<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8701100875
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
870301
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, March 01, 1987
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1F
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1987, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
I'LL GO TO GREAT LENGTHS TO SET THE RECORD STRAIGHT
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
LAKELAND, Fla. -- Hold it. I can explain.

  Some of you may have noticed me missing from this space for the last few
weeks. Some of you may have been led to believe I was vacationing in South
Pacific  sunshine while you suffered at home in the snow and cold. Ha! You
fell for that? What will they think up next?

  The truth is much more complex. The truth is I was . . . on a mission. Yes.
In the interest  of new and more interesting sports stories I was attempting
to set the record for longest single journey to an exhibition baseball game.
  And I succeeded. Fifteen-thousand, four hundred and eighteen miles. Thank
you very much.
  Here is how I did it. It began when I went to Australia for the America's
Cup  races. Now, I should say right here I do not know a great deal about
yacht racing. Actually,  my boss made me go.  I told him I would rather stay
in Detroit and cover college hockey. But he insisted.
  "How long does an America's Cup last?" I asked, my voice choked with gloom.
  "About two  weeks," my boss said.
  "Then I can come home?"
  "Yes, then you can come home."
  Well,  as you now know, the America's Cup final was over in five days. The
problem was, it took me that long to  get over the jet lag. When I awoke,
nobody was racing. 
  "I must be early," I said. 
  And I sat down in a beach chair to wait.
  Six days later, I figured something was up.
The dreaded 47 passes 
  Finally I lifted my sunglasses and saw them loading the boats onto the
freighters. 
  "Are they ready to start?" I asked.
  "They're going home," someone said.
  Uh-oh. Bad news. And it was  now early February. Spring training was due to
start in a few weeks. I barely had enough time to fly home, rest up, and fly
down to Lakeland.
  And then, I had an idea.
  "Why stop?" I said. "I will  fly directly from Perth, Australia, to
Lakeland, Fla. Surely I will be the only person to ever have done that. My
boss will be proud of my conscientious attitude, and forget the whole
America's Cup business."
  It seemed like a good idea. And I sat back down in the beach chair to think
it over.
  Six days later, I figured I might as well go.
  Well. When I got on that plane I was filled with baseball excitement.  I was
so excited, when the flight attendant came by with the beverage cart, I
yelled, "Yo, bud! How about a hot dog and a beer!"
  She gave me a beer.
  It tasted great, and I had another, and by  the time we were over the
outback  I felt like a bleacher fan. And whenever the beverage cart came down
the aisle, I yelled for a hot dog and got a beer.
  The problem was -- as you may remember from  an earlier column -- the
beverage cart on the flights from Perth to America comes down the aisle
approximately 47 times.
  After a while, I was no longer yelling. I just nodded and raised my hand.
  And after a while I sort of just smiled.
  And after a while I merely curled my lip.
  "On holidays?" the flight attendant asked, opening another.
  "Glurplip," I said.
  The rest of my record-setting  journey is a bit of a blur. But somewhere I
was moved to the very back of the plane. It was not when I leaped over my seat
 and yelled "STEE-RIKE!" into the face of a middle-aged woman. Nor was it when
 I ran down the aisle and slid safely into the food tray.
  It may have been when I pulled back the cockpit curtain and screamed at the
pilot, "YOOOUUU'RE OUTTA THERE!"
  But I'm not sure.
The Tahiti  Tigers? Hmmm
  Anyhow, at some point they moved me, and having lost my bearings, I fell
asleep and the next thing I knew the plane was landing and I got off.
  "Funny," I said to the agent. "This  doesn't look like Lakeland."
  "It's not," she said.
  "Well, where are we?"
  "Tahiti."
  At which point I fainted dead away. Fortunately, someone had the good sense
to get me to a beach chair,  where I was able to think clearly.
  Six days later, I figured I might as well get back on the plane.
  And eventually, we reached Lakeland. Which is how I came to set the spring
training distance  record, 15,418 miles. And now I am here, on the job as
usual, in plenty of time for the first game of the exhibition season.
  So I hope you will discount those rumors about vacation, a word I loathe.
Really. That burns me up. In fact I almost flew back to Detroit to scold the
person who started that story, but I decided to wait down here in Florida
instead.
  In this beach chair. For at least  six days.
  Until I calm down.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
