HOT STUFF
Sir:
I must say that learning of Alabama's 5'9" dunker (Dunkers Are Strutting Their Stuffs, March 14) raised my spirits to alltime highs. I am 14 years old, 5'9" tall and play basketball. One of my fondest dreams is of the day when, before a standing-room-only crowd, I can do a 360, double-pump and bite the rim.
I practice my form on doors, windowsills, 9-foot Jr. Pro League goals and anything else I can possibly slam a basketball over, including people. When that magical moment comes when I find myself soaring through the wild blue yonder looking down upon the horror-stricken countenance of my opponent, while surveying that no longer formidable iron hoop, I'm going to know just what to do. And when that moment comes, look out, 'cause I ain't comin' down without the rim!
LEE CODY
Eldorado, Ill.
Sir:
When I was a freshman at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy in 1967, a friend and I entered the gym for a game of one-on-one and found that the portable goal had been moved under the overhanging balcony to make room for a dance. Because the goal had been tilted, the rim was approximately 7 feet off the floor. Both of us realized that the opportunity of a lifetime was staring us in the face. Playing "possession," my opponent stuffed three straight. On his fourth possession I tipped the ball as he drove and grabbed it directly under the basket. My adrenaline pumped furiously, for I knew I was about to do what I had only dreamed of. I slammed it through as my forehead met the rim. The feeling was worth all 37 stitches.
JOHN MURPHY
Millersville, Md.
Sir:
Because of the dunk and the increase in broken rims in playgrounds, kids are being deprived of the opportunity to play basketball. These rims are not replaced immediately as they do in the pros or colleges, but more like six months later if you're lucky.
DAN SULLIVAN
Honolulu, Hawaii
Sir:
In his last paragraph Barry McDermott reveals his ignorance of the sport of power volleyball by implying that volleyball players are only "tippers." If he had ever observed a serious power volleyball match he would have seen that volleyball players also rank with "...those who can fly in the sky." Pounding an overhead spike down the near sideline inside the 10-foot line, over an 8-foot net and over two or three blockers sounds like flying in the sky to me.
Not only are power volleyball players of the U.S. Volleyball Association offended but also I'm sure Wilt Chamberlain, former King of Dunk, is offended, too; The Stilt "flies in the sky" in the U.S. professional volleyball league now.
CHRIS W. HYVONEN
Annapolis, Md.
Sir:
Your article on dunking was a great stuff.
BOB DOWNES
Hampden, Mass.
THE CAUTHEN PHENOMENON
Sir:
It is my opinion that you are heaping too much praise on Jockey Steve Cauthen (This Could Be the Start, March 7). How much skill does it take to ride a horse faster than another horse? Is one jockey that much better than another? I am a member of the Ardenheim Horseman's Association and I firmly believe that the race depends on the quality of the horses involved, not the jockeys.
HOMER HINKLE
Portstown, Pa.
Sir:
There is an amazing resemblance between Steve Cauthen, the young man who expresses himself in relatively few words, and another sportsman who is far more loquacious. Add a few wrinkles, a widened face resulting from the jowls of age and thinning of hair and you have Howard Cosell in racing silks!
MARV BEAMER
Wayne, Neb.
BEST ROOKIES
Sir:
I feel Adrian Dantley is definitely the best rookie in the NBA today (Finding a Home with the Braves, March 14). But then you list Nine More Good Ones and none of them are even close to "good" compared to the Atlanta Hawks' Armond Hill, whom you do not mention.
DAVID WHITEHEAD
Marietta, Ga.