<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8801170036
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
880412
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Tuesday, April 12, 1988
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SEE ALSO METRO EDITION PAGE 1D
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1988, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
KEEP THOSE OCTOPUSES OUT OF THE BULLPEN
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
Every now and then, a terrible problem arises which I must help solve.
Usually it involves my dog and the carpet. But today, I am called upon for an
even nobler cause. I am here to prevent embarrassment.  I am here to prevent
grown men from walking into Joe Louis Arena carrying baseball gloves. I am
here to prevent grown women from entering Tiger Stadium with octopus in their
bags.
The problem, of  course, is baseball and hockey. Same day. Same town. How
confusing! The Tigers open their home season this afternoon; the Red Wings
continue their playoffs this evening. Everybody, it seems, will be  watching
one game or the other. But can you be sure you're in the right building? I
mean, how embarrassing. They set up a power play, you yell "SLIDE!"

  We see the problem.
  I have the solution.
  And here it is.
HOW TO TELL YOUR HOCKEY TEAM FROM YOUR BASEBALL TEAM: 41 SUREFIRE SIGNS
  1. Teeth
  2. That is, hockey teeth come out. Baseball teeth stay in. Usually. Unless
the guy's been  chewing a lot of tobacco.
  3. Tobacco.
  4. Baseball players wear skin-tight uniforms;  A hockey uniform, on the
other hand, should be loose enough to hide a Doberman pinscher inside.
  5.  Hat tricks. In hockey, they mean three goals. In baseball, they mean
Vaseline under the brim.
  6. Little Caesars at baseball, Domino's at--
  7. No. Wait.
  8. The names Jean, Gilbert and Michel.  You won't find many baseball
players answering to those.
  9. Hockey players need help carrying their equipment. Baseball players
need help carrying their wallets.
  10. Domino's at hockey, Little  Caesars at--
  11. No. Wait.
Teeth spell the difference
  12. A hockey goalie gets more saves in one night than a relief pitcher
gets in a year. Unless the pitcher is Lee Smith. Or the goalie is  Sonny
Eliot.
  13. When a baseball player says "knock one out" he is referring to his
teammate hitting a home run. 
  14. When a hockey player says "knock one out" he is referring to an
opponent's  teeth.
  15. Resin bags. None in hockey.
  16. Dirt. None in hockey. If a hockey player has a dirt stain, he's been
skating in the parking lot.
  17. The names Pierre, Henri, and Ulf.
  18.  Not too many baseball players there, either.
  19. Interviews. Hockey players like to do interviews, even in-between
periods. Baseball players like to do interviews the first day they arrive from
 the minors; after that, they think every reporter has worms.
  20. Baseball umpires don't skate.
  21. Hockey referees don't holler.
  22. Hockey players come from cute little Canadian towns, such as Moose Jaw
and Medicine Hat. Baseball players come from Steubenville, Ohio.
  23. Even the Toronto Blue Jays.
  24. After a big game, hockey players call their moms and dads. Baseball
players  call their agents.
  25. Dominos at  . . . hockey? No. Baseball?
  26. Damn.
Baseball is a spittin' image
  27. In baseball, the phrase "check swing" means the batter did not go all
the way  around on a pitch. In hockey, "check swing" means Petr Klima just
took a shot.
  28. No laces on a puck.
  29. When you ask a hockey coach who will win tonight's game, he says:
"Well, da Maple  Leaf are a fine hockey club, and we're gonna put da puck in
da net and we tink we're gonna win and den my boys are gonna pound a few back
home tonight, for sure, eh?"
  30. You ask a baseball manager  who will win tonight's game, he says:
"(spit) What do I look like? A bleeping genie? (spit)"
  31. The names Willie, Pedro, Mookie. 
  32. No hockey players there.
  33. Baseball players scratch  themselves more.
  34. Hockey has the penalty box, a place where the player must sit quietly
and be huimiliated.
  35. In baseball, that's an arbitration hearing.
  36. HARRR-ROOOLLLD! 
  37. (Only in hockey).
  38. In baseball, when one player tells another "nice hit" he is referring
to a double down the right field line. In hockey, "nice hit"  means somebody
is lying on the ice  with a busted face.
  39. Hockey players don't write expose books.
  40. Did we mention teeth? We did?
  41. OK. We're done.
  And there you have it.  A pocket guide. You should be safe now.  Go and
enjoy your favorite sport, without embarrassment. 
  Just one more thing. Important safety tip. When a player hits one out at
at a baseball game, you should stick your glove high in the air  and try like
mad to catch that magical souvenir.
  And if a hockey player hits one out? 
  Duck.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>

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