Americans go to China
to play table tennis, Alan Shepard
goes to the moon to tee off and The New York Times
goes to press with the Pentagon
Papers. Lee Trevino
wins the U.S.
and British opens, while Joe Frazier
decks (below) and outpoints Muhammad Ali
. The Pirates, Cowboys, Bucks, Canadiens, UCLA
five and Nebraska
11 win.
IN SI
'S WORDS
TRENCH WARFARE
A long night was still ahead for Frazier
, because this was an Ali
determined to put a muzzle on all the mouths that have questioned his courage, his will, his ability to handle pain. "That man," Frazier
said later, his own face covered with pyramids of hurt, "can sure take some punches. I went to the country, back home, for some of the shots I hit him with." And Ali
's jab faded like a sick flower. His once remarkable legs gone, his arms heavy, he hung on the ropes and spent long and dangerous periods in the corners; it was astonishing that he escaped serious damage. "The way they were hitting," said referee Arthur Mercante
, "I was surprised that it went 15. They threw some of the best punches I've ever seen."
—MARK KRAM
INCIDENTALLY
BEST OF 'THEY SAID IT'
? John Brodie
, asked why a million-dollar quarterback had to hold the ball for extra points: "Well, if I didn't, it would fall over."
? Bill Bonham
, Cub pitcher, after failing to retire any of four Cardinals he faced in his first big league game: "I was due for a bad outing."
FACE IN THE CROWD
CHRIS EVERT
Chris, a sophomore at St. Thomas Aquinas High in Fort Lauderdale
, disposed of three top-ranked women tennis players to win the St. Petersburg
Masters. En route to victory she beat Francoise D�rr
, Billie Jean King
and Julie Heldman
.
Ping-Pong diplomacy.
Super Mex whoops it up at the Open.
Yellow tennis balls? Come on!
Wayne Gretzky
is 10.