
NOTORIOUSLY BIG Swing a sledgehammer for a half hour at the crack of dawn. Face 100 pitches from the left side of the plate, then 100 more from the right side. Rest. Repeat. That's part of the drill at George Scott's summer baseball clinic, which has an enrollment of one: his son Brian, an 18-year-old standout infielder who recently graduated from Greenville (Miss.) High and has a scholarship to Alcorn State. In August, when the average high in Greenville is 93�, good ol' Dad adds hill sprints to the regimen. After managing in Mexico and the independent leagues, Boomer, 60, now tutors Brian, the youngest of his three sons. Though admittedly not in great shape—the 6'2" Scott says he's pushing 270 pounds—he has the wisdom of a ballplayer who hit 271 home runs and won eight Gold Gloves between 1966 and '79. "Knowing what I know," Scott says, "I can make him twice the player I was." His career was filled with monster dunks and supersized meals. But Mel Turpin wants to talk about a gigantic crush. In 1997 Turpin ran into Kerry Soper, his health teacher when he was a senior at Lexington (Ky.) High in the late '70s. "All those old feelings came back," says Turpin, 43, a star 6'11" center at Kentucky before a disappointing five-year career in the NBA. He asked Soper, nine years his senior, to go out. A year later he asked her to marry him. Now a security guard at a Nissan dealership in Lexington, Turpin, at 350 pounds (90 over his NBA weight), is happy to weigh in on the league's current big men. " Oliver Miller, that's a big dude," he says of Minnesota's 315-pound center. "In my day, they thought the big man was supposed to be thin. They didn't know too much. It was medieval.
GREG LUZINSKI
On her way back from a tennis match in New Jersey in 1980, Andrea Jaeger, then 15, had an epiphany: She wanted to help sick children. She directed her limo driver to stop at a toy store, where she bought several hundred dollars worth of gifts to give to kids in the critical-care unit of Helen Hayes Hospital in West Haverstraw, N.Y. "I just felt a calling at that moment," says Jaeger, who turned pro at 14 and rose to No. 2 in the world 19 months later.
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