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Hermans Health Education Sally Scaggs, RD Call 268-3322 For Appointment R1 Page 12^116 Battalion/Thursday, September 29,1988 U.S. chokehold is gone; archaic rules are at fault By Doug Walker Assistant Sports Editor Tuesday’s loss by the United States Olympic basket ball team to the Soviet Union made journalists around the world note the end of American dominance in in ternational amateur basketball. Unlike the 1972 Olympic basketball final, in which the Soviets won after getting a third chance at making a last-second shot, the Soviets defeated the American team fair and square on the court this time. It was only the second American loss in 52 years of Olympic basketball competition. It left me with the same sick feeling I get when I see film of the loss in the Munich Games of 1972. In the loss at Munich, the United States was done in by a controversial ruling by international basketball of ficials which forced two replays of the game’s final three seconds and snatched a gold medal from the Ameri cans. The latest loss brings to mind a question that has been floating around amateur athletics for the past few years: Should the United States send professionals to the Olympics, and should the government finance ath letes in sports such as track and field? A move in the right direction was made a few years ago when the United States began allowing track and field performers to accept money for appearance fees at major track meets around the world. It seems that if the United States wants to win in these competitions we must learn to play by the same rules as the competition. America should send a basket ball team of paid professionals to the Olympics. This team could be either a team of NBA all-stars or the NBA champion of the Olympic year. Soviet athletes in all sports compete as paid profes sionals while most American athletes competing against them in these amateur sports festivals struggle for funding ofany kind. Soviet team members are paid by their government to play the sport and have been together as a team for several years. Coach John Thompson’s team did a fine job in the Olympic tournament and would have won the game if forward Danny Manning had contributed offensi Manning, college basketball’s player of the year,dj score in the game against the Soviets. Even though a bronze medal is nothing to ashamed of, the Americans should be expectedtoi the gold every four years in this sport. Americahal greatest basketball league in the world — the NBA, yli SEOt dged t; luding ore hi; loctor it Dr. L Historically, the players chosen for U.S. nan*j ru g S f c teams for international play are picked froracol on “nev programs. They only play as a team for a few mo™ before competing against, and usua s that from other nations "If us Lee the St ated Pi herapei After wilding ind his lanada. Lee si bout 3( ally beating, tfj have been playing togetfe; years. Other countries use American basketball as and have only begun to catch up with usbecauseAn ica doesn’t show the best it has to offer. Probably the be^t route to follow is usingthe\! champion to compete as the U.S. team. Think of the possibilities! Would the Sovietu j-Qm Sei stand a chance against the Laker fast breakiju i c ]yelab Worthy and Magicjohnson would have a fielddav * An NBA champion could complete tb championship series in June, take a month off, gin touring against a team of NBA all-stars likethea rent Olympic team did. Perhaps the team could also be bolstered by addit player, or two, from another NBA team toshoreupi problems with depth. After the long reg schedule and playoff games the team may lems with fatigue and injuries. Adding a playerl Larry Bird or Michael Jordan would certainly solve problem. The only reservation I have about this idea is tin many cases, the same people may be receiving Ob gold medals over and over again. The governing forces for U.S. amateur baskt; est posii “You ■ s® lave no ome an ohnson ind of g Johnsi lave spil the st: iot bear f ? T< need to face the fact that America probablyhassetn end of its domination of Olympic basketball iftheo rent policy remains in effect. If Sports orted tl of Jo leroids t iving atl “1 nev the United States keeps this policy, Ameria ie j or() should get used to losing in international competit — just because we choose to play by archaic rules other countries refuse to follow Glasnost spreads to sports s;foitt cap's — ■ ■ After; staphar jhnson’ arned t sents tin When SEOUL, South Korea (AP) Maybe this basketball glasnost is tak ing things too far. Look at the facts. When Soviet coach Alexander Gomelski met the media Wednesday after the Soviets’ 82-76 humbling of the U.S. basket ball squad, did he credit Mother Rus sia or Marxist-Leninist doctrine for the victory? No. “United States basketball and NBA basketball helps my country,” said the short, gray, grandfatherly Russian. “I am very happy, and thank you, United States basketball.” Thank you, United States basket ball? Gomelski was talking about the National Basketball Association, a decidedly capitalist outfit that has given comfort and aid to the Soviet team. The Soviets have played exhibi tion games against tne Milwaukee Bucks. The Atlanta Hawks toured the USSR and trained with the Sovi ets in the United Sates. The Hawks have even spent draft choices on Alexandre Volkov, Rai- mondas Marchulionis and Valeri Tikhonenko in hopes the Soviet gov ernment will let their stars play in the NBA. The Portland Trailblazers, with a first-round draft interest in Arvidas Sabonis, took in the 7-foot-3 Russian and supervised the therapy on his ruptured Achilles tendon. Sabonis was doubtful for the Olympics before he got NBA care. He paid back the kindness with 13 points and 13 rebounds against the United States on Wednesday. At the post-game interview, U.S. Coach John Thompson noted the Sabonis recovery with some irony. “He’s been working hard all sum mer, and he’s improved ... against America’s finest,” said Thompson, who has been critical about the chummy relationship between the Soviets and the NBA. “I don’t see it as a form of collabo ration,” he said. “Several NBA teams helped us, too. We lost. The NBA didn’t. We understood the circum stances under which we were play ing. Because I agree or disagree, that’s totally different from blam ing.” Thompson wasn’t so subdued a few months ago when he com plained that the use of U.S. sports medicine to heal Sabonis was like Benedict Arnold handing the British the keys to the fort. “I see Sabonis as being a fulfil lment of Lenin’s prophecy: The cap italists are selling the Communists the rope they can hang us with,” he said at the time. “We are in direct competition with them, and to pre pare Sabonis to play against us just isn’t right.” De U.S. loss to U.S.S.R. w< not isolated incident BAY SEOUL, South Korea (AP) —This is not 1972, and this was no fluke. The 82-76 loss to the Soviet Union in the Olympic basketball semifinals Wednesday was the fourth straight failure in major international tour naments for U.S. men’s teams so ac customed to ruling the world. And, according to the coach who will play the Americans for the Olympic bronze medal Thursday night (Thursday morning EDT), there is good reason: The Ameri cans are behind the times. “The U.S. is a very young, inex perienced team ... and they paid the penalty for preparing the team within the United States,” said Aus tralian coach Adrian Hurley. The 1987 World University Games and the World Junior Cham pionships both meant silver medals to Yugoslavia’s golds. The Pan Am Games were a showcase for Oscar Schmidt, the shooter from Brazil who flew back with a gold medal while the United States again ac cepted silver. But the loss to the Soviet Union came in the Olympics. The only blemish on the U.S. basketball re cord in the Games had been a loss to the Soviets in 1972 that was so tainted the silver medals were never accepted — they remain in a bank vault in Munich. There was nothing tainted about this Soviet victory. The United States was beaten by a team that was never bothered by the Americans’ most po tent weapon — pressure defense — and a team whicn showed there is no substitute for international experi ence and competition. Hurley said the U.S. team should “get out of the country and play un der international rules and with in ternational referees. That talent isn’t enough. You’ve got to play.” Well before the Olympics^ U.S. coach John Thompsonrai ing people that the system select the team was out of date, dally considering that thebettti ternational teams were using Am m can training methods andexpetti men ver Ca aining roves 1 eld wot “Ever; w 'Ut nov ne of -odd,” fibune om Set do lari’s f< hoi [lympic “I me e’re th e the i bat I amethi: oeDeL : l< “Every y^ar my team has competition with U.S. collegeki hall teams,” Soviet coach Alexi Gomelski said. "We playedone,] ago against Milwaukee Buds recently against Atlanta Hawk “United States basketball, basketball help my country happy. Thank you, United basketball.” The United States did makei at the Soviets on Wednesday^ within two points midway the second naif after trailingl| just after halftime. But the So ^ held off all challenges and United States was faced withtiit| sihility of no medal, let alont g° ld - . „ “I think they gave all theycw represent their country and I that’s all their country can affl ask of them,” Thompson said came here to win the goldmedi were extremely disappointed didn’t, but you get in it with portunity to win and thepossi of losing.” The future could be however. This tournament probably the last played under! where NBA players are FI BA, the sport’s international! ; eor erning body, meets nextmontii n . " q] the motion to allow NBA expected to pass easily. league has all tltt Contin ppeari tossible ind wer | Tech Howing in oper printec he end No f ased “That Near lenly runche names,” Soviet guard Shat* | te g ent Marchlionis said. “Butitisdil If they play it will be no contest J ust as it was for so many yeas But is Thompson supposed to act like a diplomat or a general? That is the heart of the question facing U.S. sports officials and fans. Are the Olympic games a battle for world- wide.basketball hegemony or an ex change of friendship and the fur therance of international sports? In a world where President Rea gan promises to share Star Wars se crets once we figure them out, is John Thompson out of step Yes, said Glasnost Go# whose basketball is muchbetteid his English. “The United States and Union organize good contacti» tic, economic, in sports,” It “All country, all people, very for this friendship. Peopled problem and maybe Thompsc- understand this.” he end aw tha Harg bout o etting jeld i r ans alii The hat Ri^ RESTAURANT See Us for Sunday Lunch & Dinner Buffet Lunch Mon.-Fri. Dinner Mon.-Thur. Special Special $2 95 $3 50 Lunch Saturday & Sunday Lunch & Dinner all you can eat Buffet $3 95 (includes Iced Tea) Full menu also available Mon.-Sun. - — 3805 S. Texas Ave. 11-2 5-10 j ^ VISA Bryan 846-8345