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<UID>
8702160270
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
870929
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Tuesday, September 29, 1987
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
STATE EDITION
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
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<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1987, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
GIBSON'S WAIT-A-MINUTE HOMER BUYS TIGERS TIME
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
TORONTO -- Oh, if home runs could talk! What might this one have said --
this ninth-inning speedball that exploded off Kirk Gibson's bat and sailed
gloriously over the right field wall, tied the  game, silenced the crowd,
landed in the Blue Jays' parking area and rolled under a car. What might it
have said? "Wait a minute. We're not done yet."

  Wait a minute. Time out for a great moment,  a great game, a reprieve from
the warden on a Tigers season too good to end. Yes, Detroit is still in second
place in the American League East. Yes, it still trails Toronto by 2 1/2 games
with a week left.

  But here, Sunday, for four hours and six minutes, was the chase, the
season, everything they play for, everything we watch for. One must-win game
-- against a team that had seemingly forgotten  the phrase: "You gotta lose
sometime." Stop Toronto. That was all the Tigers wanted. Stop Toronto. No
problem. Stop the ocean, while you're at it. And war, and world hunger.
  After all, hadn't these  Blue Jays been kissed by some devilish destiny,
hadn't they already won three games from the Tigers by one run apiece, with
enough ninth-inning magic to fill an entire reel of highlight film? Stop
Toronto?  How did one do that? The Tigers had already tried throwing their
ace, taking early leads, scoring nine runs. Nothing had worked.
  And here they were, in the  final game of this four-game series --  "We
lose this, that's it," Darrell Evans would later admit -- and so they played
their trump card: Doyle Alexander, the hottest pitcher in baseball. And he
surrendered one run in eight innings, fought  off threats in the fifth and
sixth, and handcuffed guys like Lloyd Moseby, Ernie Whitt and Jesse Barfield.
  And with three outs to go, his team was still losing, 1-0.
  What went through your mind  when you came to bat in the ninth?" Gibson
would be asked when this thing was all over, when the Tigers had finally
beaten the Blue Jays, 3-2, and breathed new life into the final week of the
season.  "What were you thinking?"
  "Honestly?" he would say. "I was thinking that last time up I swung like a
bleep!"
  Well. What do you want? Shakespeare? The fact is that Gibson, like his
teammates,  was fed up with all that had been happening, these weird losses,
weird bounces, bullpen collapses, and he decided to swing freely -- "Go for
it," a Californian might say -- and bam! Over the wall. Suddenly,  the score
was tied. And more important, a spell had been broken: It wasn't just the Blue
Jays who could have magic in the ninth. 
  "That was as big an at-bat as we've had in a long time," Evans would  say.
Indeed. It seemed to change everything.  Only one inning earlier, Evans, the
Tigers' elder statesman, had smacked his own towering fly ball to
right-center, only to see it caught against the wall  by a leaping Barfield.
Evans stood for a long time on first base after that, just staring off,
mumbling to himself. What did the Tigers have to do to win here? Sports
writers memorized the scene, stored  it like a chestnut for when the Tigers
went down.
  Only they didn't go down. Gibson hit that homer and they went to extra
innings and the Tigers scored again, and the Blue Jays tied them, and the
Tigers scored in the 13th and . . . 
  Well, we'll get to that in a second.
  A few words here about Doyle Alexander: Fantastic. Awesome. Totally. What
he did Sunday was no less than save the Tigers' season -- in a park that loves
him as much as Popeye loves Brutus. All day long, the lean, saggy-faced
pitcher (who criticized  Toronto  after the Jays traded him)  had endured
jeers from the sellout  crowd -- at one point a plane flew overhead with a
tailing message "LET'S FOIL DOYLE!" -- and he ignored it all. On top of that,
he was working without a net; the Tigers'  bullpen was a tinderbox. Everybody
knew it. Alexander had to go long. He went long. Alexander had to choke the
rallies. He choked the rallies. 
  He went 10 2/3 innings, before giving up a tying run on Barfield's single,
and  Willie  Hernandez relieved him. "He was unbelievable the way he pitched,"
Dan Petry said afterward. "Doyle left his heart on the mound."
  The Tigers weren't about to let it be stepped on.
  So, OK. Back  to the game. The 13th inning.  By now a rain had already
started falling, stopped, the clouds disappeared, and the sun returned. How
much longer would this go on? Jim Walewander opened it with a walk.
Walewander? But of course. The young man who made the rock group The Dead
Milkmen famous, was perfect for a game like this. He took second on Lou
Whitaker's  bunt,  and stayed there while Evans received  an intentional
pass.
  And up came Gibson. One more time. Whiskered. Tight jawed. Realistic. He
hadn't celebrated when he'd hit that home run in the ninth ("You never
celebrate early here") and he  knew, despite the indications, that he wasn't
swinging well.
  "I've been lousy for a while now," he said. "I just followed that old
saying, 'Swing in case you hit something.' " And he did. The first  pitch. It
blooped toward center field and Walewander and Evans froze on the base paths,
watching Moseby, the center fielder, come charging, charging -- and, no! The
ball bounced in front of him and ricocheted  over his head. Flash! Walewander
took off, charged around third, as Manny Lee retrieved the ball and threw
toward home. It was close, Walewander went in headfirst, dragged his hand and
reached the promised  land in a cloud of dirt. . . . 
  Safe!
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