<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8701280086
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
870607
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, June 07, 1987
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1987, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
MAD DOG REALLY IS JUST A TIGER ABOUT WINNING
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
BOSTON -- We interrupt these NBA championships to take a walk with the Dog.
Mad Dog. Bill Madlock. The baseball player. To be honest, I am not sure how
you address a man who, among other things,  has pushed  a glove in an umpire's
face, been tossed out of every National League ballpark at least once, and has
children nicknamed the Mad Puppies. I mean, do you just say hello here, or do
you need  a bone?

  As it turns out, hello is enough. On Saturday in Fenway Park (just a few
miles from Boston Garden), Madlock, 36, was suiting up for his third game as a
Tiger, the sixth team in his career.  And as I said, hello was enough. Because
Bill Madlock has never been at a loss for words.

  "Hey, if I think I'm right I'm gonna say it," he admitted after a few
minutes of conversation. "I've always  been that way."  
  True enough. This is a guy who, when Chuck Tanner predicted his drooping
Pirates would soon be pennant contenders, responded by saying: "No way." And
he was on the team! After  being traded from Chicago, Madlock once remarked:
"I never really fit the Cubs' image of a player -- although you'd think after
all those years of losing, they might want to change their image."
  So he could always talk. And he could always hit. He usually did both. Four
NL batting titles. A lifetime .306 average. A short, compact chop that usually
made contact. Combine that with his candid criticisms,  his umpire squabbles,
and his base-path melees, and he has  earned his place with the Englishmen
who come out in the midday sun.
Forget the rest
  "Aw, the Mad Dog stuff is mostly because I play  intense," Madlock said. "I
do a lot of screaming at the umpires, I slide in hard to break up double
plays, that stuff."
  "How about the off-field stuff?" I asked.
  "Let's forget about that," he  said.
  "The time when . . . "
  "Forget about that. Let's talk about today."
  Well. All right. Today and tomorrow will be challenging enough. Madlock is
coming off an uncharacteristic .180 average in 61 at-bats with the Dodgers
this season. And now, here is a whole new league, with new pitchers, new
parks. "I go out there not knowing what to expect," he admitted. "Mostly I've
been asking Darrell  (Evans), 'What's this guy throw?' then going out and
looking for it."
  On top of that, Madlock has now played three positions in three days, first
base, designated hitter and third base. ("That's  all the positions I know,"
he said, laughing.) And yet, the variety indicates the enormous needs the
Tigers have for a productive right-handed hitter in the lineup.
  So it's a big stick there for  Mad Dog to fetch. And yet, should it work
out, his acquisition -- which is costing the Tigers only about $40,000 of his
$850,000 salary, with the Dodgers paying the rest -- could be nothing short of
 terrific, like getting a top-quality model from a public auction.
  True, the Tigers have rarely been an organization to pursue players with
controversial reputations. Sparky Anderson likes quiet leaders.  The front
office does not tolerate public criticism. And the fact is, Madlock has rarely
left his teams on good terms.
  But the same intensity that brings the stinging comment brings the hit when
 it's needed, the hard slide, the spark. "I like playing with him," said
Evans, who did so in San Francisco. "You're apprehensive playing against him,
because of his intensity, his arguments, his occasional  fights. But he plays
the game hard, and nobody here is threatened by that. It's a perfect situation
for him."
'He wants to win' 
  So everybody hopes. On Saturday, Madlock showed some of the very  intensity
that makes a difference. In the eighth inning, score tied 2-2, he swung badly
at two Roger Clemens pitches, then chopped one up the middle for a single. He
stole second, and scored  on a single  by Matt Nokes, giving the Tigers a 3-2
lead. He also made a nice defensive snare at third base for the final out in
the Tigers' 14-inning victory.
  "He wants to win, that's all," Evans said. "Back  in '78, with the Giants,
I was platooning.  Madlock went to Joe Altobelli (the manager) and offered to
play second base just so I could get in the lineup regularly. And he did. And
we had the best second  half in baseball that year."
  So Mad Dog, older and wiser, could work out just fine with Detroit, even
with his edge. "Hey, sometimes," he said, "the reputation helps me."
  "Well, you know," I  said, "I was  a little apprehensive coming up to a guy
known as Mad Dog. I was afraid you'd chew my head off or something."
  "Oh, no," he said. But I noticed a grin.
  Ruff.
CUTLINE
Bill Madlock
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
DTIGERS; COLUMN;BASEBALL
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
