<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8701290904
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
870618
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, June 18, 1987
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1E
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SEE ALSO STATE EDITION 1E
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1987, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
TRAMMELL'S STREAK ENDS AT 21, BUT ALL ISN'T LOST
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
TORONTO -- The ball went flying high into center field and Chet Lemon
waved, he got it, the final out, and that was that. Alan Trammell stood at
shortstop, watched the catch, then trotted in with  the rest of his teammates.

  The game was won. 

  The streak was over.
  "Was any part of you hoping Chet wouldn't catch that ball?" Trammell would
be asked later, after his 21-game hitting streak ended in the Tigers' 3-2
victory over Toronto -- ended with a man on third representing the tying
Toronto run. "Any part of you hoping he'd drop it and we'd go to extra innings
and you'd get one more  at-bat?"
  "Ah, no," he would say. "Sure, I thought about it. I'm disappointed. But
mostly I just wanted to win the game."
 Mostly. Not completely. One more at-bat would have been nice. One more swing.
 For 3 1/2 weeks Trammell had finished each game with at least one hit.  Some
days 1-for-4, some 3-for-3. Always one hit. Today, no hits. Four tries. No
hits.
  The streak was over. Trammell walked toward  the dugout, then he stopped and
looked out at center field.  Jack Morris, the pitcher, found his friend and
put his arm around his shoulder.
  "First he said, 'Good game' because we won," Trammell  would say, noting
the order of importance. "Then he said, 'Don't worry about it.' "
Happiness a matter of degree  He should not worry about it. With a
performance at the plate Wednesday that he called  "my worst since this thing
started," his batting average fell all the way to .355. Everyone should have
such problems. Trammell, 29, is still enjoying his best season ever with the
bat, and he is able  to throw pain-free at shortstop, something he could not
claim the past two years. He should be happy.
  And yet, well, you know. There are different kinds of happiness. The kind
you get when your company's  stock goes up, and the kind you get when your
boss makes you vice-president. Sure Trammell wanted to win this game against
Toronto. It was a big victory for Detroit, it represented two-out-of-three
against the AL East leaders.
  But he also would have liked to get a hit, to extend the streak that was
the longest in baseball so far this year, the longest he's ever had. What had
the streak been like? His average reached as high as .362.  He was the top
hitter in the American League. The rankings read Alan Trammell, Detroit, then
Wade Boggs, Boston.
  The streak had become a sort of friend, a traveling companion. It met him
at the park every day, stayed until his first hit, then vanished like a coy
lover whispering "see you tomorrow."
  "This is fun," Trammell had said before Wednesday's game. "It really is
fun. Lately other players have been kidding me, saying, 'What have you been
doing, lifting weights or something?'
  "I know 21 games is not that big a deal. Lots of guys have done it. I mean,
 it's not like Joe DiMaggio or anything. But it's been fun. I'll be
disappointed when it's over."
 And a few hours later, it was. He grounded out. He grounded into a force out.
He grounded out again.  And  he fouled out. "I knew that was gonna be it,"
he would say. And yet, had the game reached a 10th inning, he was due to bat.
  "I knew that, too. I had the exact count of how many more batters  we
needed. But when Chet caught the ball . . . "
  But, but. No buts.
No fuss, good or bad  So he sat in the trainer's room for a long time after
the game, his feet propped up on the table. For a while, Kirk Gibson lay on
the table next to him. Then Gibson left and Morris lay down. Trammell stayed
put, quiet, sipping a Coke, elbows on his knees. About 40 minutes after
Lemon's catch, he finally  came out and waddled over to the television set.
  "What are we watching here?" he asked, nonchalantly, as if the streak and
the reporters circling in did not exist.
  Trammell is the type of guy  who prefers no fuss; not over good, not over
bad. And yet the streak had been, well, important. He had been checking the
batting averages daily to see where he stood. He was happy when he reached 21
games, because that broke his personal best of 20. He knew it wasn't DiMaggio.
It wasn't even Pete Rose. But it was on the way, wasn't it?
  "If it had to end, I'm glad it ended when we won," he finally said. "It's
not so quiet in here, you know. Less time to sit and mope."
  And he shrugged. Baseball players talk about burying their personal goals
for the sake of the team. But that is impossible. The heart wants. The mind
dreams. So the game was won, but the streak was over, and Trammell was an
intersection of we and me, one part happy, one part sad.
  "You'll get 'em, tomorrow," somebody said,  as he headed off to get
dressed.
  "No, I won't," Trammell answered.
  Then he grinned.
  "We're off tomorrow," he said. "I'll get 'em the next day."
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
BASEBALL;DTIGERS
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
