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<UID>
8702070206
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
870809
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, August 09, 1987
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
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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) 1987, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
MISTER JOHN, ON AND ON, PITCHES A TIMELESS GEM
</HEADLINE>
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Movie stars will come and go. New songs are old by morning. But get lost at
sea for 20 years, let them find you on a raft in the South Pacific, and when
they revive you, and you mumble, "Uhhh . .  . what did Tommy John do
yesterday?" surely somebody will answer, "Two-hitter."

  Mister John rolls on and on. He beat the Tigers Saturday with a 7-0 shutout
that, among other things: 1) snapped Detroit's three-game winning  streak, 2)
put the Yankees back in first place, and 3) gave the New York press something
to write about besides Georgie Steinbrenner's latest case of diaper rash.

  On and on. Mister  John. So what if he's 44 years old and looks as if
"Mulligan's Saloon" should be across his uniform instead of pinstripes? Those
slumping shoulders? The loosening midsection? So what? Did you count how  many
ground balls he got off Tigers bats? Did you see the score? Detroit grabbed 20
runs in two days off "youngsters" like Ron Guidry and Rick Rhoden. Give the
old guy a try and . . . shutout.
  On  and on.
  "Do you remember the first time you pitched  in Tiger Stadium?" someone
asked John, whose record improved to an eye- rubbing 11-4.
  "I remember," he said. "It was 1964. I lost, 3-2. Bubba Phillips beat me
with a home run."
  Bubba Phillips?
Low and lower  Well. OK. Bubba Phillips. After all, John has been pitching
longer than some of the reporters quizzing him have been living. "I  used to
stay at the Sheraton Cadillac here," he said. The young reporters nodded
blankly. "Used to eat at Danny's Gin Mill." More blank nods.
  "I love to shop in Hudson's  basement."
  "Hudson's  isn't here anymore," he was told.
  "Oh."
  But John is. Tigers boosters cannot be happy with his shutout Saturday, but
even the rabid fan can appreciate the effort. After all, here is a guy in  his
24th major league season. Look at that body. Other guys flex. He sags.
Forty-four? He pitched a two-hitter? Forty-four?
  "It was a good day," he understates. Why not? What can possibly still
impress Tommy John? He has  worn six  big-league uniforms, been a free agent
three times, been released once, retired once, endured a number of operations.
He blew out his elbow in 1974. They patched  it up with a tendon from his
forearm. From his forearm? Yes. He borrowed spare parts from himself.
  And he's still throwing -- 13 years later. Saturday he retired  Kirk
Gibson  in a double play in  the first inning. He retired  Chet Lemon the same
way in the fifth,  with the bases loaded. So much for Tigers scoring threats.
Eighteen of Detroit's 27 outs were ground balls. Which is no surprise.  When
John is throwing well, he has two pitches: low and lower. Hitters are tempted
to step up in the box. About 10 feet.
  And when the game ended (on a grounder to short) John loped off the mound,
looking like the front half at a father-son softball tandem. The pitcher he
beat was nearly half his age: Eric King. Baby-faced Eric King. His weapon is a
fastball.
  "Do you enjoy beating the fireball  pitchers like that?" John was asked.
  "Anybody's a fireballer compared to me," he said, and then, remembering
where he was, added, "except Frank Tanana.  . . . "
A calming effect  So, OK. If you've  got to lose one, might as well be to
Old Man Sinker. He has earned his place in the "I Love Lucy" room of baseball.
He has pitched forever, it seems, through the Monkees, a man on the moon,
disco, punk,  yuppies, Iran, the Monkees again. That should count for
something. He has passed the Monkees twice.
  Because of this, John has a skewed concept of time. How big was this game?
"The biggest in 24  hours." How much longer will he pitch? "Well, I'm on a
multiday contract."
  But this, too, is vintage Tommy John: modesty. He was rarely good enough to
become bigheaded. His personal setbacks -- the operation, the near-fatal fall
from a window by his infant son, Travis, in 1981 -- have given him
perspective.
  He probably will never land in the Hall of Fame. But on a team that is
racked with  disturbances from the front office, a team that  slips and slides
from brilliance to ineptitude, you cannot overvalue a win like John gave the
Yankees Saturday. A calming effect. That is what it is.  That was what they
needed.
  No fun for Tigers fans -- who endured the absence of Jack Morris, out with
a groin pull. But Morris will recover. He's young. He's 32. Geez.  Next to
John, he's a puppy.
  So call this a defeat for a cause. To prove that old is not useless. That
sagging is not a crime. As John talked, the other Yankees were getting
dressed. Hard, lean bodies, like Dave Winfield and  Claudell Washington.
  "Do you ever get nostalgic looking at the physiques of your teammates?"
someone asked John.
  "Nah," he said, "I never looked like that."
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