<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8701120119
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
870308
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, March 08, 1987
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo MARY SCHROEDER;Associated Press;Chart
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1987, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
IT'S BEEN NICE WORKING WITH YOU
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
LAKELAND, Fla. -- When will they write the last Alan Trammell/Lou Whitaker
story? Four years from now? Five? Ten? And what will it say? Probably some
syrupy prose about the longest- running keystone  combo in baseball, Trammell,
the boyish California shortstop, Whitaker, the brooding-but-gifted second
baseman, and what great partners they were on the field and off the field and
how sad it is to see  them breaking up and walking into the sunset arm in arm
and . . . 

  Well. OK. What's baseball without a little schmaltz? So that's what the
story will say. Here is what it should say. It should say  what the two
players themselves will say -- at least what they will likely say -- when the
moment comes to say goodby. Which is this:

  "Nice working with you."
  "See ya."
  Now don't get me wrong.  They are indeed a magical duo, Trammell and
Whitaker. What's that scoreboard phrase they flash at Tiger Stadium? "Tram To
Lou For Two!"  Yes. Why not? Their movement on the crack of a bat is beautiful
 fury, a sort of Mexican hat dance around second base in which singles die and
come back as double plays.
  For 10 seasons now, Trammell and Whitaker have been in glorious sync, the
same positions,  the same infield, the same Tigers uniforms. And when they
begin the 1987 campaign for real next month, they will be in the history books
as well -- the longest-running shortstop-second base act ever.  And they still
perform as if set to music.
  But when the game ends, the music ends. And this may surprise. Nice working
with you. For the off-field Trammell/ Whitaker relationship is not a
movie-of-the-week.
  "Have you ever had Lou and his family to your house for dinner?" Trammell
was asked Thursday after a spring workout.
  "No," he said, mulling it over, "I guess we haven't."
  "Well, has he ever  had you and your family over for dinner?"
  "Nope. Never has."
  "How often do you and Trammell talk in the off-season?" someone later asked
Whitaker.
  "We don't, really," he said.
  "Isn't  that kind of strange, for all the time you put in together?"
  "Shoot," he said, grinning. "It's a business."
Now, this is true. It is a business. So are the movies. And that same curious
discovery  that Fred and Ginger  dance that way only for the cameras is at
work here with these two. On the baseball stage, Trammell and Whitaker could
not be any closer without wearing each other's clothes. They  began their pro
careers with the same  minor league team. They were called up by the Tigers on
the same day, and played in the same first game. They share adjacent
positions, adjacent lockers, the same agent, for a while they shared the same
room.  They even did a guest-starring bit together on the "Magnum P.I." TV
series.
  And yet they are curiously distant. The other day someone suggested to
Trammell  that for all they had been through, he and Whitaker were little more
than two guys at the office whose desks had been next to one another for 10
years.
  "Exactly!" Trammell said, grinning. "Exactly!  I couldn't have said it
better. You described it perfectly."
  This, of course, is vintage Trammell. What time is it? It's enthusiasm
time! He is fan and player rolled into one body, a gimme-the-ball  guy, a guy
who ended his first major league radio interview by yelling  "Go Rebels!" -- a
message to his minor league buddies. He may have less pure baseball ability
than Whitaker -- "I think so, anyhow,"  he said -- yet his passion seems to
run twice as deep.
  Whitaker, meanwhile, is an enigmatic mix, a warm smile on a cool soul,
reluctant to talk, resistant to team spirit. His passions run deep also  --
deep inside. There are few who claim to know him well (Chet Lemon, the center
fielder who, like Whitaker, is a Jehovah's Witness, is an exception) and  yet
he is a natural, an All-Star, the best at  his position today, and likely the
best to ever wear a Tigers uniform.
  "Like I said, it's a business," Whitaker answered, when asked about the
closeness between him and his shortstop. "I'm sure a lot of people in big
business, they just do their job and that's all that matters.
  "Tram and I don't do the same thing off the field. Maybe they'll be a team
get-together and I'll show up for a few minutes, but I'm not gonna sit in the
room and party all night. I don't do that. I never did, not when I met Tram,
not before, not after."
  There was, however, a time when they were closer. In fact, the more years
pass, the further they seem to drift. In their early days of Instructional
League ball, Trammell and Whitaker would pal around with Lance Parrish and
Dave Rozema. Trammell remembers a  pellet gun Parrish used to have, and how
they'd beat the boredom by firing at the Florida lizards. "One shot apiece,"
he said, laughing.
  "In those days Lou and I talked a lot, mostly about baseball. Then, of
course, we roomed together our first four years. The routine was pretty
similar. We'd get up, go get something to eat. I'd read the newspaper and tell
Lou who was doing what and where. He'd  listen, but he wouldn't say much."
  Added Whitaker: "Maybe once or twice we talked about something personal.
But I can't remember it."
  Trammell married first. He began to grow closer to other Tigers players,
most notably infielder Tom Brookens and his wife, Christa. Then Whitaker
married. The two stopped rooming together. In the winter of 1983, Whitaker
embraced his new religion.
  "When  we came back in 1984, instead of just talking shop the first thing
he said was, 'Did you know I was a Jehovah's Witness now?' " Trammell
recalled. "I said, 'No, I didn't.' He told me about it.
  "He  changed his life, basically. He used to smoke cigarets, he stopped
doing that. We used to have a beer together after the games. Now he almost
never drinks.
  "I would say the religion thing put a bit  of distance between us, no
question. But I don't care what someone does off the field. That's his
business."
  These days, the pair will shake hands at the end of each season, and
generally not speak  to each other until they return for spring training. From
April to October they will dress in the clubhouse, side by side, harmoniously
-- "I can't recall one serious fight with him in 10 years," Trammell  said --
and yet very few words will be exchanged. On plane trips, Whitaker will
usually sit up front with Lemon, while Trammell is in the back playing cards.
  "Do you miss not being closer?" Trammell  was asked. "Would you rather you
and he talked more?"
  "Not really," he said, shaking his head, "because Lou's been that way since
the day I met him. It's not my job to go and change somebody. He's  always
been quiet. Always."
  The next question, of course, is what difference does it make? None. At
least none on the field. It is as if all the two don't know about each other's
regular life is  made up for by a sixth sense on the diamond. They are so well
choreographed, neither can remember the last time the other got in his way.
  "That's one of the little things you get by working together so much,"
Whitaker explained. "You don't see us stepping on each other, or bumping into
each other. Like when Tram is directly behind second base, making a throw, I'm
never blocking his way. Or if he's  gonna make the play himself, I'm never in
the way of the bag."
  Trammell nodded at Whitaker's explanations. He admits he barely looks at
his partner anymore before throwing to him. "It's a little  careless, I guess.
But I just know where he's gonna be."
  Their double plays are a tribute to economy of movement. A stop, a flip, a
rocket to first. How many, after all, have they practiced? Maybe  10,000?
20,000?  So tuned is each to their private frequency that both confess a need
to wake up when a substitute partner is out there. "It's not the same," said
Trammell.
  How could it be? It's  a wonder these two aren't fused at the hip. Look at
these numbers: .281 and .281. That's Trammell's career batting average -- and
Whitaker's career batting average. How about these? Career games played:
Trammell 1,289, Whitaker 1,283. Career hits: Trammell 1,300, Whitaker 1,320.
Career RBIs: Trammell 504, Whitaker 522.
  Their service in the major leagues is  identical. Their team history is
identical,  from the lowest level of the minors. Their numbers are only one
digit apart (Whitaker wears "1," Trammell "3") and that is only because Phil
Mankowski was wearing No. 2 when they showed up -- and now,  in honor of
Charlie Gehringer, that number is retired.
  No wonder they work together like the insides of a German clock. And, when
cajoled, each will admit that yes, they probably are the best tandem  out
there today. They have earned it. And they are still young (both 29). And who
knows what lies ahead? How many more double plays, more baseball dances, more
highlight films?
  And yet . . . 
  "What if Alan Trammell had never been around?" Whitaker was asked.
"Wouldn't your career have been different?"
  "Nuh-uh," he said, shrugging, pointing to the shortstop's locker. "The next
guy would  be right there, where he is. And I would be here. That's all.
  "And it's the same for Tram."
  So here comes history, the 1987 baseball season. And Tiger Stadium fans
should be aware of  what they  are getting a chance to watch, even if it's not
movie-of-the-week material.
  "It's true," Trammell said, rubbing a fist though his hair, "we've kinda
separated over the years, Lou and I. We very seldom  do anything together off
the field. But there's a special feeling  when we get on the field. It's like
eye contact. We don't even talk. We just look at each other. And that
relationship, well, there  aren't too many of those around. . . . "
  On they go. When will they write the last Trammell/Whitaker story? What
will it say? That they parted in a sudden splash of emotion? Or that they
simply cleaned  out their desks and shook hands? Nice working with you.
  Who knows?
  "Will you guys keep up?" Trammell was asked. "When this is all over, will
you stay in touch?"
  "Oh . . . uh, yes, I think  we will, I think I will," he said. "At least
once or twice a year. . . . I don't know. I would think so. . . . "
  "What do you think?" Whitaker was asked. "Will you guys keep up?"
  He looked at  his knees, then his glove.
  "That's a tough question." 

Close  on field
    Trammell  Whitaker
Age    29    29
Height  6-0   5-11
Weight  170    160
Started  Bristol,  Bristol,
with Tigers  1976  1975
Called up  Sept. 1977  Sept. 1977
First game  Sept. 9  Sept. 9
with Tigers  vs. Boston  vs. Boston
Games    1,289  1,283
At-bats  4,631  4,705
Runs    702   724
Hits    1,300  1,320
Doubles  214   202
Triples  42    49
Homers  90    93
RBIs    504    522
 Average  .281   .281
CUTLINE
Lou Whitaker: "You don't see us stepping on each other, or bumping into each
other. Like when Tram is directly behind second base, making a throw, I'm
never blocking his way. Or if he's gonna make the play himself, I'm never in
the way of the bag."
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN;LOU WHITAKER;ALAN TRAMMELL
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
