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<UID>
8901220503
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
890526
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, May 26, 1989
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
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<ILLUSTRATION>

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<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1989, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
WE EXPECT TOO MUCH FROM MORRIS, SPARKY
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<BODY>
Somewhere along the line, we forget that they are human. We figure they will
be there forever, or until they willingly retire to the broadcast booth or the
Hall of Fame. Whatever takes them out, it  will be something more than pain or
exhaustion, right? That's for us common folk.

  If you had to pick two faces you would most expect to see on a late spring
day inside the Tigers' clubhouse, whose would they be? 1) Sparky Anderson --
at 55, arguably baseball's finest manager, and 2) Jack Morris, 34, the  star
attraction pitcher, the longest-tenured Tiger.

  Sparky. Jack. The underlings might  come and go, but the manager and the
staff ace will remain, right? Haven't they always been there? Yet  Thursday,
Morris was placed on the disabled list -- for the first time in his career --
a forced vacation for at least three weeks; and Anderson, even as his team
battled the Cleveland Indians, was far away, on some quiet street in
California, under doctor's orders, trying to recuperate from severe
exhaustion.
  "The day Sparky went away was really weird," said relief pitcher Mike
Henneman, recalling last Friday. "Usually, you can smell his pipe smoke from
the office. He's always in there by the time I come in. That day, he wasn't.
No pipe smoke. Nothing. I kept looking at the time: 4:30, 4:45, 5 o'clock.
Still nobody in that office. Finally, I said to myself, 'Something's up. He's
never  not here.' "
  He's never not here. Isn't that the magic of baseball? Its timelessness?
But while the sport may be immortal, the men who create it are not. And
sometimes, sadly, they don't want to admit it.
The truth about living a lie
  We are fond of the expression, "the sky's the limit." It symbolizes the
American spirit: Do it all, experience it all, have it all. Nice idea. But
never true. We push, we push, and if we are in the limelight, with people
slapping our backs, egging us on, wooing, cheering, convincing us we are
indeed special, well, we push even harder.
  For Sparky  Anderson, that meant more than just managing a baseball team.
It meant attending every charity benefit, every speech, every cause that came
to him like a lost puppy. It also meant swallowing every loss,  every bullpen
collapse, every strikeout  as the Tigers fell to last place. And finally, it
meant the drain of putting on a lie -- some days bigger than others, but still
a lie -- a too-happy face that  said, "Why worry? Either way, come October,
I'll be at home, playing with my grandchildren."
  Now he is at home, all right, but it is not October, and he was sent there
by doctors who saw a man deflated  by his own effort. Sparky was noble in some
ways, foolish in others, keeping up such an impossibly sunny disposition. But
the body gives no credit for good intentions. Run-down is run-down.
  Push,  push. Smile, smile.
  For Jack Morris, it was the game itself, the pitching, every performance a
personal challenge to his pride. He is cantankerous, yes, moody, sure, but his
blood boils against opponents,  game after game, year after year. He does not
like to sit. He does not  like to leave the game. Doesn't Morris always make
his starts?  Hasn't he won more games than any other pitcher in  this decade?
  His  injury  is  an elbow problem that  team doctor David Collon said may
be "a number of  weeks old." X-rays revealed a career's worth of strain. Quite
likely Morris tried, as most athletes will, to play through the pain, to pitch
 out of his slump. He does not want to let age beat him. He does not want to
acknowledge his internal odometer. Has he really pitched more than 200
innings  for seven straight years? That is the baseball equivalent of stocking
the shelves, selling the merchandise and driving the trucks.
  There's an old Paul Simon song that says:
  "Boy, you  better look around,
  how long you think you can run that body down?"
Other examples around town
  Anderson and Morris are hardly the only sportsmen in town who push the
outside of that human envelope. Take a look at Jacques Demers toward the end
of hockey season; he seems to scream exhaustion. Chuck Daly? That's one weary
cowboy. Consider the pain that Isiah Thomas plays through, broken bones,
twisted muscles. Or visit the Lions' training room on a Monday morning in
November, where the bodies creak like doors in a horror movie. "We're only
human," Chet Lemon said Thursday, shrugging.  "All the money in the world
won't change that."
  No, but it can keep you trying. Endorsements. Fame. A chance to help
people. Grab them while you can. That is the message to our American sports
star,  because his shelf life is not long.
  After a while, the body simply says, "Enough."  So Thursday, the manager's
office was empty. And the corner where the star pitcher sits, was quiet. They
played  the game anyway. "It's weird," Henneman said, "you get so used to
people being around, and all of a sudden when they're not, you say, 'Hey, wait
a minute, something's wrong here.' "
  What is learned?  Perhaps only the lesson that all athletes learn sooner
or later: The sky is not the limit, not even to heroes. Sometimes, the limit
is closer to Earth than you think.
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