fanuarp 22, 1993 Guilford "old-timer" is good in a game, better In a library Brian Tomllri Reprinted with permission of The Greensboro News and Record David Winn is an athlete who became a student who became an athlete. He's also a husband. And a father. And a scholar. Guilford College's basketball program lists the sophomore guard at 5-foot-10, but he's shorter than that. It's about the only instance there's less to him than meets the eye. At age 28, he is well into what amounts to a second life. "The basketball just kind of came," Winn says over the phone from his home in Eden as Alex, his 2 l/2-yearoldson,demandsabowl of Cap'n Crunch. "Alex was the reason for going back to school. "I pictured people saying, 'What's your mommy do, Alex?' 'Well she's a professional. She went to school.' '"Well, what's your daddy do?' 'Oh, well, he didn't go to school.' "If you wanted to write a story about why I did it," Winn says, "it's Alex—wanting to be a good father and the type that can be a role model. I want him to have that attitude." Or, rather, that new attitude. Not long ago, Winn was ambling along, working for a decent salary at a job with Duke Power that he didn't like, playing basketball every chance he got—successful yet mis erable, longing for something more Can You Beat the Greek? Test your NBA and college bas ketball prognosticating ability against Eric "the Greek" Pappas, unequivocally Guilford's most knowledgeable sports mind. The holidays are over and "the Greek" is back. With only one NFL game remaining, i.e. The Super Bowl, and with basketball season in high gear, it seems like a logical time to make the transition from the gridiron to the basketball court. Over the next several weeks, a selection of National Basketball League games and college basket ball games will be listed on the accompanying entry blank. To go head to head with "the Greek", all you nave to do is enter your win ning selections. Whoever outpicks "the Greek' and has the best record of all entrants will receive certifi cates for two dozen glazed dough nuts courtesy of Krispy Kreme. but not sure what it was or how to get it. Until the day his wife, Janet, picked up the paper and read of Guilford College's night school program. They decided it was per fect for him—if he had the guts to try it. "I talked till I was blue in the face, trying to make him go to school," says Janet Winn, who has a master's degree and works as a counselor in the Eden school sys tem. "I've even enrolled him in schools." "It was either now or never," David Winn says. "I guess I just quit being chicken. I hate to admit it, but I was scared." It turned out to be the good kind of scared, like a queasy stomach before a big game—not enough to make him sick, just enough to make him play better. And has he played. He made straight A's that first semester, in the fall of 1991, and held onto his job as an appliance repairman for Duke Power.,.; People at Guilford took notice and nominated him for a presti gious Charles A. Dana scholar ship, which covers up to half of Guilford's tuition. He won the Dana and he did not disappoint. Over half the course work for his degree in sports medi cine is done and his grade-point average is 3.68. It includes a B-minus in a phi losophy class that may have had more impact than all the A's put If no one can outpick "the Greek," he gets the doughnuts. All members of the Guilford community are encouraged to en ter; however, please limit entries to one per person. Place entries in the boxes located on the news stands in the Founder's lobby and in the Underground. Deadline for entries is Sunday at noon. GB7 iGame 1: Indiana at Charlotte Winner: I I Game 2: Chicago at San Antonio Winner: I | Game 3: Portland at Utah Winner: | | Game 4: Houston at New Jersey Winner: | |Game 5: L.A. Lakers at Washington Winner: | ■Game 6: Sacramento at Atlanta Winner: J Game 7: Philadelphia at New York Winrer: NCAA Game 8: UJM.C. at Seton Hall Winner: :: iGame 9: Indiana at Ohio State Winner: I |Game 10. Duke at Florida State Winner: f {Tiebreaker: Total Score of NBA game: Phoenix at Detroit Total Score: i 5 uName: Phone #: . Sports together. "I'm the kind that, if I don't do well, sometimes I quit," Winn says. "I don't deal well with struggling. "I still don' t know anything about philosophy, but I learned how to succeed in a course I wasn't well adapted to and didn't have any interest in." Success bred confidence. Once he had taken the chance and reached for one dream, he reached for an other—he'd play basketball. Not pick-up games in and around Eden, even if they did give him the chance to go against college play ers like N.C. State's Donnie Seale, East Tennessee State's Robert Doggettand others. Not recreation league, either, "with Domino's Pizza or something like that on your shirt," he says. Real basketball, the kind he had tasted only briefly at Drewry Ma son High School outside Martinsville, Va., because of a bro ken collar bone. The return to the game at Guilford—an NCAA Di vision 111 school, which, unlike its Division I counterparts, imposes no age limits for athletes —was exhilarating. "It feels great," Winn says, "just to shoot lay-ups in warm-ups." "Here's this guy that hasn't played an organized competitive game in 10 or 11 years," Guilford coach Jack Jensen says. "To have the opportunity to look at a career change and to play on an organized basketball team for the first time in that long—he's so excited he's ' about to jump out of his skin." In his debut, he was relatively cool and calm last Thursday in a 69-64 win at Hampden-Sydney, hitting two of five field-goal at tempts and his only free throw for five points, but nerves hit him in his first home game Saturday against Virginia Wesleyan. Winn is regarded as a deadly outside shot; he wentO-for-4 in the Quakers' 81-69 loss. He has made 95 of 100 free throws in practice; he missed his only attempt against Wesleyan. Four days later, in a 63-59 win over Randolph-Macon, he hit three of eight shots, including a 3-pointer, for seven points. "Practice was learning," Winn says. "This is going to be learning, too. "Physically, I feel great. There's no way I'm out-classed out there." "He's as good a shooter as there is in our league, I think," says junior guard Paul Ferrell, who is ranked first in the Old Dominion Athletic Conference and 10th in NCAA Division 111 in assists. "He's in as good a shape or better than most of the players on our team. "He'spickedmypocketacouple of times in practice, running be hind me. He's quick." Winn's pursuit of his dream has cost his family. They're cutting every corner financially, Janet Winn says, and hoping David's 1982 Pontiac—the one his team mates plastered a Band-Aid on— holds up through two more years of commuting from Eden. It's been hardest on her. "I'm a planner," she says. "I had my whole life planned out. I've learned not to have routines and not to know what to expect next— GUILFORD COLLEGE COMMUNITY SENATE AND UNION ELECTIONS 0 Petitions for candidacy in the Senate and Union Executive Council Election are available at the Information desk in Founders Hall. Candidates must run on a ticket system and submit a petition to the Senate Elections Committee by February 2, 1993. Elections are on February 23,1993. Further details are available at the Information Desk. fcfre t&uUtortrian and to pray and pray that every thing turns out all right." In one sense, it already has. "He is just wonderful to be around," she says. "People can't even believe I'm talking about the same person. I think it's the first time he's ever been really happy with himself." "When I was 19," David Winn says, "I thought some things would never end. "When you know they're going to end, you appreciate them a lot more. I'm trying to milk every thing I can out of life." Ever Get A Pal I Smashed! '">ltK lrs fat i FRIENDS DON'T LET FRIENDS DRIVE DRUNK. US Department of Transponat'on 11