Hometown p
frtmnAtltiAn 4 ' Q i > f n?ii/ tl?n? I ' a I'
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like to play in the ACC, I think I c
Kim finished the 1983-84 seaso
overall record. More importantly, s
her rookie season that conference
keeps. In fact, their stiff competitiv
her the most problems as a freshm;
"It's dog eat dog out there," she :
ponents are nice to you off the corn
matches begin, everyone is out there
"You can't talk to your opponen
she says. "They might hit a good
never say 'good shot' because, if j
your opponent an edge.
"Because the players are so good,
errors. They are not going to give >
you expect them to give you somethi
meat."
~ - - .. ?
Kim also learned TlTat if^ne fS'lGH
ACC rivals, she has to make some
her. game.
"You have to stay cool, no mattei
tion is," she says. "It's important t
You also have to use everything you
opponent.
"The players in the ACC
experienced," Kim says. "You havt
shots and not be intimidated."
Another area Kim says she's
preparing herself mentally for her c
"I've got to have more confidenc
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NCAAmigh
i?iiiwiHtiiinni?miiHimnmiminnmnmiiiiiiMHimi
momentum in the wake of the ?
Supreme Court's recent decision
regarding college football TV
rights.
Florida A&M, the University
of Central Florida and Georgia
Southern had begun preliminary
talks concerning forming a conference
of predominantly white
and predominantly black
schools.
However, now that the
Supreme Court's ruling has made
it almost impossible for smaller
schools to appear on television,
several of the schools that wera^
interested in forming the league
have lost interest, sources say >
The league was to have included
schools from Florida, Georgia
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIMWWMMUMIIimillllllll
Garber I Lash
Hansforth, who plays on the
Satellite Professional Tour as
part of the New Zealand team,
had been resting in WinstonSalem
and had not played com
petitively for more than six
weeks.
"I practiced with Lucioni for
the last couple of days before I
entered the tournament," said
Hansforth. "I felt a little funny
on some of my shots because 1
hadn't played for such a long
time. Although the competition
wasn't as good as some I've faced,
I think it was a good tournament.
"I got a little tired in the second
set," Hansforth said of his
1-6 thumping by Lucioni. "But in
the third set everything sort of
r* I I- ??
Mill ILU LU LUlllf UdLK.
Due to the growing success of
the tournament, Upshaw said,
the Greater Winston KiwanLs are
HiA f ... -
r
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roduct Kim i
NMMMNMNNilNINMIIIIIIMNIIIIMNMIIIIIIIIIIMIIlliMIIII
rarned what it's know there are
an get better." to reach a poin
n with a 23-17 don't want to
he found out in there are a lot <
matches are for who are arroga
e nature caused play vs ith anyoi
an. When she ar
says. "Your op- person Kim knt
't, but, once the there a little mo
for themselves. about trying to
t on the court," A shy, intro
I shot, but you that she had to
r'ou do, it gi\es social life.
"After a whi
you can't make friends 1 would
ou anything. If sit there and mi
ng, you're dead to do."
As she began
... TechT Kim stori
r^VvvetnigST1-nr~-X,lanta setting,
adjustments in ..The socia, ,
"People there
r what the situa- always somethi
_ i. . _ . ty _ ?
0 dc consistent. rvim got so c
have to beat an grades slipped ;
happening to h<
are all very swiftly rearranj
1 to set up your "The aeaden
says. "You hav
working on is forgot what I c;
>pponents. want to stay an
e,""she says. "1 come first. It's
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiii
t scrap playoi
iMiiiiiitiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiii
' and Alabama.
i.
This And That
*
ORLANDO, Fla. -- Grambling
State football Coach Eddie
Robinson recently testified
before Congress on how the
Supreme Court's recent TV decision
will harm smaller schools.
Robinson, by the way, recently
signed a two-year contract to do
-promotional work for CocaCola....
? Former, Alabama- State standout
football players Michael
t Madison . and Roger vPritchard
haVP Kppn Kirorl Kv; fWo oc
1IM T V f VVII 1411 VU U J I 1 IV JW I I \J\J I (W
assistant coaches....
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiimmiiiiimimiiiiiiiii
From Page B1
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
"Once you reach a certain
plateau, you have to expand to
make it better," said Upshaw.
"We're thinking of maybe having
doubles next year to increase
the participation."
Also, Upshaw said the tournament
came off without any major
problems thanks to dedicated
volunteer workers.
"I'd like to thank all the
members of the Greater Winston
Kiwanis," said Upshaw . "In particular,
I'd like to give special
thanks to Will Jenkins and Larry
Anthony. Without those two it
would have been very difficult.
"I would also like to thank
Coach (David) Lash," said Upshaw.
"He's a real problemsolver.
Whenever you put on a
tournament of this type, you're
going to have some minor problems
and Coajch. is always
I
[lash: Tennis o
IMIHIilllllliillMlltllMlllltMMMIMNftMMMIMMIItMllltllMlltl
players that I can beat, but I've got
it where I feel I can beat anyone. I
have an arrogant attitude because
jf players that I've come up against
int. I just need to think that I can
ne that is across the net from me."
rived in Atlanta last fall, the only
'W was her tennis rnarh Aft*r k/?ir?o
VVWVII t 11 IV A I/VIII5
re than a week, she was still cautious
make friends.
verted youngster, Kim soon found
open up a little if she was to find a
ile,*.l saw that if I didn't make any
be lost," she says. "I couldn't just
ake excuses for not having anything
to explore the social life at Georgia
ted tctteel comfortable in the urhnt* .
life in Atlanta is great," says Kim.
are really open and nice. There's
ng to do and someone to talk to."
OlinUt nn in Un. I i?1 * L
au?in uyj in nci suviai iiic inai ncr
a little before she realized what was
er. Headstrong and determined, she
jed her priorities.
lies at Georgia Tech are hard," she
e to study your butt off. At first, 1
ame there fqj\ I told myself, 'If you
d play tennis, the academics have to
not a matter of what I want to do
ifs From Page-fit
inimnm>utnmiHmminiiinnmiimiiwtiniiMMiiHMi<
Alabama State Sports Information
Director Charles L. Smith
has resigned to become an assistant
at Rice University....
Aicorn state sports publicist
Lonza Hardy, rumored to have
been planning to leave, has decided
to stay put. So has Florida
A&M's Alvin Hollins.
While some conferences are
still struggling to put preseason
football information together,
the ambitious Central Intercollegiate
Athletic Association
already has basketball information
ready to distributee.
, Now that Florida A'M President
Walter Smith has resigned, ^
the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference
is thinking of trying to
talk the Rattlers into returning to
the league....
Officials at Delaware State
College say they are willing to
play a football game in
Philadelphia every year if this
season's game with South
Carolina State in Philly is wellattended....
Tennessee State has asked the
Tennessee Legislature to build a
new, 30,000-seat football
stadium on the TSU campus.
IHKSBMiii
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n collegiate level is d
bttf what 1 have to do."
By the time the academic year was over, Kim and
her parents could see the changes she had made as
an individual.
"The longest Kim had ever been away from home
was two weeks," says her father, Coach David
Lash, who admits his daughter grew up in a
sheltered environment. "In the summer, I would
send her away for a couple of days to a tennis camp
or something, but she had never been away from
iiuine uvei a lung penou oi lime.
44I think by her going away to college, she has
started to really come into her own as a person,"
adds Lash, who retired from coaching when Kim
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og eat dog From Page B1 I
was 10 years old. "It was a blessing in disguise
because now she is starting to develop her ow n identity
and personality.
"Being 19 years after the rest of the family
(Lash's next oldest child is 37), Kim has always tried
to live up to my expectations," Lash says. "She
does a lot of things just because it's what she thinks
her daddy wants."
To a certain extent, Kim agrees.
"My father is the driving force behind me playing
tennis." she savs "He's the nnc whn alwavs en
couraged me to do my best. When I first saw him
teaching tennis when I was a little girl, it looked like
fun and I decided that was what I wanted to do."
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