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<UID>
8902020932
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
890820
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, August 20, 1989
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1E
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<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color LINDA STELTER/Special to the Free Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
THE GENERALS
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1989, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
YOU RESTORED MY FAITH IN BASEBALL
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
COLUMBIA, S.C. --  Dear Guys:

  I'm leaving you. Actually, by the time you read this, I'll be on a plane
back home. I appreciate your letting me wear the uniform and sit in the dugout
 the other  night, just like a real player. And thanks for letting me hang out
with you after the games at the Steak-n-Egg. Not that there was much to eat. I
mean, let's face it; that steak was still moving. But,  hey, $11  a day in
meal money? How far does that go?

  I appreciate your filling me in on the secrets of the minor leagues. Like
how to chew raw tobacco. And what seat to grab on the bus. I also know  to
never switch bats in the middle of a hitting streak.
  But I believe in luck, guys, and I think mine is working against you. In
less than a week since I showed up to examine life in Class A ball,  the
Fayetteville Generals have lost three in a row and had one rained out. I call
that bad luck, don't you?
  Heck, you guys taught me about luck.  DeSilva, you can't even pitch a
game without first  playing your lucky pinball for an hour. And Erickson? You
get a hot bat, you do everything but sleep with it. Cole? You told me if you
have a good night, you'll walk to the plate in the exact same steps  the next
night and the next, until you cool off. And Steve Carter? Weren't you the guy
who told me, "The Generals are 9-0 when we visit shopping malls the day of the
game"?
  Until I showed up.
  We went to the mall Wednesday.
  You lost, 15-2.
So it's time for me to collect my notes and my box scores and my pizza-stained
T-shirts and get lost. Not that I'm crazy about leaving. Oh, it's  true, I
never really liked the South, and I'm not wild about hot, humid weather that
makes the hair on your arms frizz. And there's not much appeal in empty
ballparks, and motels that smell like cleaning  fluid.
  And, yet, I liked my five days with your team. I can't explain why. Maybe
it's the smell of pine tar and tobacco juice. Maybe it's those ballparks, hot
summer nights, where they play a scratchy  recording of the national anthem
and everyone sings along. Maybe it's watching the manager, Gene Roof, waving
his arms and yelling: "Back up, dummy! Back up!' And the rightfielder can
actually hear him.  Remember that, D --.
  Uh, never mind.
  I'll tell you this: You can have the gnats. I've never seen gnats like
that. What do you have behind that dugout? A swamp? I must have smacked myself
in  the face a dozen times trying to kill those things. Hey, guys, ever hear
of a Shell No-Pest Strip?
  Gnats? They didn't show gnats in "Bull Durham." But then a lot of that
movie was fantasy, wasn't  it? So many people saw it and came away saying, "So
that's what the minors are really like." In fact, maybe that's part of the
reason I came to live with the Generals. To see whether  it was true.
  Here is my verdict: Bull who?
  For one thing, I didn't see many groupies, and I certainly didn't see any
 Susan Sarandon look-alikes. Oh, you told me about a girl who hangs around
Fayetteville.  But you said she looked like -- what was it now? -- "Someone
tried to put a fire out on her face." Gosh. She must be swell.
  As for those "Bull Durham" radio broadcasts, with the guy making sound
effects in the booth -- cracking wood, banging on cabinets? Come on. It's the
minor leagues, not Time Tunnel. The station may broadcast only from the press
box to the Dunkin' Donuts, but it's real radio.
  Remember the night I asked for the biggest lie in "Bull Durham"? Mark
Ettles, the relief pitcher from Australia, didn't miss a beat.
  "The biggest lie in that movie is that a guy can go from A- ball  to the
major leagues in one step."
  When he said it, you all nodded in agreement.
  "Yeah, Mark."
  "Amen."
  It was then I realized that waiting for your chance is the hardest part of
 minor league baseball.
Not that you guys don't have a good time waiting. There's the pool halls. And
Taco Bell. And the card games on the bus.  And I'll never forget sitting with
Duane Walker, the muscular outfielder from Tampa, as he told me about
Mudslinging.
  "We only do it after it rains. We drive a jeep back behind the stadium --
there's these mud fields back there -- and we start whipping around  in the
jeep, bouncing all over, spitting up mud from the tires."
  "This is fun?" I asked.
  "Yeah. It's like a roller coaster. Or it was, until we got stuck last
night. The jeep hit a ridge, and  we couldn't move it. We had to get out and
push, all of us, knee deep in mud, with mosquitoes eating us alive."
  "Sounds great," I said.
  "Yeah," he laughed, "life in the minor leagues."
  Life in the minor leagues. I've used that phrase a lot in the last  five
days. Some people think it means the glamorous life of a pro athlete. I think
it means this: Sleep till noon, watch some TV,  get some lunch, wait around
till 4 o'clock, bum a ride to the park, stretch, warm up, play the game, pray
you get a hit, pray that somebody is watching, shower, eat some fast food
before the last place  closes, call home, talk to Mom and Dad, tell them that
any day now you might get moved up. And go to sleep.
  It is not what I call glamorous. It is not what you call glamorous. They
can make all  the movies they want: four men to a trailer, with pale carpeting
and a overhead fan? Let's see Kevin Costner live in that for a while.
Listen, guys. I want to admit something. I collected some of your
conversations. Had a few favorites, too. Like the time Mark Cole and Anthony
Toney were eating Mexican food and talking about everybody's dream, getting
called to the major leagues.
  "When Mike  Schwabe got called up? I heard it took him 20 minutes before
he believed they were serious."
  "Shoot, you wouldn't have to tell me but one time."
  "You got that."
  "I'd be gone like (clap)  that!"
  "Ha ha!"
  "I wouldn't be sitting there goin': 'Really? Really? Are you kidding?' "
  "No way."
  "Be gone like (clap) that!"
  "Like that."
  "Yeah."
  "Shoot."
  "(Clap)  Like that."
  "You want another  margarita?"
  "Yep."
  And then, there was the conversation on the three-hour bus ride from
Fayetteville to Columbia:
  "Hey, Duane, what you reading?'
  "Stephen King."
  "Lemme see. . . . Damn, this is big! You readin' this or just carrying it
for weight?"
  "I'm reading it."
  "Wow! . . . You need one of them pesauras things with this, right?"
  "Huh?'
  "What do they call that, a pesauras? A sauras? What the hell they call
that?"
  "A thesaurus."
  "A what?"
  "A thesaurus."
  "Yeah. One of them. Whatever. You need  one?"
I've seen a lot of interesting baseball the last five days. I didn't know
there were so many ways to overthrow the first baseman. And then there was the
game you lost when Leo Torres threw that  wild pitch with the bases loaded.
Poor Leo. The look on his face when that ball sailed over the catcher's mitt.
  But that's what the minor leagues are for, right? Learning. Working out
the kinks.  There were some good moments, too. Like when Anthony stole three
bases in one game and everybody congratulated him. That kid can fly.
  There was all that time in between games, too, like when we bused to the
bank to cash your paychecks (nobody has cars, so you ride the bus or walk).
And then you persuaded  the driver to take you to the local shopping mall, so
you could spend some of that $225  a week. Hey, Cole. Remember when you tried
on that sweat suit, then took it off, then tried it on again, then took it
off, and kept looking at the $100 price tag?
  "Hey, Mitch," you finally asked  me, "is there any way you can like, you
know, put this on your expense account?"
  Good try, kid.
  I don't think so.
  Then there was the night that a buzz went through the dugout because  one
of you was being moved up to the Lakeland club. Who was it? Who did they pick?
It was Mickey Delas, the big, broad-shouldered catcher with the Cheshire-cat
grin.
  "Didya hear?
  "Mickey's  goin' up."
  "Yeah. Why him, man?'
  "Yeah?"
  I caught up with Delas that night, as he was heading to his room. He could
hardly stop smiling. "When Gene called me in, I thought I was in trouble.
Then he said to me, 'You're going up.' I couldn't believe it! I'm three  steps
away now from the big leagues! This is what you dream about!"
  It was 11 p.m. Crickets chirped. The motel was quiet.  A man with a car
was waiting in the parking lot, and he and Mickey would drive back to
Fayetteville, get there about 3 a.m. Mickey would pack up his things, and a
few hours later, fly to Florida.
  The following night, he'd be with a new team, new dreamers.
  And meanwhile, the Fayetteville Generals would get up in the morning and
get some coffee and wonder when, if ever, their turn will  come.
I'll do you all a favor when I get back, guys. I'll dispel some of the myths
about the minor leagues. Such as:
  1. Everyone is a bonus baby.
  2. You stay in rented houses.
  3. You  all drive fancy sports cars.
  4. The crowds love you.
  5. You all have shoe, bat and glove deals.
  Also, I will testify that, while most of you are pretty young, not all of
you came straight  out of high school and put on the cleats. A number went to
college and are just beginning in the minor league system. Like Pat Pesavento
from Notre Dame, or John DeSilva from BYU, or Randy Marshall from  Eastern
Michigan.
  Of course, some "myths" are true. Like the way you get your lucky shoes or
lucky socks. Or the times you prayed for a rainout. "At this point in the
season," Dan Raney, the first baseman from Triangle, Va., admitted, "You're
thinking a lot about getting home." Sure. What do you guys play, 140 games in
five months? And you get only four days off the whole season? That's
unbelievable.  A five-game series against Augusta, followed by a five-game
series against Myrtle Beach, followed by a five-game series against
Charleston. . . .
  Rain? I'd be praying for an earthquake.
  Chewing  tobacco.
  I don't know about this one. You guys chew an awful lot for young kids. It
seems like everyone has a tin of Red Man or whatever. Still, this new guy,
Casey McKeon? He takes the cake. He  arrived Thursday night, up from Bristol
to replace Mickey, and I guess he was trying to make friends in the dugout, so
he asked, "You wanna try some really good chew?"
  He pulled out this plastic  bag that contained a long, twisted tobacco
plant. It looked liked a miniature tree. And he yanked about four inches off
the end.
  "We been curing this in my uncle's barn for about a year and a half,"  he
drawled. "It's the real stuff. Here, try some."
  Now, personally, I don't like to eat anything that looks like a tree. Not
without salt, anyhow. But a couple of you tried it. Stuffed it between  your
gum and lower lip and let it juice up.
  And then you spat it out.
  Poor Casey.
  A year and a half in the barn?
Then there was the time I asked Gene Roof, your fearless leader: "What  do you
tell these kids about the major leagues?"
  Remember that, Gene? You've been there. You've been in The Show. Sure.
Maybe it was only 48 games. But that's 48 games more than a lot of guys get.
You played at Busch Stadium. You played in Wrigley Field. You made that catch
off the ivy that they showed on TV around the country. Bobby Bonds, right?
Bases loaded, two out, bottom of the eighth?
  I'll never forget the look in your eyes when I asked you that question.
What do you tell them about the major leagues? You sort of glazed over, you
leaned back in your chair, I don't know, it was  like the look you get when
remembering a long- lost uncle who used to play catch with you as a kid.
  "When I tell them about the major leagues," you said, your Kentucky drawl
thickening your words,  "I tell them to think about all good things. That's
what it's like. All good things. You go up there, and, hell, there are people
who cheer you during batting practice. People asking for your autograph. Nice
hotels. Someone to carry your bags. Shoot, they got buses that take you right
to the airplane, and when you get on that airplane, they have food for you.
  "You're playing baseball in beautiful  parks. You're making real money.
The announcer calls your name when you come to bat and it echoes all around
the stadium.
  "All good things. That's what I tell 'em. Just think of all good things,
and that's the major leagues."
  Gene. I wish you could talk to Guillermo  Hernandez.
Here's something I'm going to remember: When I met your team's general
manager, Matt Perry, his pants were dirty.  Red clay. All over his shoes, too.
I asked him what happened.
  "Oh," he said, "I had to pull the tarp on the field."
  Guys. Up in Detroit, the GM doesn't pull the tarp on the field. He also
doesn't  cook hot dogs and fill up the popcorn machine, and he doesn't count
the money at the end of the night and put it in a little bag and have it
driven to the bank. I give a lot of credit to Perry for doing  that and for,
in essence, saving the franchise. The guy is only 28 years old, a neat, trim,
business school grad from Ohio State. But he's out there hustling, working the
phones, rousing up the local business in Fayetteville, and hiring post-game
attractions like Captain Dynamite, a nut who actually blows himself up in his
"Coffin of Death."
  And thanks to that, the Generals, who were on the  brink of failure last
November, have turned it around at the gate.
  "You're sort of the Bill Veeck of the minor league?" I asked Perry, after
noticing his calendar of Video Rental Night, and Dime-A-Dog  Night, and
Cellular-One Cushion Night, and The Famous Chicken night.
  "Well," he said, grinning, "I don't think I'd bring in a midget."
  Oh, good.
  The Elvis sign? I have to bring that up  one more time before I close this
letter. Guys. I have seen a lot of things in sports. I have seen Olympic Games
and Kentucky Derbies, I have seen Bourbon Street on the night before the Super
Bowl.
  I have never seen a giant billboard of Elvis Presley holding out a
doughnut -- like they have in the Columbia Mets' stadium. In
right-centerfield. And if you hit the ball through the hole in the  doughnut,
what do you win?
  "Five hundred dollars," one of you told me.
  "A dozen jelly doughnuts," someone else said.
  Too much.
  Elvis, your legend lives.
You know, a lot of people  asked me why I wanted to go to the minor leagues.
I'm not sure. I guess it was to meet guys for whom baseball was still
everything, not the money (you have none), not the fame (you have none). I
want  to thank you guys for restoring my faith.
  Ettles, from Australia, I hope you make it to the big leagues, just so
you can pay off your phone bill back home. And Erickson, Donnie, the
California  Kid at third base, I don't know about that tattoo you've got on
your wrist. "Lucky 13" ? Isn't that a contradiction in terms? I do give you
credit for the best line of the week. After you popped up a  few times on
Tuesday, you sat in the Steak-n-Egg and said, "Man. If hang time were batting
average, I'd be batting 1.000."
  Not bad.
  Hector Berrios, born in Puerto Rico, still goes down there for winter
ball. What did you tell me? "This league is nothing compared to that. Down
there, we play with some big stars. It's top-notch baseball. I'm going back to
Double-A  ball next year, man."
  I hope you make it.
  Did I mention the trainer, Steve Carter? You, cowboy, have got to slow
down. Most trainers just sort of hang around and make sure nobody's knee
explodes. But you're everywhere!  Doing the wash, ordering new shorts,
wrapping elbows, handing out paychecks, buying aspirin, massaging arms,
collecting socks, reading the road map to the bus driver. (By the way, you
need to work on  that part; the lost tribe of Israel had a better sense of
direction.)
  "I guess I end up doing a lot of odds and ends stuff," you told me. "One
time a guy called me at 2 a.m., woke me up. I could  hear music in the
background. He said he had jammed his thumb, what should he do. I told him
what to do and went back to sleep."
  See? Smart, too.
Maybe the whole scene was summed up best by Donnie  Rowland, a guy I had
circled on the roster before I ever got to Fayetteville. He's from Michigan,
St. Clair Shores, and I figured talking to him would be a good local story.
  What I didn't know was  Donnie is on his way out. At 26, he was a little
too old. He had made it to Triple-A ball, Toledo, he was within a breath of
the major leagues. "Then I got hurt," he told me, "and that was it. They took
another guy up instead. I had to think about where I was going. They came to
me and said, "Donnie, we have to be honest with you. We don't see you playing
in the big leagues.' "
  I remember when  you told me that story, Donnie, in the parking lot of the
motel as we waited for the bus. I winced when I heard those words. "We don't
see you playing in the big leagues." How many guys in the minors  live in
dread of that sentence?
  But you know what you said? "Hey, I was lucky to get to Triple-A. I've
been paid to play a game. They can't take those years away from me."  I give
you credit,  Donnie. You took a lemon and made lemonade. You accepted their
offer to be a coach, and here you are, in A-ball, working with the kids.  One
day you may make it to the majors, as a manager.
  It's  the next-best thing, right?
So long, guys. I may never see many of you again. Duane, remember when you
told me, "If I haven't made it by 25, I'm out of here"? And you're already 23.
Nearly all of you  had a similar sort of cut-off point. That's probably smart.
There are few things sadder than a baseball player who stayed too long.
  So if you're gone, if you never make it to Detroit, well, thanks  for the
week. I liked the smells and the sounds and the tastes. I liked the bus rides,
and the gentle cacophony of 20 Walkmans playing simultaneously. Hey, Anthony,
you sleep with your mouth open.
  Ha. Just kidding.
  I liked the rhythmic sound of cleats on concrete, and the pop-pop-pop of
ball meeting glove. I liked the way you seemed to know what every other minor
leaguer had done. ("Hey,  see this guy? He stinks. He can't get around on the
ball. First- round draft choice. Paid him two-hundred grand. My mother swings
better than him.")
  I liked looking at the hotel list and seeing "Tillman Murchison" listed as
"coach" and then finding out that Tillman Murchison was the bus driver. I
liked walking with you from the convenience store at midnight, along some
nameless southern boulevard, eating  M&M's and potato chips while you asked me
about Jack Morris, Lou Whitaker, what were they really like?
  And what other team would let a writer put on a uniform and sit in the
dugout, just to get  a better feel for his story?
  I liked the whole thing. The parks, the small crowds, the love of the
game. Maybe I liked it because I like sports. Maybe I liked it because it was
simple and young.  As we grow old, those are the two things we miss the most.
  But that's sentimental, and you have no time for that now. Take care. Best
of luck. I wish you, as Gene might put it, all good things.  The major
leagues.
  And now that I'm gone, your luck will return. Just watch.
Knock the heck out of that doughnut,
    Mitch
CUTLINE
Hit a ball through the hole in the doughnut  Elvis Presley is holding (right),
and win $500 or a dozen jelly doughnuts.  The payoff varies, depending on whom
 you're talking to. The billboard is in the Columbia Mets' ballpark. Below,
Darryl Martin (left) and Mark  Cole watch the closing moments of the Generals'
15-2 loss to the Mets.
Dan Raley (left) and Jim Murphy work on a crossword puzzle during a bus ride.
Choosing the right seat on the bus is an important  consideration.
Darryl Martin and Tim Brader (right) watch TV in their hotel room before
leaving for the ballpark.
Duane Walker heads toward the Generals' bus.
Mickey Delas packs his bags after being  called up.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
BASEBALL
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