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<UID>
8901300056
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
890722
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Saturday, July 22, 1989
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1C
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<ILLUSTRATION>

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<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

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<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1989, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
STEPHENS' PIPE DREAM LASTS ANOTHER ROUND
</HEADLINE>
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<BODY>
TROON, Scotland --  Somewhere on the Channel island of Jersey late Thursday
night, a woman flicked on the television and said, "Hey. That's the guy who
fixed our sink. What's he doing there?" A few  blocks away, an old man had the
same reaction. "Look, that's the bloke who did our pipes. The leader at the
British Open? Wait a minute. . . ."

  Wait a minute. Time out for a dream. Wayne Stephens  has never been what
you call a big-name golfer. No fewer than seven times he failed to hang on to
his Tour card and had to return to qualifying school and pray he could get it
back.

  In the winters  of 1984, 1985 and 1986, he worked as a plumber with his
father, Graham, hoping to eke through the cold months until he could pursue
his golf dreams again. Together they fixed pipes, loosened faucets,  passed
the wrench. Thursday morning, Graham was one of the few spectators bothering
to watch when his son teed off in his first-ever British Open; but as each
hole went by, the crowd grew, first a handful,  then a cluster, then a small
army. And by the 18th, they were roaring, because Wayne Stephens, plumber from
Jersey, was leading the pack.
  "It is a dream come true," Stephens said after his first- round  66, two
strokes ahead of men  such as Lee Trevino, Paul Azinger and Jose Maria
Olazabal. "I hope this feeling never leaves me."
  People smiled and slapped his back. That was Thursday. Deep down, no  one
expected to see him by Friday night. A one-round wonder, they figured, like
those novelty songs that shoot to the top of the charts, then disappear.
  But Friday came and went, and we glance at  the leader board -- and how
about that? There sits Wayne Stephens, just three strokes off the lead, after
shooting par on The Day After.
  Two rounds down, two to go.
  "How many times have you been  interviewed?" he was asked Friday.
  "Twice," he said, a smile curling his blond mustache. "Yesterday was the
first time. Today is the second."
  Wait a minute. . . . 
He really came out of nowhere
  This is the stuff they make movies out of, right? Former plumber, drops
screwdriver, picks up three-wood, swings to glory? Stephens, 28, has been on
the edge of the golf tour for so long there's  a permanent crease in his
resume. But how refreshing! Here is a man just thrilled to be here, a golfer
who does not yet endorse car companies on his clothes.
  "What was last night like?" he was asked.
  "Well, when I got to the house where I'm staying, the phone was ringing off
the hook, calls galore, my buddies from back in Jersey, my girlfriend. I took
every call. Then we watched the television.  It's quite embarrassing,
actually, watching yourself on TV."
  Understand that this is not a guy who has won a few tournaments, gotten
some exposure, been tagged as a comer and suddenly, here at the  biggest golf
event outside of the United States, achieved his potential. Nuh-uh. Stephens
is so unknown, even the British journalists were scratching their heads. They
grilled him about his past, where  he came from, what events he had played.
The serious newspapers wanted to know about his excellent shots -- like the
sand wedge he smacked to within two feet of the hole on 18. The tabloids
wanted to  know where his girlfriend lived and what he would do with the money
if he won any.
  "Um, I want to win this tournament," he answered, shyly, as if he
half-expected to get scolded for saying so. "If  I can't win it, then I guess
I'll think about the money. But only then."
Eight would be too much 
  So it was that Friday -- a cool, drizzly day, unlike the sunshine that
accompanied his first-day  miracle -- Stephens came out swinging. He bogeyed
on eight (the infamous "postage stamp" hole) and he bogeyed on nine and
observers figured, "Well, there he goes; another dream bites the dust."
  But  it takes more than that to shake a plumber. Consider what Stephens
already has endured: In Europe, if you fail to earn a certain amount of money
on the Tour, you must requalify, competing against 250  other golfers in a
maddening, two-week shootout in which only 50 will emerge with Tour cards.
Make it, you're safe. Miss it, and it's wait until next year.
  "Talk about pressure," Stephens said. "That's  the worst. I hope I never
have to go back there. Seven times is enough."
  Seven times? That's enough for a household. So he birdied the 10th, birdied
the 15th, birdied the 16th -- and for now, he stays here. British Open. Two
more rounds.
  And who knows? You have to root for old favorites  such as Trevino and
Tom Watson, sure, but you have to root for the Wayne Stephenses, too. From
monkey  wrench to sand wedge. What a terrific story. What a natural movie.
Wait a minute. . . . 
  "Do your friends back home have a nickname for you?" someone asked
Stephens.
  He looked sheepishly at his  feet and whispered: "Hollywood."
  Better save those faucet handles, Jersey. They might be worth something one
day.
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