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<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8701160994
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
870406
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, April 06, 1987
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color;Photo MARY SCHROEDER;Chart
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SPECIAL SECTION;Baseball '87;Tigers
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1987, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
IS THE SPARK STILL THERE?
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
Sparky Anderson used to play baseball with Buckwheat. That's right. The
Buckwheat. From "The Little Rascals."  In a Los Angeles playground, when they
were kids. I'm not making this up.
"He'd  come in a limo, right from the studio," Anderson says. "He brought
all the equipment and the balls. That's the only reason we let him play with
us. He was terrible."

  Can you picture the two of them,  Sparky and Buckwheat, charging from the
outfield for the same fly ball?
  "Outta my way!"
  "O-tay, Sparky.'
  "I got it! I got it!"
  "Ooo-tay!"
  Now, I ask you. Can a manager who had  this kind of start be thrown by
something as ordinary as another baseball season? Can a 53-year-old smoothy,
the son of a house painter, the grandson of a Norwegian house painter, a guy
who flunked fifth  grade, who once worked as a Rambler salesman, who was a
terribly average shortstop, whose hair turned white before his first manager's
job, who, in his rookie season as manager, guided the Reds to the  World
Series, who  snared four pennants and five division championships in nine
years -- then got fired -- got a new job, and became the first manager to win
championships in both leagues, who says things  like "I ain't never had no
good education" and "If you don't upchuck now and then, it's time to quit" and
who could finish under .500 for the next dozen years and will still rank third
on baseball's  all-time manager's win list -- come on. Can a guy like that be
thrown by anything anymore? 
  "Is The Spark Still There?" the title here reads. As if to say the last
two middle-of-the-pack finishes  for his Tigers might have siphoned the gas
from his tank. As if this is some sort of  crucial year for Mr. Sparky.
  Perhaps you think so. Here is what I think: I think about the night I
watched  Anderson pose for the photo that accompanies this piece -- the one
with all the fireworks going off behind him. It was cold and windy and they
couldn't get the fireworks all lit at once. So they had  to shoot it six
different times. Six sets of explosions. And Anderson wasn't allowed to move
or he'd mess up the picture.
  So there he was, on one knee, posing in the middle of a dark empty
ballfield,  while three prop guys tried to ignite the fireworks behind him.
Only the things kept going off in their faces so they were screaming and
rushing around and it was like guerrilla warfare because the fireworks  make
this loud hissing noise and they burn and the prop guys were yelling "LOOK
OUT!" and "RUN FOR IT!" And right in the middle of this, Anderson, whose
biggest worry was keeping a smile on his tired  cheeks, started singing his
laughter, you know, like "ha-ha-ha-HA-HA-HA- ha-ha-ha," oblivious to all the
chaos, all the smoke and the fire and the screams behind him. He was singing
to keep his smile.  And they got the shot.
  And when it was over, he got up, turned around, looked at the burnt-out
explosives, and the prop guys who were sprawled in the grass, and he shrugged
and trotted back to the  clubhouse.
  I decided, that night, that very little fazes Sparky Anderson anymore.
Why Sparky doesn't worry, in his own words, reason No. 1: "Gene Mauch don't
worry, Whitey Herzog don't worry, Chuck  Tanner don't worry, Tommy Lasorda
don't worry  . . . "
  Let me tell you how Sparky Anderson views this "critical" season. We
were sitting in his clubhouse office in Lakeland a few weeks ago, and  he was
leaning back behind his desk, pipe in hand, and suddenly, he sprang forward
and grabbed a piece of paper and a pen.
  "Do you know where the experts are picking us this season?" he asked, and
he wrote "5th" on the paper and slid it in front of me.
  "And do you know what the Las Vegas odds are against us?" he asked, and
he grabbed the paper back and wrote "18-1" on it then slid it in  front of me
again.
  "Now," he said, taking the paper back, "what if I finish here?"
  He wrote "4th" on the sheet. And again he slid it in front of me. Then
he folded his arms behind his head  and smiled.
  "Hell," he said, "I'm up for manager of the year."
  That is how Sparky views this season.
  Which is not to say he doesn't care. You could never say that if you knew
him. It  is to say that after 23 years of managing teams in Rock Hill and
Modesto and St. Petersburg and Asheville and Cincinnati and Detroit, Sparky
Anderson has come to some conclusions: "If we're a fifth-place  club, we'll
finish fifth. If we're a first-place club, we'll finish first. I ain't gonna
do nothing about it. I ain't gonna change us from a fifth- place club to a
first-place club.
  "Players win  and players lose it. Bleep. I was the same guy in '85 as I
was in '84. Whitey Herzog's the same guy in '86 as he was in '85. What
happened? The players didn't win it. That's what happened.
  "It's  very simple. If you've got a last-place club, you can send 25
managers in there and it'll still finish last. You can go through history and
prove that. Take Casey Stengel. He couldn't win with Brooklyn.  He couldn't
win with the Braves. Then he got the Yankees, and he could've gone to the
Bahamas after spring training. Everybody knows that."
  The Bahamas?
Why Sparky Anderson doesn't worry, in his  own words, reason No. 2: "I used to
call John Wooden, the UCLA basketball coach, and say, 'Hey, John. You got
Pepperdine on your schedule? Let's give the Pepperdine coach the night off.
You coach Pepperdine,  and I'll coach your team. I ain't never coached a
basketball team in my life. And you can have the point spread. Whatever it is.
Who are we kidding? How you gonna beat me? I got the best horses. The  best
horses win.' It's that simple."
  Now, OK. I hear you. If Sparky Anderson can't turn a fifth- place club
into a first-place club, if it's all up to the players, just what is it, you
ask, that  he does for a living? What difference does the manager make? It is
a legitimate question.
  In his autobiography, Bear Bryant, the famed Alabama football coach,
described his first meeting with a  thousand Texas Aggies this way:
  "I took off my coat and stomped on it.
  "Then I took off my tie and stomped on it.
  "Then, as I was walking up to the mike, I rolled up my sleeves."
  Now that kind of technique you can understand. That approach works in
football. It does not work in baseball. For one thing, you can't just rip off
your uniform and stomp on it. The damn things are too  tight.
  So what is it that Sparky does if his team finishes fifth? "Well, you can
be fifth one way and fifth another way," he explains. "Take a look at our
clubhouse. It's a professional atmosphere.  When the young players come in
here, they know immediately what it's going to be. If you're fifth place, but
you remain professionals, remain businesslike, eventually you're going to turn
things around.  Two or three young guys replace the older guys, then two or
three more, and then suddenly, you got a hell of a ballclub. 
  "That's what happened here. We had (Lance) Parrish and (Lou) Whitaker and
(Alan) Trammell and (Kirk) Gibson. All young kids. And they grew with the
system and all of a sudden -- wham! -- all four were ready, along with Jack
Morris and Dan Petry, and it all just fell together.  It just clicked.
  "The players, like I say, are gonna win it or lose it. What the manager
does is create the right mood. Create the system where the right players can
succeed. That simple. Hell,  my best season of managing, pure managing, was
1978. I got fired."
  You can buy this theory, or you can leave it. The problem, critics will
point out, is that the Tigers aren't sending in many  of those good young kids
Sparky refers to. It's mostly the same old kids, with a little less hair. This
season, Lance Parrish is gone. Kirk Gibson is hurt. And Detroit just completed
the worst spring  training record of any team in baseball. Yet Anderson
recently proclaimed this "the best spring we've ever had."
  But then, he is always doing that. Words don't give him much pause.
Remember, this  is the guy who predicted a championship when he arrived in
Detroit (which came true), and superstar status for Chris Pittaro (which did
not) and who always predicts the sun will come out tomorrow (which  it does,
though he really can't take credit for that).
  Because he juggles his lineup, because he says one thing, then
contradicts it the next day, because he always seems to find a silver lining
on even the dimmest of hopes, there are many who believe George Lee (Sparky)
Anderson is full of it. Here is what I believe. I believe he speaks from the
heart, he speaks spontaneously and optimistically  and with passion and with a
genuine love for the game and the people who play it. And sometimes, he is
full of it.
  But then, who isn't?
Why Sparky doesn't worry, in his own words, reason No. 3:  "You think I'm
gonna worry about if the Detroit Tigers are gonna fire me? God Almighty! Let
'em fire me. You know what happened the last time I got fired? I got twice as
much from the next club."
  There is a point in baseball where it's up to them, and a point where it
is up to you. Sparky Anderson -- now the 12th- winningest manager in baseball
history -- says he has reached the latter stage.  And he is probably right. 
  "I'd have to be a bleeping maniac to worry about losing my job," he says,
his voice tinged with anger. "I know my stature. I'm not gonna pretend I don't
know what I've  accomplished. 
  "Put it this way. We go to the winter meetings. I put all the major league
managers in a crowded room, scatter them around. How many of them are you
gonna recognize? Who'll be the most recognizable? Who do you think's got the
biggest crowd around him?
  "You think if I was fired the phone wouldn't be ringing? Let me ask you
this. Who won more games than anybody in the 1970s? The Cincinnati Reds. Who
won more games than anybody in the 1980s? The Yankees -- but you know who's
second? The Detroit Tigers. What more can I do for you? You're talking lunacy
here when you suggest  I should be worried about a job. If I'm worried about a
job, there's 24 other guys out there who might as well commit hari-kari."
  Which doesn't mean he can't be fired. On the contrary, he expects  it
sooner or later. (We should note that he did not expect it the one time it
happened before -- in 1978 with Cincinnati. The Reds had sent him on a winter
tour of Japan, used him for promotional purposes,  then let him go when he got
back. A guy who had won more games than any other manager that decade. He
remembers coming home and finding only his youngest son, Albert, in the house.
"Your daddy just got  fired," he told him. He has never forgotten that.)
  These days, Sparky, sufficiently realistic, employs what you might call
the Anderson Theory of Animosity: The longer you are anywhere, the more
animosity builds up. Eventually the animosity spreads within the organization.
Eventually it reaches the top. And eventually you are gone. "Has to happen,"
he says. "But I never worry about it. Never.  That's the truth."
  Which, again, does not imply that Sparky doesn't care. On the contrary, he
cares plenty -- but only about each game. "His intensity is the same now as it
was when he was a player,"  says George Scherger, who was Sparky's first
manager back in the early '50s and who, like Billy Consolo and other old-time
friends, Sparky always manages to take care of. "He hated to lose, even then.
He was crazy about it."
  It is true, Anderson's hands still shake when he comes in after the ninth
inning. He still vomits a half-dozen nights during the season from anxiety
("My wife laughs. She  says, 'I see you were at it again last night.' ") But
that is warfare. A mandatory element of baseball. Sparky says he will quit if
he ever loses those jitters. But they are not the same as worrying about a
job.
  "If I was fired from the Tigers," he says, "you know what would happen?
Jim Campbell would tell me, 'Go on home to Thousand Oaks. I'll see you next
week on the golf course.' That's  what would happen. Then I'd go home and wait
for the phone to ring."
Why Sparky doesn't worry, in his own words, reason No. 4: "You think Pete Rose
honestly ever cared who was managing him -- me or  Dave Bristol or Freddie
Hutchinson or any of those guys? For one minute you think he cared? Not for
one minute. Not for one second."
  So, is the spark still there? That is really some question. It's true
that  Anderson has turned more of the club over to his coaches in recent
springs. ("I'll be the bad guy soon enough," he says. "Spring's the only
chance I have to be the good guy.") But once  Opening Day arrives, Sparky is
back on center stage. He remains the team leader. Him. Not a player.
  Anderson wants to keep managing until he's 65 -- half for financial
reasons, half because, as  he puts it, "Jeez, what else would I do?" Yet
winning the big one can no longer mean the same thing now, not because he has
done it in both leagues, but because he has seen how quickly its glow
evaporates.  After his first World Series victory in 1975, Anderson expected
to be the toast of Cincinnati for the winter. Instead, he woke up on Monday
and football season was in full swing. He was back-page news.  Then no news.
  In those days, he used to race around the off-season dinner circuit.  He
has given up that chase. He rarely makes winter appearances anymore,
preferring to stay at home in California. When he does have to give a speech,
it takes him a week, he says, to think of an opening line. "In the summertime
I can rattle those things off the top of my head.
  "In the summer there are so many  people around, so many accolades, you
start to believe, hey, wait a minute, your opinion really means something. In
the winter, I'll be honest, I feel very inadequate. I feel incompetent. I
realize without being a baseball manager, nobody would ever pay any attention
to me. It's a lack of education.  No sense lying about bit. You take me out of
this uniform, the lack of education is apparent. At least  I understand it."
  "Understand what?" he was asked.
  "That without baseball, I don't have nothing. It don't need me, I need
it."
Why Sparky doesn't worry, in his own words, reason No. 5: "I got 24 players.
Every one of them has a fan club. Tommy Brookens has a fan club. Kirk Gibson
has a fan club. So every time I bench one of them, I lose some fans over here.
Every time I take one out of  the lineup, I lose some fans over here. The
longer I stay around the more I lose. That's the way it works."
  So here comes another baseball season. The Tigers are projected to be
average at best,  and Anderson, who once sold cars on Olympic Boulevard in Los
Angeles -- "I was excellent until it came to closing a sale" -- will put on
his full-scale salesman's smile and take charge. And let us not  forget a few
things before we paste him. He now has the longest tenure of any American
League manager working. He is the only guy besides Leo Durocher to win more
than 600 games with two different teams. Only once has a major league squad of
his finished below .500. There is a reason for this stuff.
  People in Detroit may be growing, well, used to him. Maybe tired of him.
Yet the delight in this  guy is that something new can surface any time. He is
the verbal equivalent of water above a sunken ship. We were talking once about
nothing special, and suddenly, out of the blue, he admitted that he  has never
liked people with money, and he has a hard time remembering rich people are
not necessarily bad people.
  "It's a terrible fault I have," he said softly, "but I feel so inferior
around them."
  And then someone walked in and his voice jumped three octaves and he was
chattering about curveballs as though the previous conversation never took
place.
  I don't know whether Sparky Anderson  is the best manager going. I will
tell you this. You don't find his players bad- mouthing him. You don't hear
whispers behind his back. You don't hear rumblings. Some would say that's
because anyone who rumbles will be gone. There is some truth to that.
  "A ballplayer who blames the manager for his problems is an a--," says
Anderson. "Why would I want to spend seven months around an a--?"
  That makes sense to me.
  So take him or leave him. Complain that he yanks pitchers too fast. That
he tinkers with the lineup. Is the Spark still there? Sure. Where else would
he go? Anderson has  reached that rare stage where the dugout is now his
privilege, not his prison. He can sit there, pipe in hand, talking baseball
and dishing out the philosophy like an army chef dishes out mashed potatoes.
First place? Fifth place? What, him worry?  This is a guy who played with
Buckwheat.
  "You know," he muses, "I asked Vin Scully once, 'What does success mean?'
He said, 'For the moment.' That's all  it means. No more. Some guys seem to
think one success should last them a lifetime. Shoot. Those guys don't last.
  "What does success mean? For the moment. That's the greatest piece of
philosophy  I ever heard. Yes, sir. That's what I believe. That, and one other
thing. 'Don't tell me, show me.' I love that philosophy, too. I believe it
with all my heart. 'Don't tell me, show me.' Oh yes."
  "Who said that?" he is asked. "Herzog? Stengel? Connie Mack?"
  "I seen it on a bumper sticker," he says.

Sparky Anderson's managerial record
YEAR  CLUB  RECORD, FINISH 
  PLAYOFFS    WORLD SERIES 
1970  Cincinnati Reds  102-60, 1st    W, 3-0 (Pittsburgh) L, 4-1
(Baltimore)
1971  Cincinnati Reds  79-83, tied 4th  
1972  Cincinnati Reds  95-59, 1st 
  W, 3-2 (Pittsburgh)  L, 4-3 (Oakland)
1973  Cincinnati Reds  99-63, 1st 
  L, 3-2 (New York)
1974  Cincinnati Reds  98-64, 2d  
1975  Cincinnati Reds  108-54, 1st 
  W, 3-0 (Pittsburgh)  W, 4-3 (Boston)
1976  Cincinnati Reds  102-60, 1st 
  W, 3-0 (Philadelphia W, 4-0 (New York)
1977  Cincinnati Reds  88-74, 2d  
1978  Cincinnati Reds  92-69, 2d  
1979  Detroit Tigers  56-50, 5th 
1980  Detroit Tigers  84-78, 5th  
1981  Detroit Tigers*  31-26, 4th 29-23, tied 2d 
1982  Detroit Tigers  83-79, 4th 
1983  Detroit Tigers  92-70, 2d  
1984  Detroit Tigers  104-58, 1st 
  W, 3-0 (Kansas City)  W, 4-1 (San Diego)
1985  Detroit Tigers  84-77, 3d  
1986  Detroit Tigers  87-75, 3d 
Totals      1411-1132 
  17-5      16-12 
* Strike season. 

Winningest managers
MANAGER    RECORD  PCT.
Connie Mack  3,776-4,025  .484
John McGraw  2,840-1,984  .589
Bucky Harris  2,159-2,219  .493
Joe McCarthy  2,126-1,335  .614
Walter Alston  2,040-1,613  .558
Leo Durocher  2,010-1,710  .540
 Casey Stengel  1,926-1,867  .508
Bill McKechnie  1,898-1,724  .524
Gene Mauch  1,826-1,950  .484
Ralph Houk  1,619-1,531  .514
Fred Clarke  1,602-1,179  .576
Sparky Anderson  1,513-1,122  .574
Clark Griffith  1,491-1,367  .522
Earl Weaver  1,480-1,060  .583
Dick Williams  1,470-1,334  .524 
Best percentages
MANAGER    RECORD  PCT. 
Joe McCarthy  2,126-1,335  .614
Fred Clarke  1,422-969  .595
Billy Southworth  1,064-729  .593
Frank Chance  932-640  .593
John McGraw  2,840-1984  .589
Earl Weaver  1,480-1060  .583
Al Lopez    1,422-1026  .581
Sparky Anderson  1,513-1122  .574 

CUTLINE
Tigers  skipper Sparky Anderson, directing traffic at spring training, always
has made it clear that there's room for only one leader in the Detroit
clubhouse.
Sparky Anderson hands back a glove after spring  training autograph.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
DTIGERS;BASEBALL;STATISTIC;SPARKY ANDERSON
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
