<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8701040528
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
870122
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, January 22, 1987
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
STATE EDITION
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Associated Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SEE ALSO METRO FINAL EDITION PAGE 1D
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1987, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
THE QUARTERBACK AND HIS KEEPER 
ELWAY MEETS DESTINY  WITH SUPER MOXIE
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
ANAHEIM -- "John?"

  "Yeah?"

  "Can I get two minut--"
  "Excuse me. You'll have to get John in the press conference."
  "Sorry."
  "This way, John."
  "Where we goin'?"
  "Over here,  big room."
  "John?"
  "I--"
  "Not now, guys, John's got a press conference."
  "Sorry."
  "That him?"
  "Where?"
  "Right there, stupid!"
  "Oooh . . . "
  "John Eh-way?"
  "Yeah?"
  "We are from Japan."
  "Really?"
  "We, um--"
  "John, let's go."
  "Sorry, guys I--"
  "This way, John."
  "This door?"
  "Right here."
  "Hey, John, four o'clock, today?"
  "Yeah,  I--"
  "Guys, he has a press conference.
  "This way, John."
  "This way?"
  "Go! . . . "
  Go. This way. That way. Lead the way. The impossible he does right now,
miracles might take a little  longer. Isn't that John Elway's calling card
here at Super Bowl XXI? Rarely has there been one player so tied to his team's
fortunes in this biggest of big football games. Elway or no way. The media
have circled him alone from the Broncos' roster photo. Heck, even his own
teammates are saying that unless he is super they don't have a chance.
  Ask him  whether he cares.
  "I can't get real  caught up with that," said the quarterback, shrugging
off  the question as if it were a would- be tackler. "Whether they say I have
to have a great game or not, it doesn't matter. I figure I have to play  my
part and so does everybody else."
  That's true. It's just that his part has all the lines. It is not because
of the miraculous 98-yard drive he engineered against Cleveland in the final
minutes  to force an eventual overtime victory in the AFC championship. That
was just to get your attention. He is The Force in Denver's galaxy, and as
much as any Bronco he seems, at 26, to be at the Super Bowl  for a different
calling.
  He is meeting his destiny.
  Remember, this is the son of a football coach, a specimen, as they say,
6-feet-3, 212 pounds, big hands, arm like a slingshot. He has been  a
football star since his loose-leaf notebook days. A guy who in high school
threw a 75-yard touchdown pass, had it called back on a penalty, then did it
again on the next play. A guy who could have  been a baseball hero with the
Yankees, a guy with enough moxie to tell the Baltimore Colts to take a hike
after they drafted him, and who, from his first day in Denver, faced about the
same expectations  as the animals had of Noah.
  So why let a little thing like Super Bowl pressure get him down? Why,
indeed? The truth is, he has wandered through this whole weird week with
squinting eyes that seem  slightly amused, and a slow loping walk that is the
kinetic of all high school football players --  all the cool ones anyhow --  a
sort of heel-to-toe, hands-dug-in-your-pockets thing.
  No problem.
  "Aren't you sick of all the media attention by now?" he was asked.
  "No, I told myself I was going to enjoy this week. It's been pretty
enjoyable so far."
  "Are you bothered by your team being  nine-point underdogs?"
  "Nah, it takes all the pressure off of us. We can just go out there and cut
loose. Everybody expects us to lose anyhow."
  "Are you nervous?"
  "Not yet."
  He fields  the questions  in a slouch, like a kid who needs to be told to
get his feet off the table. Parts of John Elway seem to have never grown up.
The overbite, the yuk-yuk laugh. Just as well, for he  plays  a kid's game
like a kid, to the point of spookiness. During that 98-yard  drive against
Cleveland -- with the country watching and a potential $36,000 per Bronco
riding on it -- his teammates recall  that he smiled in the huddle between
plays.
  Smiling? 
  Yes. For it seems that it has never been for John Elway to live up to
greatness, but rather for him to come down to it. "When he first started  out
he was too pumped up," said his coach, Dan Reeves.  "He'd want to win so bad
he'd force things." Everyone knows Elway can heave a ball 80 yards in the air,
on target. His receivers have all worn  the "Elway Cross" -- a skin mark made
when the ball accidentally gets through their hands and hits them in the
chest.
  "Guy dislocated three of my fingers in one game," said Vance Johnson, the
Broncos'  fastest receiver. "And that was in warm- ups."
  Can he run? Can he read defenses? Good Lord. He is a football warehouse.
Need a part? He's got it, and he's using it.
  Only the intangibles now, the  leadership, the confidence, the amalgamation
of all that glorious talent that remains as he sleds down the learning curve.
  Don't bother with all the Broncos' records he already has set in his four
years for completions and passes and rushing -- which he does as effectively
as many halfbacks in the league. "The big difference with him now is he is
relaxed out there," Reeves said.
  How far has  he come? Early in his career he was in a two- minute drill
against San Diego when, in his excitement, he lined up behind the guard
instead of the center.
  He reached down for the hike. "What are you  doing?" asked the startled
guard.
  "Oops," Elway said.
  Oops.
  Super Bowl.
  That's how far he has come.
  So, how's he doing in the week of his life? Just fine so far. The papers
have cast  the Giants' Phil Simms as the "lunch-pail" quarterback and Elway as
the "executive" version.
  "I got a kick out of reading that," Elway said, "because I consider myself
very ordinary."
  Swell.  Nobody else does. As far as the press and the fans are concerned,
the other Giants and Broncos arrived by airplane. Elway rode in on Pegasus.
  But so much for everyone else. Elway, his way. He has handled the
merry-go-round here as steadily as a porcelain bronco. The rest of us are
getting dizzy from the ride. He is the ride.
  "See you guys tomorrow," he said after 30 minutes of non-stop
press-conference  questions. He gets six steps into that lazy athletic gait,
and, boom, those three Japanese TV reporters encircle him. Roll tape. Action.
Ask about Japan. Ask about his ankle. Ask about anything.
  "What . . . is . . . game . . . point?"
  "The point spread?"
  "Game point."
  "You mean the points?"
  "He mean key point."
  "The . . . I'm sorry, what?"
  "Key point."
  "Yes. Key point  of game."
  "Oh, key point of game. OK. Uh, I'd say whoever makes less mistakes."
  "Yes?"
  "Yes."
  "How many touchdowns you make?"
  "How many?" He laughs. "I don't know. I'm hoping four  or five."
  "Yes?"
  "Yes."
  "Yes. And finally, do you have message for Japanese peep- pole?"
  The Japanese people. This is a question he has not heard 30 times yet. Rise
to the occasion, John.  Lead the way, John.
  "A message to Japan. . . . " he repeated. Got it. He lifted a warning
finger at the camera and looked dead into its glass eye. "Root for the Denver
Broncos this Sunday! . . .  
  Pause.
  Grin.
  " . . . the guys in white."
CUTLINE
The Broncos' hopes will be riding on John Elway's strong arm Sunday. "I figure
I have to play my part and so does everybody else," he  said.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
FOOTBALL;JOHN ELWAY;SUPER BOWL
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
