<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8601270096
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
860615
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, June 15, 1986
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1C
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1986, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
IS IT OVER?
MORRIS: TIGERS NOT REALLY CARING
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
TORONTO -- Jack Morris objects.

  To all of it. The losing, the last-place standing, the ballooning ERAs, the
stranded base-runners, this talk about Kirk Gibson being the Tigers' only
leader, this  talk about Alan Trammell being a culprit, the no-movement stance
by management, the "cheap shots" from the media,  his problems, the team's
problems, the losing, the losing, the losing.

  No good.  None of it.
  Jack Morris objects.
  "You might write what I'm telling you now," he said, after a workout Friday
-- a day before the Tigers would again lose a game he started, this time 6-5
to the  Blue Jays. "You might write it, and my teammates might read it and
maybe some will think I'm accusing them. Maybe they'll be apprehensive towards
me. I know that can happen."
  He sighed, and ran a  towel over his head. "On the other hand," he said,
"I've never been one not to state my mind. I've never been afraid to tell the
truth as I see it."
  The truth, as he sees it, is that the poor performance  by the Tigers this
season is a cancer in danger of spreading to the very heart of the team,
eating away the desire. Death by complacency.
  "It's gotten to the point where we're accepting mediocrity," he said.
"We're realizing that we're playing bad and nobody's really caring. To me,
that's the ultimate sin in baseball, or any profession. When you get like that
 . . . you're just lost."
  How can  you tell it's like that?
  "You can see it in players' faces," he said. "In the attitudes after a game
that you lose. Before we'd be somber, quiet or ticked off, literally fuming at
times -- which indicated to me that we cared.
  "Now guys come in, take the uniform off, eat the food, and five minutes
later they're talking about whatever the hell they want to talk about just
like an everyday  situation. We used to die a little bit when we lost. But now
 . . . "
Now is different. Clearly. The Tigers -- who by nearly everyone's pre-season
reckoning had one of the better teams in baseball --  have slumped to the
bottom of the AL East. Their hitting has been mild and poorly timed. Their
starting pitching, which was to be their strong point, has wilted like wax
under a heat lamp.
  Morris,  the ace of the staff, has been part of that. He has surrendered 21
home runs and is dragging around a 4.84  ERA. Not the kind of person to be
throwing stones from his own glass house, one might think.
  "I accept that," he said, pushing a fist through his thick brown hair. "I
accept that my year hasn't been acceptable. Not in my eyes or in your eyes.
The only hope I have is that before the year is  over I can get back to where
I should be."
  But, he added, he has never considered losing a coat that comes in his
size. This is a man who blows smoke through his nostrils after a defeat, whose
voice  takes on a hard edge, whose eyes go steel-cold. How competitive? How
proud? How high can you count?
  Because of that, what he says he senses from the clubhouse this year sends
bells off in his head.  In most cases, a ballplayer can only grimace and bear
it. But Jack Morris has a choice.
  He is a free agent at the end of the season.
  "I'll tell you this," he said, "I'm not gonna accept a horsebleep  attitude
for money. I've got a choice this year. This organization has got to prove to
me that they're gonna be winners down the road or I'm leaving. Period.
  "I don't care about the money. I'll get  my money. But damn it, it's no fun
to lose. I've had a taste of the good life and to be back in this rut is just
no fun  . . . "
  Too much losing. Not enough caring.
  Jack Morris objects.
Now  maybe what he objects to is the Tigers' unwillingness to talk contract
during the season. Maybe what he objects to is his own less-than-great
performances. Maybe what he objects to are games like Saturday's,  where his
eight good innings were trashed by two lousy Willie Hernandez pitches.
Morris is proud yet emotional, the type of man for whom words can mix with
frustration, until the two become inseparable.
  But make no mistake. What Morris thinks is important. Like it or not, he is
a linchpin on the Tigers, one of four or five players whose success seems to
have a domino effect on the rest of the clubhouse.  As Sparky Anderson admits,
every winning team needs a "stopper" -- a la New York's Dwight Gooden or
Boston's Roger Clemens this year -- who the players know is going to go out
and most likely win. "Then  if you lose two or three in a row," Anderson said,
"you don't get shook up, because you know he's coming around again."
  Morris has been viewed that way before. He has led the Tigers in victories
for the past seven years. But he shrugs off the idea that one player makes
that much difference.
  "I read all that crap about Gibson being a leader and how, when he was
gone, we were lost," he said.  "I think that's bullbleep. Period. I ain't
afraid to say that to the whole world. I don't think any one guy can do
anything to change the team. It's a culmination of guys picking the team up
that shows leadership."
  Which guys?
  "As far as I'm concerned, there are three guys that have to go good to get
us going. Alan Trammell, Lou Whitaker and Lance Parrish. When Trammell and
Whitaker were going  good in '84 we'd have a lead by the first inning. I wish
people could see how hard Tram tries. That guy puts the weight of the whole
team on his shoulders. I read something last week that we should trade
Trammell. I can't believe that bleep! You trade Trammell, you trade the heart
of this team."
  You left out Gibson. 
  "Well, Gibby can carry you for a week or two and just be awesome," he said.
 "But then he can also play the way he has the last two weeks and nothing
happens. I don't consider him a Wade Boggs or a Don Mattingly. He's not.
  "But look. Basically what I'm saying is we've all  been horsebleep. No one
is picking each other up."
  So what should be done? What is the answer? 
  "To be honest," he said, pulling a shirt over his broad frame, "I expected
a few changes to be  made. I thought by now there'd be one or two players on
this team moved. But it hasn't happened."
  Which players?
  He paused, then shook his head. "I can't say," he said. "I can't. But I
just hope  to God the front office knows which guys, or we're in worse shape
than I thought."
Going into Saturday's game, Morris' biggest problem was the home-run ball. In
a game against the Yankees last week,  he gave up four. And on Saturday he
gave up another -- a two-run pinch- hit homer by Rick Leach. Bad pitch
placement, he said. Bad decisions. Lack of concentration.
  "Because I've been around a while,  guys know what I have. They're waiting
for certain pitches, looking in a certain zone. So I have to change things a
little. Maybe more brushback pitches. I won't ever throw at a guy's head, but
I can  make him think."
  Indeed, on Saturday, the first pitch Morris threw to Toronto's clean-up
hitter George Bell was within inches of his nose. A few pitches later, Bell
hit a soft out to the infield. But the result was still disappointment.
Another Tigers loss.
  Who knows? Maybe he can turn it around. Maybe the team can. Maybe the whole
reason Morris got all this off his chest -- knowing full  well that much of it
would end up in print -- is because he wants to light a fire under the team.
Anger them into winning.
  Or maybe he is simply looking out for himself. He said that the more the
Tigers lose, the greater the danger of the team dividing into two factions --
the players who lose sleep over the losses and the players who don't. He
doesn't want to be part of that kind of organization,  he said. "I've seen
situations where guys throw in the towel way before the season is
mathematically over," he said.
  Is it getting that way around here? 
  "Let's just say it's too late to say  it's still early," he said.
He pulled on his blue cap and reached around for his glove. You can accuse
Jack Morris of many things -- belligerence, selfishness, impatience -- but you
cannot fault his  desire to win. At 31, he still burns with the fuel of a
rookie, still works out harder than most third-year men, still stalks the
mound like a grizzly bear in search of breakfast.
  "I'm gonna be around  for a few more years," he said. "I'm still taking
care of myself. I'm still healthy, my arm ain't broken, I ain't hurt, I may be
going through some problems because I need to be more selective in my
pitches. But you don't see everybody taking care of themselves the way I do.
  "You're gonna see me pitching next year," he said, standing up. He then
added the warning: "Somewhere  . . . "
  He  headed for the field, for another game, for another step in this
strange and so far disappointing season. Call his the voice of a leader. Or
call it bailing out. But Jack Morris objects. And, if this  season keeps
sinking, he could well be gone.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
DTIGERS;BASEBALL;JACK MORRIS
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
