<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8601200816
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
860506
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Tuesday, May 06, 1986
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
STATE EDITION
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SEE ALSO METRO FINAL EDITION 1D
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1986, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
WORDS FAIL ENGLISH AS HE RETIRES
THE TOUGHEST PART WAS SAYING GOODBY
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
He sat in an office behind smoked glass windows. He wore a sports jacket
and a button-down shirt. No pads. No helmet. These were the final 60 minutes
of Doug English's football life. He was going  out as a civilian.
"You OK, big fella?" a front-office guy asked.

  "I'm OK," English said.
  "You mind waiting here until the press conference?"
  "I don't have any other plans," English  said.
  Nice guys finish last. Someone said that once. But that wasn't what was
burning inside Doug English now. Last would be fine. Last out of the pile.
Last to stagger off the field. Last to drop.  Last would be fine. It was going
out first that was killing him.
  But going he was, retiring at age 32. A neck injury had decided it. A
ruptured disc. He had missed the last six games of 1985, he  had gone under
the knife, and he had seen the doctor Sunday. Here was the verdict: Play and
you could end up crippled. Even now you're going to suffer from arthritis and
maybe some degenerative bone  problems.
  "The bottom line," English said, lowering his eyes, "was that he could not
pass me to play football."
  He choked on the words. This big man, this 6-foot-5, 258- pound lineman,
who  had taken elbows and knees and helmets in the face for 19 years,
including high school and college. One sentence cut him down. You want to kill
a football player? Tell him you can't pass him to play.
  "When I heard the news," he said, "I said to myself, 'Well, let's push
it. Let's beg. Let's try and talk these guys into something to let me keep
playing.' "
  He paused. "But the doctors can't  do that. They have to live with
themselves. They don't want to go to some alumni meeting 10 years from now
and see what I've become."
  He crossed his legs. Then he uncrossed them. He rubbed his hands over his
face. The minutes passed. Through the office windows you could see the first
TV trucks arriving, and the camera crews heading up to the third floor.
  Do you realize," he asked suddenly,  "that outside of my parents, I've been
more involved with this team than anything in my whole life?"
  He sighed. These are the discoveries you suddenly make. All the time he
was out there, 11 years  with the Lions, slamming into linemen, earning four
trips to the Pro Bowl, rolling in the melted butter of glory, he never stopped
to consider the time. Now he was counting it up. And down. Sixty minutes.
Fifty. Forty. Thirty. 
  Fate was stealing him, piece by piece. It had taken his mobility. Then his
uniform. Now it was after his name.
  "It's me," he said of football. "It's my identity."
  Maybe it would be easier if someone had speared him. If some player had
done the dirty deed. Then he could focus the anger, blame somebody. But no, he
said. It happened sometime during a game against  Chicago last year, in a
frozen wet Soldier  Field, and all of a sudden he felt a tingling in his hands
and fingers. Parts of him went numb. Then he fell down a few times for no
apparent reason. He stayed  in the game until the fourth quarter, and no one
will ever know how much damage that did.
  "Why didn't you come out?" someone asked.
  "I didn't want to abandon ship," he said. "I hate coming out of a game
when we're losing. It's too easy. You see a lot of guys doing it. But the only
fights I've ever had with my coaches were over coming out of a game too soon."
  He was coming out too  soon again. This time there was nobody to argue
with.
  A PR man poked in again. He laid out the plan. A photographer wanted a
quick shot out on the field. And then, the press conference.
  "All  set?" the PR man asked.
  "Let's go," English said.
  It would be easy to call Doug English a nice guy because he co-operated
with reporters, laughed with them, spoke candidly with them. But  you  don't
need to read newspapers for good reviews on this man.
  Try the kid with a brain tumor whom he befriended in the hospital last
year. English was on the phone with the kid's mother Monday morning  -- just
to pass along his retirement news first-hand. Try the secretaries in the
Lions' offices, who light up whenever he comes into the office. Try the guys
sweeping up the Silverdome. Try the Muscular  Dystrophy Association. Try
anyone on the streets of Detroit.
  "Whadya think about Doug English?" you say.
  "Great guy," they say. And they've never met him.
  The coaches like him. His teammates  like him. Oh, maybe a few resented
the attention he got, considering he was a lineman. But more were likely to
chow down with him in the unofficial Thursday Night Club, in which players
gathered at an  area restaurant to blow off some steam before zeroing in on
Sunday's game.
  Thursday nights. He would miss those.
  "It's the players," he'd said, when asked what hurt the most about
leaving.  "Guys like Keith Dorney (his roommate) and Bill Gay and all of them.
You live with these guys, fight with them, cry with them.
  "I mean, what's a sport anyway? It's a billion-dollar business of watching
 people play a game that doesn't mean nothing. So it's the people that count.
I can't say how much it hurts to be leaving them."
  Back in 1980 he had left them voluntarily. Took a year off. He was
disillusioned, depressed, tired of 2-14 seasons and taping his legs from thigh
to ankle every day. But a year away renewed him. He returned with a
daydreamer's desire never to wake up outside of football  again.
  Now, for the last time, he was walking down the field tunnel as a Detroit
Lion.
  He passed a clean-up crew and stopped to shake hands with one of the
custodians. 
  "Doug English!  How you doin'?" the custodian said.
  "OK," English said. "I'm, uh, fixing to hang it up in a few minutes. Gonna
call it quits."
  The custodian just stared, forgetting to remove the smile from  his face.
"Nawww. Uh-uh," he said.
  "Afraid so," English said quietly.
  The Silverdome was hauntingly still. The photographer posed English in the
middle of the field. Across the way were a dozen rookies, tossing a football.
Some of them knew of the guy in the sports jacket and button-down shirt. Some
didn't. They just stared, then went back to their catch.
  Fifteen minutes left in the career.  English walked through the carpeted
corridors of the Lions' offices, picking up followers like the Pied Piper. A
few secretaries fell into line behind him. A few front-office people. Coach
Darryl Rogers. General manager Russ Thomas. The PR staff.  They all squeezed
into the elevator. English towered above everyone. 
  "Kind of tight in here," he said.
  Everybody laughed.
  The door opened.  The ensemble walked down the otherwise deserted hallway.
Several Lions players -- who had just finished lunch -- were coming the other
way. Demetrious Johnson saw English and held open his arms, like  he was a
relative just arriving from a long flight.
  "Heyyyy," Johnson said, hugging him.
  "Heyyyyy," said English, hugging back.
  That was better than words. English broke away finally and walked on, on
through the press lounge where the other ball players were eating. At the
front table sat William Gay, one of his closest buddies. They exchanged
glances. Gay knew where English was going.
  "Just tell 'em you got tired of it," Gay yelled after him.
  "Yeah," said English, forcing a laugh.
  On they marched. Got within five feet of the door. Inside were the
microphones, the notepads.  The finish line. The final gun. And suddenly Doug
English, who never wanted to come out of the game, disappeared behind the
nearest door and closed it behind him.
  No one followed him. No one said  anything. Through the narrow glass pane
you could see Doug English wiping the tears from his eyes and trying to catch
his breath.
  Spring should never have to come for football players. Better to  leave
them in the cold, shivering and bleeding on the sidelines, still a part of the
game they love. But no. The seasons change, the circle goes around, and
doctors examine the injured and they decide  who to pass. And sometimes the
news is dreadful.
  No one will be around when Doug English is 50 and aching with the simplest
of movements. No one will know how many more years he could have played  if
not for Chicago. No one will know how he feels today, waking up without a
Detroit Lions locker to call his own.
  All you have is what you see. And here is what you saw. Darryl Rogers
introduced  him, he opened with a joke, and then Doug English swallowed hard.
  "With the exception of my family . . . and the Lord . . ."
  Somewhere a distant gun was fired. Time had expired. No more football.  No
more Thursdays. Nevermore.
  " . . . this has been the best thing in my life . . . "
  The cameras clicked. The microphone meters jumped. Doug English, dressed
in a sports jacket and button-down  shirt, was out of it. He was over. He was
saying goodby, ending a career. And he was trashing an old expression.
  Sometimes, nice guys finish first. And it hurts a lot more.
CUTLINE
The Lions'  Doug English sits on the Silverdome field before announcing his
retirement Monday.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
DLIONS;FOOTBALL;RETIREMENT;DOUG ENGLISH;Lions
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
