<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8601160273
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
860411
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, April 11, 1986
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1986, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
WITHOUT HIS FRAYED FRIEND, LEMON FEELS LOST
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
The glove was gone. It was just gone. Everything else happening around Chet
Lemon, all the players shaking hands and welcoming each other back, it didn't
matter. Because the glove was gone.

  "Have  you seen it?" he asked.

  The equipment man said no.
  "I thought I left it here," he said.
  The equipment man said no.
  Every spring the players return, every spring Lemon gets his glove.  The
glove. The Rawlings Fastback Model with the picture of the cow in the pocket
that says, "Heart of the Hide."  The glove with the frayed strings and the
leather that had turned white. The natty,  smelly old glove. The glove they
wrote stories about. The glove he's been using in center field, what? Nine
years? Ten? The Rawlings Fastback Model. With the picture of the cow.
  "It was like a plumber's  tools," he said. It was his glove. Every year
the manufacturers sent him four new, recently oiled models. And he just gave
them away.
  "My glove is magic," he said.
  And now the glove was gone.
  They looked for it. They couldn't find it. Did someone take it? Did Lemon
lose it? No one knew. This was all anyone knew. The glove was gone.
  "I was sure I left it here (at Tiger Stadium)," he  said. "That's what I
always do, because if I take it home, I might lose it, or forget to pack it.
Then they bring it down to spring training. But this year it wasn't there. And
I got back up here and  it isn't here. I can't believe it's gone."
  How many dives? How many shoestring catches? How many collisions with the
walls were in that glove? The best. The worst. Wherever he went in the
outfield, it went with him. Nine years? Ten? How many dives?
  "Hey, Hondo. Tell him about my old glove, man," Lemon yelled to teammate
Larry Herndon. "Hondo asks me how I make those catches, man, and I say  I just
wave that glove out there and the ball goes fffffttttt!" -- he smacks his hand
-- "right into the glove."
  "Yep," said Herndon, smiling."Fffffffffft!"
  "Yep," said Lemon, nodding. 
  "Ball just jumped in," Herndon said.
  "Ffffffffft!" Lemon repeated.
  He talked about it like an old friend. Like an old drinking buddy. They
had been in Chicago. And New York, and Milwaukee. They had fallen down steps
together. Sang the blues together. Walked each other home. They had been to a
World Series. How many dives?
  "It was a nasty old thing," he said. "People were always telling  me to
get rid of it. They were afraid to stick their hands in it. But it was my
glove. Only one I wanted."
  He was holding a new glove now. A substitute. A new Rawlings Fastback with
the picture  of the cow in the pocket. The model has been discontinued. But
the Rawlings people found one lying around their warehouses. 
  The knuckles on his right hand were swollen from slapping his fist into
the new pocket, trying to wear it in. Over and over. Punch, punch. How much
did he miss the old glove? That's how much. Four swollen knuckles.
  "It still ain't ready yet," Lemon said, looking at  the stranger on his
hand. "I've been working on it. I told my wife to put it in the driveway and
run over it a couple of times, and then throw it in the dirt, and then maybe
it'll look like the old one."
  He laughed, then sighed. "But it won't feel like it."
  You hear of players who won't let you touch their bats. Or polish their
shoes. Or pitchers who have to wear the same T- shirt when they start  a game.
Equipment and performance are often tied together by heartstrings. Especially
in baseball.
  "The first day with a new glove was terrible, man," Lemon said. "I didn't
feel right out there."
  He looked at his new partner. "This is gonna take time," he said. "Just
lots of time."
  Maybe, Lemon said, the old one will show up again. Maybe it's in the
stadium somewhere. Or behind some  box or in a back room. Maybe someone will
return it. The Rawlings Fastback Model. With the frayed strings and the skinny
leather and the picture of the cow in the pocket, although you can't even see
the cow anymore.
  "Sad," someone said.
  "Like a plumber's tools," he repeated.
  Life is a series of involvements. And somewhere in between the teddy bear
and the mortgage there is the glove.  Man and his glove. The more time
together, the stronger the attachment. You can't explain it to non-glove
people. You can just slap your fist into the pocket.  Chet Lemon was
slapping. And he stopped for a second. He looked at the glove, as if listening
for familiar music. But there was no fffffffft!
  "It won't be the same, will it?" someone asked him.
  "It won't be the same," he said.
CUTLINE
  Chet Lemon poses with his "magic" glove (left, in 1984) and the unwanted
substitute.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN
</KEYWORDS>
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