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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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<text>
<title>
(Jan. 06, 1992) Sport
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
Jan. 06, 1992 Man of the Year:Ted Turner
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
SPORT, Page 86
BEST OF 1991
</hdr>
<body>
<p> 1. WORLD SERIES
</p>
<p> In a year of glory for unknowns and has-beens, baseball's
1991 finale matched the Minnesota Twins and the Atlanta Braves,
last-place teams in 1990. Lads fresh off the farm, like
Atlanta's Mark Lemke, showed manful poise; geezers like the
Twins' Jack Morris pushed guts and wiles past exhaustion. For
once, the "fall classic" really was.
</p>
<p> 2. MIKE POWELL
</p>
<p> When Everest was scaled, man had no higher mountain to
climb. But in sport one can dream of jumping over the moon. This
summer in Tokyo, Powell just about did it, though few dreamed
he'd even come close. The unheralded American spanned 29 ft. 4
1/2 in., eclipsing by 2 in. one of the few sports standards
thought impregnable: Bob Beamon's long-jump record, set in
Mexico City's thin air in 1968.
</p>
<p> 3. MICHAEL JORDAN
</p>
<p> Record-setting long jumps and high jumps are no problem
for the world's most astonishing athlete; he makes them 82
games a season. Also quadruple back-flip dunks with his eyes
closed. But the man had never won it all until his Chicago Bulls
captured the N.B.A. crown in a clinic of Jordan aerobics and
cagey teamwork against the Los Angeles Lakers. Now will all
those who scorned him as a great but selfish showman--a
one-man Harlem Globetrotters--please shut up?
</p>
<p> 4. GEORGE FOREMAN
</p>
<p> In the ring he is a joke, standing there like Buddha,
hoping some galoot will walk into his earth-orbiting fist. But
Foreman, 42 and gaining, laughs as much as anyone. Along with
other grand old fogies, like baseball's Nolan Ryan (who at 44
pitched his seventh no-hitter), Foreman answered the sports
fan's need for father figures who can still play with the kids.
</p>
<p> 5. JIMMY CONNORS
</p>
<p> And the Best Bad Actor (Senior Division) showed that an
aging tennis ace can climb into a semifinal slot at the U.S.
Open by behaving like a colicky two-year-old. Gentleman Jim,
39, disputed an umpire's ruling with such epithets as "son of
a bitch" and "an abortion." Some spectators guessed that
Connors had seen too many Robert De Niro movies--or too many
John McEnroe videotapes.
</p>
<p> 6. SEXUAL DISCLOSURE
</p>
<p> Which news item from the shadow world of basketball
stardom was more poignant: Magic Johnson's announcement that he
had contracted the HIV virus, or Wilt Chamberlain's boast, just
days earlier, that he has had sex with more than 20,000 women?
</p>
<p> 7. MONEYMEN
</p>
<p> What recession? Not in the prime-beef market of pro
sports. Jordan will reap about $25 million in 1992, most of it
from product plugs. Evander Holyfield earned $20 million
waltzing with Foreman. Bobby Bonilla signed with the New York
Mets for $29 million for five years. And
Minnesota-Twin-for-a-year Morris, 36, whose won-lost record for
the past four seasons is 54-57, rented his right arm to the
Toronto Blue Jays; the two-year deal is worth $10.85 million.
That's about $1,500 a pitch, for those of you who couldn't
afford a pocket calculator this Christmas. (But these are still
middle-income entertainers. TV's Bill Cosby earned $60 million
in '91.)
</p>
<p> 8. JERRY TARKANIAN
</p>
<p> To rivals of Tark the Shark's dominant, scandal-plagued
basketball teams at the University of Nevada at Las Vegas, UNLV
stands for UNLoVed. So not many cried when his 1991 squad, 30-0
in the regular season, lost an NCAA semifinal game to the
scholars of Duke. The coach's defenders aver that his rehab
program for inner-city tall guys is affirmative action at its
most productive. Others, spotting the athletes' BMWs in the gym
parking lot, see another moral: it's not whether you win or
lose, but how much you make on the side.
</p>
<p> 9. FLORIDA FOOTBALL
</p>
<p> When the N.F.L.'s Miami Dolphins may only be the state's
fourth best football team, you realize that the college game has
become pro ball by other means. At season's end Miami
University, the University of Florida and Florida State
University were at or near the top of the rankings. Michigan and
Washington fans might disagree, but how about a national playoff
for the state championship?
</p>
<p> AND THE LOWEST BLOW...
</p>
<p> Mike Tyson's alleged "serial buttocks fondling." If the
charges are correct, this walking keg of testosterone was doing
at an Indianapolis beauty pageant what he does in the ring:
mauling the competition. Tyson's troubles spotlighted the threat
behind many an athlete's swagger: he may think the world is his
for the taking, with one swift punch or pinch.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>