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- SPORT, Page 87The Global Cry: Play Ball!U.S. leagues and foreign athletes are breaking down boundariesBy Tom Callahan
-
-
- Something is abroad in the games people play, or about to go
- abroad, anyway. Suddenly the globe is ready to play ball, with the
- Soviet Union leading off. In their hearts, the Soviets probably
- still think they invented baseball, or lapta, an innocent
- steppes-child that supposedly predates both British rounders and
- Tommy John. But the bench jockeying has quieted considerably since
- the Reds dropped an April game to the U.S. Naval Academy, 21-1, and
- their coach was heard to mutter, "Throw to second, not first.
- Second is the one in the middle."
-
- At the moment, Western sports pages are lousy with Soviets, who
- are lousy only at baseball. Three more hockey players from the
- vaunted Red Army team resigned their commissions last week. By the
- grace of a fresh understanding between Moscow and the National
- Hockey League, stars Vyacheslav Fetisov, Igor Larionov and Sergei
- Makarov are now free to negotiate with the teams that drafted them:
- the New Jersey Devils, Vancouver Canucks and Calgary Flames (which
- already employs Sergei Priakin). Only one Soviet applicant has felt
- the need to defect. Alexander Mogilny saw Buffalo and just couldn't
- live anywhere else. Shrugging everything off, Soviet authorities
- have invited the Flames and the Washington Capitals to play a
- revolutionary series in Moscow and Leningrad come September.
-
- In the tennis community too, freethinking Soviets are
- multiplying. Olga Morozova, the pig-tailed pioneer who occasionally
- popped into grand-slam finals during the '70s, now coaches a raft
- of promising young countrymen and -women known as the Glasnost
- Gang. The most precocious gangster is Natalia Zvereva, 18, who is
- also the most perestroika-emboldened. She has won $515,000
- professionally, but since much of it has been diverted into state
- coffers, she gripes, "I still don't have enough money for a
- Mercedes." When last seen, Zvereva was stomping back to the Kremlin
- to have it out with her agents. "If you don't see me at the French
- Open," she giggled in parting, "you'll know what happened."
-
- The Soviet Union is just a piece of a new picture. Cleared to
- participate in the next Olympics, the National Basketball
- Association plans to contribute one team to a Milan tournament in
- October and assign two others to open next season in Tokyo. Japan's
- association with American baseball, of course, goes back to Babe
- Ruth. Just last November, on a typical All-Star tour, the Dodgers'
- Orel Hershiser capped his nearly scoreless autumn by yielding a
- Ruthian homer to Fujio Tamura of the Nippon Ham Fighters ("I was
- told he couldn't hit a curve ball"). But Japan is importing all
- sports now, and the Los Angeles Rams will confront the San
- Francisco 49ers there in August.
-
- The most daring development, as usual, is coming from the
- National Football League. Tex Schramm, the exiled general manager
- of the Dallas Cowboys, has been forming an international spring
- league that will announce its franchises any day now. "And they'll
- be kicking off next April," Schramm says.
-
- Montreal and Mexico City will likely join four U.S. and four
- to six European cities in a twelve-game season leading to a
- summertime World Bowl. Towns tired of hoping for N.F.L. expansion
- franchises (Jacksonville, Memphis, Oakland and Baltimore) would
- seem the prime American candidates for the auxiliary league.
- London, Dublin, Frankfurt and Milan are among the European
- possibilities.
-
- Television inspired both the European players and the American
- plotters. "The people saw delayed broadcasts and taped highlights
- and liked them," says Schramm, who notes that live N.F.L. telecasts
- are scheduled in London this season, along with the latest Wembley
- exhibition (this year Philadelphia vs. Cleveland). "Television
- stations in Europe are doubling and tripling. With the complete
- common market in 1992, a great melding of entertainment is about
- to take place."
-
- Comparing football with soccer, whose charms are mysterious
- only to Americans, Schramm says, "Games where the players use every
- part of their body, not just their feet, and where there's
- generally a lot of scoring, have a good chance to win the world
- over." But will the world be open to this militaristic game of
- bombs and blitzes? Maybe so, if Richard Tardits is any barometer.
-
- Tardits is a Frenchman from Biarritz who, through a series of
- family coincidences, matriculated at the University of Georgia four
- years ago. Apprised by his father that he would need a scholarship
- to remain, Tardits donned his rugby shorts and knee-high stockings
- and went out for the Bulldog football team. The first day on
- defense, he ignored the ballcarrier and tackled the blocker. But
- Tardits was quick, tall and weighed 200 lbs. Coach Vince Dooley was
- intrigued. For one thing, he had never had a linebacker whose
- previous experience consisted of running with the bulls in
- Pamplona.
-
- In situations where Tardits could do no harm, Dooley tossed
- him into games for a play or two. He started to sack quarterbacks
- with a move the other players dubbed the Tour de France. During a
- spring practice in Tardits' sophomore year, just as his father was
- about to summon him home to the University of Toulouse, Dooley
- called for quiet. In the manner of a battlefield commission or the
- awarding of the Croix de Guerre, Tardits' scholarship was presented
- on the field. Last month he was drafted fifth by the N.F.L.'s
- Phoenix Cardinals.
-
- Tardits has attempted to tell his French friends about the
- amazing spectacle of "a stadium with 85,000 filled seats and people
- still fighting to buy tickets." He tries to mix in "all the colors
- and the vehicles and the screaming" and even tosses out a "How
- 'bout them dogs?" Mais zut. "They can't realize what it's like,"
- he says in dismay, and concludes with a sigh, "Only in America."