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Letters
Edited by Gay Flood
June 13, 1988
ZIEGLER'S LEAGUE E.M. Swift hit the nail on the head with his POINT AFTER (May 16). In the NHL the only consistency is inconsistency.
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June 13, 1988

Letters

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ZIEGLER'S LEAGUE
E.M. Swift hit the nail on the head with his POINT AFTER (May 16). In the NHL the only consistency is inconsistency.

The league is going nowhere with John Ziegler as president. May Swift's words go from his pen to the NHL Board of Governors' ears.
JOSH MORA
Chicago

What does SPORTS ILLUSTRATED have against hockey or, more specifically, the NHL? I just finished your harangues in the May 16 issue (Theater of the Absurd and POINT AFTER) and decided I could not stand it anymore. I agree that the whereabouts of NHL president Ziegler during the referee- Jim Schoenfeld crisis was relevant, but calling the NHL a "leaderless joke" and saying the Stanley Cup is now "devalued" is simply wrong and a cheap shot.
SCOTT BOGREN
Chesterfield, Mo.

COMPETITION
As coaches and parents of children heavily involved in competitive athletics, we appreciate the thought-provoking article by Bil Gilbert (Competition: Is It What Life's All About? May 16). We're not sure that there are answers to the large, heavy questions about when and why competitive sport is good or bad. However, we were very much affected by the comment of a 10-year-old boy during a recent Little League game. The game had just been called according to the 10-run rule (if one team leads another by 10 runs or more at the end of five innings, that team wins). However, time permitted another inning, and the coaches agreed that both teams could use a practice inning and that score would not be kept. Up to the plate stepped the 10-year-old. He took a few practice swings, stepped out of the box. eyed the pitcher, scuffed the dirt a bit with one foot and then, with absolute seriousness in his voice, looked up to the plate umpire and asked, "Are we just playing for fun now?" We smiled at his question. We also haven't been able to forget it.
VON AND PATTY JOLLEY
Orem, Utah

As the father of two teenage sons who are active in sports. I feel it is important that we consider more seriously the deleterious effects competition can have on young athletes. Articles like Bil Gilbert's help us keep sports in perspective.

I also enjoyed Rob Day's illustrations. Is there any chance you can show us more?
FRANK MUHLBAUER
Altoona, Pa.

?Here's one more. Day painted this picture in response to former UCLA basketball coach John Wooden's statement to Gilbert. "Yes, I think competition can build character. But it can also tear it down."—ED.

I've been coaching elementary school children for 15 years. You summed up my philosophy that children should derive enjoyment from participation in a game, not from the result. I use all of my players in games to give them an opportunity to gain experience and to improve themselves. If encouraged, a child who is the last player off the bench one year could be the first off the bench the next. Granted, our softball team hasn't won any championships, but we have been over .500. Last season one girl who was 1-for-28 on the year, with 22 strikeouts, hit a grand slam against the first-place team. We lost that particular battle, but not the war.
TOM SHINE
Flushing, N.Y.

I am an elementary school physical-education teacher who is involved in a program of administering a Soviet youth-fitness test to U.S. students for the purpose of comparing the fitness levels of the children from the two countries. Although the program is not a competition, a lot of my children think it is. I believe this feeling of competition is innate. It is a form of self-discovery and is essential to growth and development.
LENNY SAUNDERS
Ridgefield Park, N.J.

GILL NETS
I commend Clive Gammon for his outstanding article on the threat gill nets pose to our marine resources (A Sea of Calamities, May 16). Here in California our ocean resources are dwindling at an alarming rate, and a major reason is that the state still permits the use of gill nets by commercial fishermen off our coast.

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