<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8601180388
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
860424
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, April 24, 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>
AT 18,000 FEET, EVEN A CAST CAN'T KEEP GIBSON DOWN
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
This was where Kirk Gibson belonged. Up in the clouds, 18,000 feet high,
looking out through an airplane window at the land masses below.

  "That's Niagara Falls, I bet," he said, leaning over  for a better view.
"Yeah. And out there. See that shoreline? That's Lake Ontario. I'll betcha it
is."

  His eyes were alive, his voice had that high pitch to it -- he gets that
way when something interests  him -- and all told, it was a pretty happy
moment, except that his left leg was propped up against the bulkhead wall,
straight out, and his left foot was swallowed by a cast and a flesh-colored
bandage.  It was the size of a Thanksgiving turkey.  "Oooh," he would say
occasionally, when the ankle started throbbing. And then he'd close his eyes
for a second, he'd swallow, and then he'd look out the window  again and
identify Buffalo.
  He was flying home, back to Detroit. He was out of it. The night before he
had gone down trying to scurry back to first base in a game between the Tigers
and the Red Sox,  and his foot seemed to catch on the bag, and the rest of him
twisted horribly, and a second later he was writhing in pain and cameras were
snapping. The star of the team. Hobbling off the field. Ugly.
  "You could hear the thing pop," he said, staring at his toes sticking out
of the cast in front of him. "The Red Sox's doctor came running out. Did you
see him? He said he could hear the ligaments pop  from the dugout."
  Gibson sighed. A middle-age woman across the aisle had been staring at him,
as had most of the people in the first-class cabin. The woman leaned over.
  "It was terrible," she  said, as if Gibson didn't know. "We were there last
night. We saw it."
  "Yep," said Gibson.
  "We saw it," the woman repeated.
Everybody saw it. Fans in the stadium watched from their seats. Fans at home
watched on TV. The radio broadcasted it. The late news reran it. Maybe it
shouldn't be such big stuff, but in a baseball-crazy town in April, it  is.
Everybody saw it.
  But nobody saw  this.
  Nobody saw Kirk Gibson, alone, slouched in  an airport chair, his injured
foot propped up on crutches, his hand over his eyes. This was early Wednesday
morning at Logan Airport in Boston,  and Gibson's plane was late by two hours.
  He tried to lose himself in a newspaper. But the ankle was throbbing. The
doctors said he'd be out three to six weeks  with a "severe sprain." An
examination  today will prove if that's all it really is.
  Gibson shifted in his seat. He'd been up most of the night. He didn't take
the painkillers. "I don't like codeine," he said. His blue sweatshirt dangled
loosely. He needed a shave. To his right was his briefcase. To his left was a
wheelchair.
  A wheelchair?
  It was an unsettling picture. Kirk Gibson in a wheelchair is like Superman
hailing a cab.  Better Gibson should be out in right field, chasing a line
drive, or at the plate, whacking the hell out of the ball. Leading the Tigers.
Slapping high-fives. Hitting home runs. He is 28. A wheelchair?  No.
  But this is the flip side of sports. And nobody saw it, except the people
at the airport, who mostly gaped and madeCC18p9 comments as he wheeled past.
  "You with a baseball team?" one old  man asked.
  "Yes," Gibson said.
  "Which one?" said the old man.
  A young woman brought up her 10-year-old son.
  "Mr. Gibson broke his foot," the woman said.
  "He did?" the kid said.
  "No, I sprained it," Gibson said.
  "Oh," the woman said.  "That's worse."
  It went on like this for the more than two hours. Autographs. Handshakes.
Quips. Autographs. Anyone who thinks celebrity  is some big thrill should sit
in an airport coffee shop with Kirk Gibson sometime. How many little girls did
he have to pinch? How many businessmen made small talk? This isn't his job.
His job is baseball,  battling pitchers and racing across the outfield.
  How much would he rather have been out at a ballpark, taking batting
practice? Instead of sitting there, listening to the same tired questions.
"How'd you do it?" "Is it bad?"
  Is it bad? The guy was in a wheelchair, with crutches across his lap.
Well. Could it be any other way for Kirk Gibson? Everything he does is
magnified. There is no  peace. When he hits two home runs on Opening Day, he
is virtually canonized. And when he tells some nagging fan to get lost,  it's
liable to end up in the gossip columns. The baseball field is Gibson's
sanctuary from all that. Only now, as he made his way onto the plane, left
crutch, right crutch, he knew the sanctuary had been taken away. Three  to six
weeks.
  "The next few days are really critical,"  he said, settling into his seat.
"I have to stay inactive. I'll go home. Try not to walk around too much.
Tomorrow's an off-day. Before this happened, I was planning to ride my horse."
  He wiggled  his bare toes. "I don't know. Maybe I can ride it anyhow. Maybe
I will."
  Ride a horse? With a sprained ankle?  Well. Such is the spirit of Gibson,
the same stuff that lets him smack a home run when  it's most needed, or tell
a stranger to bleep off without hesitation.
  "Will you go to the games while you're on the disabled list?" someone
asked.
  "Oh, yeah, I'll go to the park for treatment,"  he said. "If I can get a
seat where I can stretch out my leg I'll stay for the game. I'll be out
there."
  "The Tigers will miss you," someone said.
  "Well, yeah, but this happens," he said. "Now  we'll see the character of
the team."  "What will you do until you're well?" someone asked.
  He shrugged and opened a bag of salted peanuts. "I've got a lot of things
to read, you know? I'm about  a month behind in my business stuff. And I'm
studying for my pilot's license. I hope to buy a plane after the season. So
I'll study. I'll read the manual." 
  It seemed odd to think of Kirk Gibson  reading in April and May. Odd to
think the baseball season will unfold without him -- even for  three to six
weeks. But the whole injury was odd. Very odd. Everybody saw it.
  "I still can't figure  out what happened," Gibson said. "I spoke to my
wife, and she said, 'It was really bad. It was worse than when you got hit in
the mouth by that pitch. I wish I was there with you.' "
  He laughed  off her concern. And you can be sure if he could have laughed
this injury off, he would have. This is a guy who once played a college
football game with a separated shoulder and refused to be helped  off the
field when it happened because the other team was taunting him. 
  But Tuesday night in Fenway Park, he had to be helped off. By two people.
That's how you know it was bad. He let them help him off. Three to six weeks.
The words stung.
  As the plane soared over Massachusetts and New York, Gibson shifted the
angle of his leg. He was in pain.
  "Will there be a wheelchair waiting for  me in Detroit?" he asked a flight
attendant.
  "Do you have one of your own?" she said.
  "No," he said, laughing.  "I don't have my own wheelchair. I'm young. I'm
healthy."
  He paused for  a second.
  "Most of the time." 
Maybe it was the hour. Or the quiet hum of the plane engine. But for that
entire flight it was a different Kirk Gibson than what most people expect. A
reflective person. An easygoing person. Bad luck often brings out a sour side
of a man. But up there, tucked safely in the clouds, away from the phones and
the minicams, Kirk Gibson seemed, well, at peace. Bum  ankle and all. He told
stories: about surprising his wife's daughter with a horse for her birthday;
about listening to flight instruction tapes in his Sony Walkman; about the
baby he and his wife are expecting in September. He watched the window. He
identified four types of clouds. And Lake Huron. And Lake Erie. The skies
agree with him.
  Toward the end of the flight he was laughing, even at himself.  When a
stewardess came over with a Detroit newspaper and asked for his autograph, he
looked at the front page and found a photo of him writhing in pain. He thought
for a second, and then he wrote beside  the picture: "OUCH! Kirk Gibson."
  Nice.
  "Can't do anything about it," he said, when someone remarked on his
pleasant disposition. "The injury happened when I was playing hard. I can't be
sorry  about that. I'll be back soon enough. I'm a fast healer."
  At one point, as the plane descended, he was squirming from side to side,
the future pilot, talking loud enough for the whole cabin to hear.  "That's
St. Clair Shores," he said, pointing out one window, "And that's Belle Isle.
Right there. And over there, that's  . . . "
  He was in control again. A brief moment. Way up high. The passengers
smiled at their geography lesson.
  For a man who can barely walk, Kirk Gibson was taking things remarkably
in stride.
The plane landed. A wheelchair was waiting in the corridor that connects to
the terminal. Someone handed him his briefcase.
  "Thanks," he said.
  "No problem," came the answer.
  "No, really, ' he said. "Thanks a lot."
  Two flight attendants began to wheel him down  the corridor. From 20 feet
away you could see the first poking of a TV camera lens through the terminal
door. Then another. And another.
  "Here we go," one flight attendant said.
  "Oh, my," said  the other.
  Through the door they came, and it was insanity. A crowd three-deep of
photographers, reporters, TV people, onlookers. All of them pushing around
this man in a wheelchair, fighting for  a better angle. At first Gibson said
nothing. Then he said quietly, "Come on, let me get by."  Then he said it a
little louder. The swarm followed him, sticking like wet cotton. A TV man
asked how he  felt.
  "Fine, until you guys showed up," he said.
  And, you know, that may be the one comment the crowd will remember. An
ornery answer. And they'll return to their offices and tell a few people
who'll tell a few people. And the "annoyed athlete" side of Kirk Gibson will
be  rehashed. And they'll never know the other side.
  More's the pity. Because there is a lot there.
  Eventually the  crowd grew so that Gibson stopped his wheelchair, got on
his crutches and did some TV interviews, as the camera lights and the midday
sunshine combined to leave him half-blind as well as half-crippled.
  It is the price he pays for who he is. And he is paid well. But it was
hard, watching Gibson, not to think that he is better suited to 18,000 feet,
his thoughts on the clouds, his sight line nothing  but blue-and-white
carefree sky.
  Not today. Not for a while. For now it's rehab. It's waiting. It's
X-rays. It's a cast and a cast of thousands. And it's pretty clear the time
will pass slowly  for Kirk Gibson, back here on earth.
CUTLINE
Kirk Gibson
Tigers right fielder Kirk Gibson returns on crutches Wednesday at Metro
Airport.
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<DISCLAIMER>

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