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ATHLETES FACE THE REALITY OF AIDS.


Byline: Greg Cote Miami Herald

Rony Seikaly Ronald F. Seikaly (Arabic: رونالد سيكالي) is a retired Lebanese-American basketball player.  walked onto the Miami Arena Coordinates:   court before a Heat game last season, before most fans had begun to stream in, and noticed a magazine on his seat. He thought it was a game program. It was not. It was a raunchy raun·chy  
adj. raun·chi·er, raun·chi·est Slang
1.
a. Obscene, lewd, or vulgar: "[He]
 men's magazine, paper-clipped to a particular page.

``I opened it up and the model had signed her picture,'' Seikaly recalled. ``It said `Love-and-kisses,'with her phone number. I couldn't help but notice that, in the picture, she wasn't covered up too much.''

Seikaly figured a teammate had played a joke. Partly out of curiosity (but not entirely), the number was later dialed.

It was no joke.

``If they want to meet you, they will find a way,'' Seikaly says. ``And if you want to meet them, it is not a problem.''

Maybe that was a game program of sorts, after all. The game is called Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous and Young and Athletic. If you are a sports star, sexual promiscuity Promiscuity
See also Profligacy.

Anatol

constantly flits from one girl to another. [Aust. Drama: Schnitzler Anatol in Benét, 33]

Aphrodite

promiscuous goddess of sensual love. [Gk. Myth.
 is a ready option. Like free sneakers sneakers
Noun, pl

US, Canad, Austral & NZ canvas shoes with rubber soles

sneakers npl (US) → zapatos mpl de lona; zapatillas fpl 
 in the mail or the best table at a restaurant, it is a job perk. Unlike those things, it can kill you.

It is what delivered Magic Johnson “Earvin Johnson” redirects here. For the Milwaukee Bucks center, see Ervin Johnson.

Earvin Effay Johnson, Jr. (born August 14, 1959 in Lansing, Michigan), nicknamed Magic
 to his fateful announcement almost 4-1/2 years ago. Now, even as boxer Tommy Morrison's similar revelation last month reverberates like some ghostly echo, Magic is back in basketball, smiling as ever.

It is a metaphor for life back to normal, for things the way they were.

Magic Johnson is outwardly robust, yet the death virus simmers within. He is halfway through the time it takes a typical person with HIV HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus), either of two closely related retroviruses that invade T-helper lymphocytes and are responsible for AIDS. There are two types of HIV: HIV-1 and HIV-2. HIV-1 is responsible for the vast majority of AIDS in the United States.  to develop AIDS, after which only 20 percent of victims survive five years.

Magic used to be the wonderful basketball star who lived up to the impossible nickname. Now he is a man defined by his illness. Now he is a lesson in living. And dying.

Magic competes, thrives and that tells others with HIV that they can, too. His inspiration to the afflicted af·flict  
tr.v. af·flict·ed, af·flict·ing, af·flicts
To inflict grievous physical or mental suffering on.



[Middle English afflighten, from afflight,
 is unquestioned.

Yet he will not beat the disease that no one has, and this should tell others to be more careful - especially fellow sports figures facing the same temptations. Whether this lesson has been learned is questionable.

Seikaly, now a Golden State Warrior, has observed a gradual return to social abandon by his NBA NBA
abbr.
1. National Basketball Association

2. National Boxing Association

NBA (US) n abbr (= National Basketball Association) → Basketball-Dachverband (=
 brethren.

``When Magic first announced, he created a shock wave. It became too close to home,'' Seikaly said. ``He led a promiscuous life, but, still, you'd think he got the creme de la creme crème de la crème  
n.
1. Something superlative.

2. People of the highest social level.



[French : crème, cream + de, of + la, the +
 - not the type of women who might carry the disease. It really made players stop and think.

``As the years wore off, you saw the effect of his announcement wear off, too. All of a sudden it's the promiscuous lifestyle again in the NBA. Players are still going out and chasing women.''

The hot issue now is whether the Human Immunodeficiency Virus human immunodeficiency virus
n.
HIV.


Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
A transmissible retrovirus that causes AIDS in humans.
 can be transmitted via contact sports. But that shifts focus from the cause of Magic's and Morrison's misery and the larger threat to all athletes.

Sex. Temptation. Carelessness.

``Sex and the NBA still go hand in hand,'' Bulls forward Jack Haley

For other people named Jack Haley, see Jack Haley (disambiguation).


Jack Haley (August 10, 1898 – June 6, 1979) — born John Joseph Haley, Jr.
 said. ``We are primary candidates to contract the disease. You either take care of yourself, or play Russian roulette Russian roulette

suicidal gamble involving a six-shooter, loaded with one bullet. [Folklore: Payton, 590]

See : Chance
.''

Haley emphasized he is married and monogamous but knows many are neither.

``I haven't seen a single unmarried pro athlete who says, `I'm not going to go out there and reap the benefits of being a star,' '' he said. ``And women are forward and aggressive in the '90s. Guy like (the Bulls' Dennis) Rodman, he has offers from gorgeous women, movie stars. Madonna came after him, not the other way.''

Even lesser athletes get their chances. Haley has seen teammates share fan mail. ``Girls send naked pictures of themselves, underwear, roses, gifts . . .'' he said.

A woman once offered sex to Dolphins security chief Stu Weinstein if he would tell her Dan Marino's hotel room number. Weinstein declined.

A reporter who covered one NFL NFL
abbr.
National Football League

NFL (US) n abbr (= National Football League) → Fußball-Nationalliga
 team recalled a prominent former offensive lineman showing up at camp one day with a stack of Polaroid photos depicting the player and teammates engaged sexually with various women.

``They find ways to make contact,'' said Baltimore Orioles This article is about the contemporary American major league baseball team. For other uses, see Baltimore Oriole (disambiguation).

The Baltimore Orioles are a professional baseball team based in Baltimore, Maryland.
 pitcher Oscar Munoz This article is about Oscar Munoz, American magician. For other uses, see Oscar Munoz (disambiguation).

Oscar Munoz is an American magician, 1999 winner of the "Gold Cups" award from the International Brotherhood of Magicians organization.
, a former Miami Hurricane. ``It can be a note delivered by a batboy bat·boy  
n.
A boy who is employed by a baseball team to look after its equipment, especially the bats.
. All of a sudden, you might have a message taped to your locker. `Call Linda,' with a phone number. Or you see a note on your car. If they want to know how to reach you, they'll know.''

O's pitching ace Mike Mussina Michael Cole (Mike) Mussina (born December 8 1968 in Williamsport, Pennsylvania), nicknamed Moose, is a Major League Baseball starting pitcher currently with the American League's New York Yankees.  registers at hotels under a pseudonym pseudonym (s`dənĭm) [Gr.,=false name], name assumed, particularly by writers, to conceal identity. A writer's pseudonym is also referred to as a nom de plume (pen name).  to avoid unwanted solicitations.

``The women try everything, anything, to get to a player - all of the above,'' Mussina said.

Some players say they can identify groupies by signs such as excessive makeup or clothing out of context with the ballpark. One recent day, a reporter asked an Orioles player if he could point out a groupie attending a game at Fort Lauderdale Stadium Fort Lauderdale Stadium is located next to Lockhart Stadium. It is where the Baltimore Orioles have had their spring training since 1996. The stadium also hosts Semi-Pro Federal League games throughout the year. . The player did. That night, the reporter saw the same woman at Chatz Lounge, the hotel bar at the Marriott where most Orioles live during the spring.

The woman, blonde and in her mid-20s, said her name was Janice but later claimed it was not.

``It's easy to get noticed at the ballpark. You just make sure you stand between a bunch of little boys and fat old men,'' she said, laughing.

The smile vanished at the mention of the word groupie.

``I'm just trying to meet a great-looking guy who might want to meet me,'' she said. ``Who would I rather meet? Brady Anderson, or some local drunk?''

Tommy Morrison's HIV infection through careless sex underlined boxing's reputation as a sport that especially attracts women. Men more commonly give than receive the AIDS virus AIDS virus
n.
See HIV.
 during heterosexual sex, but a man's promiscuity increases the likelihood he will get it from others, and few men have more opportunity to be socially active than pro athletes.

Just as Magic Johnson admitted to ``hundreds'' of sexual partners, Morrison described his lifestyle as ``permissive, fast and reckless,'' adding, ``I thought I was bulletproof Refers to extremely stable hardware and/or software that cannot be brought down no matter what unusual conditions arise. See industrial strength.

bulletproof - Used of an algorithm or implementation considered extremely robust; lossage-resistant; capable of correctly
.'' His trainer, Tom Virgets, called Morrison ``the greatest bimbo magnet of all time.''

Boxing great Larry Holmes: ``If I was heavyweight champion, and not married, I would jump on anything that moved. And if I weren't protected, I would jump on it anyway. I can't tell you I resisted all the time. You think, `Nothing could happen to me.' That's the way everybody thinks.''

Not everybody. Some athletes say the use of condoms has become more common since Magic announced - protection, if not discretion. Many teams even provide condoms.

Seikaly said many NBA players carry their own protection, fearing women with money on their mind, a paternity suit A civil action brought against an unwed father by an unmarried mother to obtain support for an illegitimate child and for payment of bills incident to the pregnancy and the birth. , ``will make little needle holes in the condoms they carry.''

``Condoms can give you a false sense of security,'' Dolphins receiver Randal Hill said. ``The best way to not get infected is to find someone who has the same thoughts and same fears about AIDS as you.''

An NFL study conducted last summer suggests football players, at least, are being more careful. The survey - conducted by the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta and by Dr. Lawrence Brown, NFL adviser on AIDS and HIV issues - asked players anonymously how their lifestyle has changed ``since Magic Johnson.''

Results have not yet been published, but, ``Far and wide, players say they have modified their behavior,'' Brown said. ``Granted, we weren't in the bedroom with cameras, but we think the anonymity gives us an accurate result.''

Perhaps not.

``Man, I talked to guys about that survey and they didn't tell the truth,'' Tampa Bay Bucs running back Errict Rhett said. ``Nobody is going to say they have sex with a bunch of people in this day and age, even if they are.''

Neither Brown nor any AIDS expert believes Magic Johnson is the only HIV carrier among the nearly 3,000 active athletes in the NFL, NBA, NHL NHL Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, see there  or baseball. The CDC's Dr. Peter Drotman estimates there may be approximately 30 active, HIV-infected players in the four major contact sports of boxing, basketball, football and hockey, based on national averages for age group, gender and race. With Morrison banned from boxing, Magic Johnson simply is the only active known carrier.

The idea that dozens of active athletes could have HIV - kept secret or unknown to them - fuels emotional debate on the subject of transmission through competition.

None of the four major team sports requires testing for HIV. Only 15 states require pro boxers to be tested.

Experts say the chance of transmission during competition via exchange of blood, even in boxing, is negligible. The CDC See Control Data, century date change and Back Orifice.

CDC - Control Data Corporation
 likens it to the risk faced by health-care workers, a likelihood one study put at 0.35 percent.

To some athletes, though, the concern is more than negligible.

Armon Gilliam of the New Jersey Nets, Vernon Maxwell of the Philadelphia 76ers and Steve Smith of the Atlanta Hawks are among NBA players who have expressed reservations this year about playing against Magic Johnson.

``Most guys are politically correct politically correct Politically sensitive adjective Referring to language reflecting awareness and sensitivity to another person's physical, mental, cultural, or other disadvantages or deviations from a norm; a person is not mentally retarded, but  about it in public,'' said the Hawks' Grant Long. ``But guys, behind closed doors, will admit they are frightened to play with (Magic).''

Even Seikaly, who makes it clear he is not fearful of competing against Johnson, acknowledged, ``The thing some players are thinking is, if this was just an average player, not Magic's caliber, would the NBA have allowed him to come back and play?''

The NBA says yes. Dr. Michael Johnson, consultant to the NBA Players Association on AIDS matters, tries to alleviate and acknowledge concerns.

``The concept of zero risk is a fallacy. Because of the stigma and hype and history of HIV, people aren't able to put it in the same perspective,'' he says. ``Is there a risk of transmission during a game? Yes. But, is the risk less than getting struck and killed by lightning? I believe it is.''

The NFL commissioned a study that estimated its players have one chance per 85 million ``game contacts'' to contract the AIDS virus. The study observed 155 games and found 575 bleeding injuries, or 3.7 per game, then calculated the odds of two bleeding players colliding and sufficiently exchanging blood.

``It's theoretically possible,'' said Brown, the league medical adviser. ``But the odds suggest there would not be an infection in the entire NFL for at least 50 years. It's a lifestyle issue, not a football issue.''

Anyone who has watched two skaters drop gloves and fight bare-fisted and bloody during an NHL game might wonder if it is a hockey issue. This is the one team sport in which fighting is considered part of the game.

Hartford Whalers center Mark Janssens: ``Trust me, I've thought about it. I hope nobody in the NHL is HIV-positive, but you're talking about 700 players. The chances are there.''

Teammate Scott Daniels, a frequent brawler: ``If you thought the guy you were fighting even might have AIDS, it would change fighting in the NHL.''

You cannot allow yourself to think that, though. Not if you are an athlete.

``There are cut knuckles and cut mouths all the time,'' Hartford coach Paul Maurice said. ``It's scary. But you have to feel a certain invincibility to play hockey at this level. Part of that is thinking nothing will ever happen to you. It's not just AIDS. It's the hit from behind that might break your neck.''

In only one sport, though, has the anxiety of transmission during competition reached a near-panic level.

CAPTION(S):

Photo

Photo: Magic Johnson's admission that he got AIDS from oneof ``several hundred'' partners has prompted some athletes to re-examine re·ex·am·ine also re-ex·am·ine  
tr.v. re·ex·am·ined, re·ex·am·in·ing, re·ex·am·ines
1. To examine again or anew; review.

2. Law To question (a witness) again after cross-examination.
 their behavior.

Daily News File Photo
COPYRIGHT 1996 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1996, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:SPORTS
Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Mar 31, 1996
Words:1967
Previous Article:SPANISH LESSONS NEWEST PASSION FOR EX-ACTIVIST.(NEWS)
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