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GREEN BAY PACKERS
The team is too good to be good--yet it won the Super Bowl. Owned by 1,915 locals who volunteer to shovel snow before games, the Pack has role models galore: all-handsome quarterback Brett Favre, who overcame an addiction to pain killers, and all-best defensive end Reggie White, a minister whose burned-down Kentucky church the folks of Green Bay chipped in to rebuild. This season Coach Mike Holmgren, with his Poppin Fresh face and Dad-knows-best style, led his team easily into the playoffs. The Pack seems set to face the 49ers for the NFC crown, with the winner inflicting the ritual Super Bowl humiliation on the AFC champ. Can nice guys finish first again?
Courage at the bat
Two flinty veterans faced something more frightening than a 100-m.p.h. fastball: cancer. The Orioles' Eric Davis returned from chemotherapy for colon cancer to bat .310 in September. Brett Butler of the Dodgers, who had throat cancer, hit .283 and stole 15 bases. They win our vote for Comeback Heroes of the Year.
Tara Lipinski
In 1996 the pixie from Sugar Land, Texas, finished 15th in the World Figure Skating competition. This year, at 14, she was first, and for an encore won the nationals with a credulity-defying triple-loop triple-loop combination. Now she's off to the Olympics, again to battle grizzled champ Michelle Kwan. Michelle is all of 16.
Arizona men's basketball team
The NCAA champs were steered by freshman point guard Mike Bibby, son of UCLA's point guard in its golden years. But Dad wasn't around much; it was Mike's mom who prodded and inspired her boy to excel. Said Mike: "She's the reason I'm here." Yes, Santa, there is a Virginia Bibby.
Florida Marlins
In just their fifth year the Marlins proved that football isn't Florida's only big-time sport. Jim Leyland's club, led by pitchers Kevin Brown and Cuban refugee Livan Hernandez, beat the powerful Braves, then outlasted the Indians to win the World Series in an extra-inning thriller. Way to go, kids!
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