We just have to execute better, that's all. Everybody has to understand where they're supposed to be." Neither of these teams are supposed to be at the bottom of the Central standings, but a loss Sunday will be tough to overcome. The Vikings play host to Dallas next week before traveling to Pitts- burgh. The Lions, who lost to thi' Steelers on a last-second field goal, are home against Arizona and San Francisco in their next two games. Barnett knows how tough it can be to overcome a slow start, but he also knows it can be done. He played with New England last year when the Pa- triots started 3-6 before winning their last seven to reach the playoffs. "We don't want to have to do that,; Barnett said. "But the first two games out of 16? We don't want to panic. I'm expecting to get a great win this week and shock everybody (against Dallas) next week." Along with Thomas, who had been a Viking since he was drafted in the third round in 1987, Minnesota also lost defensive line coach John Teerlinck to Detroit last off-season. Teerlinck was brought in to install a four-man defensive line in Detroit, which had used a 3-4 scheme. The unit had just one sack and gave up the game-winning field goal drive last week, but it forced four interceptions and injured two Steeler quarterbacks. "It allows me to run around a little bit more instead of playing in that old '34' and hitting those 300-pound guys week in and week out," said Detroit linebacker Chris Spielman. "Thatgets a little old. "This kind of fits our new persona- ity. We want to be the kind of defense that doesn't sit and read and react. We want to go get upfield and make some- thing happen." The Vikings are looking forward tb facing Thomas and Teerlinck. Although All-Pro defensive tackle John Randle played down the meet- ing, he had a sign hanging in his locker this week that read: "The Li- ns and Teerlinck are coming."