<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8501310949
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
850805
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, August 05, 1985
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
STATE EDITION
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1H
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1985, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
IN A SOUR SEASON, ECHOES CONTINUE: 'LOU . . . LOU'
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
In these trying times, when the clouds of a strike loom thick and dark, and
the Tigers' pennant hopes seem pinned to the rear of a runaway Greyhound bus,
let us, for a moment, recall four simple words  that remind every Detroit
baseball fan of his good fortune.

  Lou . . . Lou . . . Lou . . . 

  Whitaker.
  Tip your cap, No. 1.
  Even those who don't join his cow calls at Tiger Stadium ("Louuuuuuuu")  or
marvel at his deft touch at second base can't help but spot his name in the
league leaders section of the sports pages. Under runs, hits and batting
average.
  As the Tigers have soured, Lou has  stayed sweet. He's played All-Star
baseball. Quietly. Consistently. 
  So, with the season in danger of striking out Tuesday, not to nod
gratefully in his direction would be like stiffing a good waiter  because the
fish was salty.
  And Whitaker deserves more.
  All dreary summer long, he's been the candy after the medicine. The ice
cream after the brussels sprouts. If this season was a tax return,  Whitaker
would be the refund check.
  He's one of the precious few players who kept rubbing two sticks under the
kindling of the Tigers' dreams. No matter how often fate blew in to snuff them
out.
  Look, Ma, a  .314 average, 127 hits, 15 home runs, 50 RBIs. 
  And because he bats leadoff, Sparky Anderson suggests you double his RBIs
to get the true idea of his worth.
  Good stuff.
  All  of which, naturally, fazes Lou, Lou, Lou, not a bit, bit, bit.
  Praise him, damn him, hit him in the face with a household appliance. You
can't get a decent moment's boasting out of the guy.
  "I'm  doing O . . . K . . . " he says, with measured emphasis, "for the
time being."
  We are at Lou's locker, three hours before a game. The TV is blaring. His
teammates are shouting. Lou sits alone, answering his mail. 
  Even here, he is methodical. Each envelope is opened the same way. If there
is a baseball card inside, he signs it with a magic marker. Then he blows on
the card until it's dry.
  Lou  does not like to smear.
  The card is slipped into a return envelope, which he licks closed. And then
he reaches for another, as if these were so many ground balls to be scooped up
and whipped to first  base.
  It says something that in the midst of all this written applause, Lou
Whitaker remains unfazed. Outside, in front of the live version, he is much
the same.
  And media attention? You might  as well ask the man to drink dishwater. 
  "You see," he says, ripping open another envelope, "I think the more you
build up a player, the more harm it does to his career. 
  "When that player goes  out there, with all that attention, he's not just
trying to do his best. He's trying to do what the media expects him to do."
  He pauses to sign, blow, and seal.
  " I don't need that pressure,"  he continues. "When I was 13 years old,
back in Virginia, I was put on the radio to talk about myself.
  "They asked me what I wanted to be when I grew up. I said, 'A baseball
player.' That was enough  media attention."
  And for the most part, it still is. What Whitaker, now 28, has done this
season -- namely, play north while most of the team went south -- would be
bigger news for a lot of other players.
  They'd make sure people knew their numbers. They'd push to get in the
dwindling spotlight. They'd expect the star treatment, the interviews, the
camera flash.
  Whitaker comes to work  with all the expectations of a longshoreman hitting
the docks.
  "If I do anything worth talking about," he says, "it'll be in the paper
without me talking about it."
  As if on cue, he opens another  envelope. Inside is an article criticizing
him for forgetting his uniform in the recent All-Star Game.
  For a moment he stares at the clipping, and there's a sense that he might
flinch.
  Nah. He  signs it, blows on it, and stuffs it into an envelope. Like all
the others.
  "I have got to go now," he says, "and take batting practice." 
  And he's off.
  Going bad is easy. Going good is tougher.  And going good when your team is
going mediocre is more difficult than people realize.
  So if they wrap the season in a burlap bag and toss it to the wolves
tomorrow, try to at least remember the  quiet noise from second base, whose
efforts, for much of the summer, have been the only things to hitch a Tigers
dream to.
  Lou . . . Lou . . . Lou . . . Whitaker. The season may have disappointed.
Those four words have not.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
