<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8702050796
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
870731
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, July 31, 1987
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SEE ALSO STATE EDITION 1D
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1987, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
FOR THE NEXT 10 DAYS,  THE RUBES MUST BE RUDE
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
NEW YORK -- You say: "What a nice day."


I say: "Drop dead."
  You say: "Can I help with your luggage?"
  I say: "Drop dead."
  You say tomato. I say stuff the tomato. I am rehearsing  my lines. It is
part of my plan. I am following the strategy of every general from Napoleon to
MacArthur. Know your enemy. Think like your enemy. My enemy is the New Yorker.
From now until a week from  Sunday. Ten days. Seven baseball games. Tigers
versus Yankees. I seek a New York state of mind.
  "What a nice suit," you say.
  "Drop dead," I say. 
  I must become the New Yorker.  His ways  must be my ways. For 10 days.
For seven games. Think New York. Beat New York. I have no choice. 
  I must be rude and loud. I must push in line. I must eat lunch in 14
seconds. I must buy my "outdoors  wear" inside a department store on 34th
Street. I must suffer a nervous breakdown. 
  "Would you like a lift to the game?" you ask.
  "BUZZ OFF!" I answer.
  This is not ordinary behavior.  But  this is no ordinary Tigers-Yankees
series. This is for first place. This may determine the division crown when
all is said and done. This is big-time baseball. 
  But here is the problem. For  years, Midwest teams that came to this city
to challenge the Yankees were considered rubes, country bumpkins. Dairy
farmers. Ask a New Yorker about the Midwest: He thinks it's the five blocks
between Bloomingdale's and the Russian Tea Room. Our Midwest teams and Midwest
fans are merely annoying little distractions to most New Yorkers, who believe
a pennant is part of their birthright, along with  getting robbed once a
month.
  Not this time. This time we play by their rules. Fire with fire. Spit with
spit. Ten days. Seven games. Walk like a New Yorker.
  "Enjoy  the games," you say.
  "Get stuffed," I respond.
A brazen image
  I stand before my hotel mirror. I practice the leer. The rolled eyes. I
try to look as if the next person who crosses my path will be the last.
  I  do not like this. But it is part of the game. Think New York. Beat New
York. This was not necessary the last few years in the AL East. The truth is,
for the last few years, the Yankees did not play well  enough to elicit the
seething, venomous, nostril-quivering hatred that we all enjoyed in the past.
The Mets took that role.
  But now, the Yankees are back. Mr.  George Steinbrenner is once again
sticking his nose in the team's day-to-day affairs. The manager, Lou Piniella,
is quietly seething. The players are being shifted back and forth to the
minors. In other words, everything is normal.
  And now the Tigers are challenging.
  And Tigers fans must be ready. A ready team means ready fans. You can't
have Walt Terrell out there, mowing down Yankees while a New York fan pours
beer on your head, just for a laugh. Uh-uh. This is a call to arms. Think New
York. Beat New York.  
  "Show you to your seat, sir?" you say.
  "YOU'RE A BUM!" I say.
Big-name marquee
  Now, do not  worry. In 10 days, it all returns to normal. In 10 days, we
can go back to being the pleasant, polite, warmhearted people we Detroiters
have always been.
  But for now, the role must change. Three  games here. Four in Detroit.
Yankees here. Yankees everywhere. Think New York. Beat New York. We have to do
it. You don't win a gunfight with rubber bands.
  All right, then, Tigers fans are forewarned.  Within hours the rosters will
be memorized. "Tigers-Yankees" will be non-stop conversation. Barrooms will be
buzzing. Newscasts will begin with the score and end with the highlights.
  Ten days. Seven  games. Tigers versus Yankees. We are talking here about
first place. We are talking about the last time these teams play one another
this season. We are talking Trammell, Whitaker, Gibson, Madlock, Morris,
Tanana. Big names. We are talking Winfield, Mattingly, Rhoden, Henderson,
Righetti. Big names.
  Every edge counts. Every tiny advantage. We cannot control what goes on
between the lines. But there  will be no intimidation in the stands. No, sir.
Not this time. Rude? We can be rude. Obnoxious? If we have to be. Dairy
farmers? Did they really say dairy farmers? 
  I am ready. I walk to the hotel  lobby. I see a man in a Yankees shirt. I
stand alongside him. I wait for him to say something. I wait and wait. He says
nothing.  I circle him, in my Tigers shirt and Tigers cap and Tigers shoes.
Nothing. What's going on here? Finally I say, "Excuse me--"
  "Drop dead," he says.
  I gotta work on this stuff.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN;HUMOR;DTIGERS;BASEBALL;NEW YORK YANKEES;IMAGE;NEW YORK;Detroit Tigers
</KEYWORDS>
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