<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8702170182
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
871005
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, October 05, 1987
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color GARY HERSHORN United Press International;Photo PAULINE LUBENS
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1987, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
SWEEP! 
TIGERS ROAR TO THE AL EAST TITLE BY  
BEATING BLUE JAYS -- PERFECTLY
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
This said it all: Frank Tanana darting off the mound, scooping up the
ball, turning to first baseman Darrell Evans and -- with a lollipop smile
already on his face -- flipping it underhand for  the final out.

  One, two, three, leap!

  Happy ending.
  "Whenever I think of this game from now on,"  Evans said, champagne soaking
his face, after the Tigers had beaten Toronto, 1-0, to capture  the American
League East, "that's the moment I'm going to see. Frank coming towards me, the
ball in his hand, his eyes as big as saucers.  . . .  Oh, man. Oh man. I'll
never forget that."
  Forget  it? Are you kidding?  For years in this city people will be talking
about where they were when the Tigers turned that final out, beat the Blue
Jays, leaped into each others' arms having done what everybody  dreamed and
nobody expected -- on the final day of the season.
  American League East champions.
  Happy ending.
  "I couldn't move," said Chet Lemon, who watched that last play from center
field.  "I should have started to run in, but I was, like, frozen in
amazement. Then it hit me. We won! We won! . . . And I said, 'I better move
before I lose a limb."'
  They won! They won! In an instant  the field was filled with leaping Tigers
players, police on horses, fans who made it over the wall. Inside the Detroit
clubhouse, the staff wheeled out champagne, and pulled down rolls of
protective  plastic over everything that could be protected.
  And in the stands, the sellout crowd was on its feet, giving thunderous
applause, basking in a gloriously winning feeling. As their Tiger heroes
galloped  en masse toward the dugout, Tanana, in the center, looked up, his
hair in bangs on his forehead, a wad of pink chewing gum in his mouth, and
gave an expression of joy that was captured in 100 camera  clicks and a
delightful page of history.
  "I felt," Tanana said, "like I was six years old again."
  Happy ending.
  What a moment! What a day! What a finish! Here was the final piece of a
jigsaw  season, that suddenly, finally, made sense. "If you had told me this
would happen back in April, I would have said you're crazy," said pitcher Jack
Morris. "We were playing terrible (11-19 in May). That  was the truth then.
But there's a different truth now. We're playing pretty darn good baseball."
  Good? Is that the word for it? Try great, remarkable. "Awesome," suggested
Tanana. OK. Awesome. Best  record in either league. It was downright chilling
to watch these final seven games with the Blue Jays -- three this weekend,
four last weekend in Toronto -- all of them decided by a single run. History
will surely remember this as one of the finest title chases in baseball. 
  "I've never been involved in seven games like this," said shortstop Alan
Trammell, his voice a rasp, lost to screams, shouts,  a million interviews. "A
week ago, we were really down, trailing Toronto by 3 1/2. But we never gave
up. And now . . . this. I'm so emotionally drained right now. But it's the
greatest feeling. God,  it's great."
  God, it was. Seven head-to-head games in the last 11 days. And it all had
come down to this -- the last one on the schedule. Tigers win, it's over. Blue
Jays win, there's a one- game  playoff. Tanana (who two weeks ago was slumping
so badly, he was removed from the rotation)  was back and pitching for the
Tigers. And Jimmy Key, Toronto's ace, 17-7, was going against him. A duel in
the Sunday afternoon shadows. How would this one go?
  A better question: What was left? Already in this crazy series, there had
been games as raucous as a 10-9 Toronto win up north, and as tense as
Saturday's 3-2 Tiger victory in 12 heart-stopping innings.
  What was left? What hadn't we seen? How about a 1-0 game -- the slimmest
possible victory in this sport -- on a wobbly home run by Larry  Herndon in
the second inning?
  Perfect. How absurdly perfect. A series full of big hitters and big talkers
won on a single swing by the quietest man in a Tigers uniform. "Pretty
fitting, huh?" said  Evans, winking. Indeed. Herndon even gave a brief
interview afterward.
  "How do you feel?" he was asked.
  "Great," he said.
  What more need be said?
  Great. Grreeaaat. Couldn't have been  better. And Tanana wins it? The
homegrown Detroit hero? A shutout? A complete game? A six-hitter?  "Did you
ever think two weeks ago this might happen?" he was asked.
  "No," he said, "I hoped I'd  get a chance. But I wasn't even pitching. My
job then was to be a cheerleader." 
  Is that beautiful? A guy is benched, and he becomes a cheerleader.
Outsiders might suspect a tad of corniness here. But that is truly
characteristic of this Tiger team. Subs root for starters. Slumpers root for
the hot hands. Remember, this is not 1984, a Tiger season of power and
dominance. Uh-uh. This year has been  spit and glue, a leak springs, you take
the gum out of your mouth and plug it up.
  And because of that, this was the year of Sparky Anderson's life --
probably the best managing of his storied career,  no matter what happens in
the playoffs. "That guy," said pitcher Dan Petry of Anderson, "is the key. In
May, when we stunk, he came to us and said we could win it. And a lot of us
said privately: 'The  guy's nuts.' But his spirit catches on. It really does."
  And finally, it gave birth to a title. In the spritz-a-second Tigers
clubhouse, Anderson, 53, talked to microphone after microphone, dressed  only
in T-shirt and shorts, his white hair soaked with champagne. "I've had it all
now," he croaked. "If I die and go to heaven -- and I hope I go to heaven -- I
can say I've had it all."
  "What about  that prediction back in May?" he was asked. "How did you know?
How did you know?"
  He grinned.
  "I didn't know," he whispered. "I was just having fun."
  So the Tigers win the division. They  go on to play Minnesota for the
American League pennant. And the city of Detroit wakes up this morning,
happier than it expected to be, with scenes from Sunday that linger like
sucking candy:
  Here  was Toronto's Cecil Fielder, 6 foot 3, 220 pounds, trying for second
base in a botched hit-and-run attempt -- and sliding desperately into the
waiting tag of Lou Whitaker. Out. End of threat.
  Here  was Lemon, standing in center field in the eighth inning, waiting for
George Bell's fly ball to drop lazily into his glove. All weekend long, Bell,
the Jays' MVP candidate and biggest threat, had been  handled this easily. Up,
down, out. Did not drive in a run. Maybe the key to the series.
  And here, lookie here, was an octopus flying out of the stands in the
seventh, going splat in front of the  Blue Jays' dugout as nearby fans pointed
and chuckled. An octopus? Isn't that what they throw at Red Wings hockey
games? Well. Yes. Maybe someone got confused. The Blue Jays players sitting on
the dugout  steps simply looked up into the stands, mystified, shaking their
heads, as if this was the final insult.
  An octopus?
  OK. A moment here for Toronto, a great team, a team that should be playing
more baseball this season. The Blue Jays may not realize the ugly pitch fate
will toss them now; but they will soon enough. The despair of one lost
afternoon will not compare to the disgust at 100 afternoons  of questions next
spring, next summer, forever: "How could you guys lose your last seven games?
What happened? What happened?" 
  Who knows? History will record that the Jays finished just two games
behind the Tigers, with the second-best record in baseball. But who really
reads history? People will remember that they lost the last game of their tilt
with Detroit in Toronto -- some say the turning  point of the season -- then
lost three straight to Milwaukee, and three straight to the Tigers. Their last
seven games? Yes. People will cast the Blue Jays as losers, chokers, and that
is unfair, they  deserve better.
  "This series had gotten to be so good," said Trammell. "I kind of wanted to
keep playing them."
  No need for that now. The division is won. The Tigers got it.
  "Yeah," said  Trammell, grinning at the words. "Yeah . . . yeah. . ."
  Yeah.
  An hour after it was over, when Tiger Stadium was empty, quiet, the evening
sun just about gone, three figures, dressed in underwear,  suddenly appeared
on the Tiger infield: Jack Morris. Jim Walewander. Scott Lusader. The
highest-paid player on the team, and two rookies. They dropped into a stance
at first base, and, smiling, on cue,  took off in a foot race to second.
Lusader took the lead, Walewander second, Morris trailing. They reached the
bag -- Morris slid -- and they cracked up, laughing, waving, yelling. All
alone. Is that  any way to behave? The American League East champions? Racing
in their underwear?
  You bet it is.

CUTLINE
Detroit Tigers pitcher Frank Tanana jumps for joy after he pitched a 1-0
shutout against  the Toronto Blue Jays. 
Police, on foot and on horseback, take the field at Tiger Stadium on Sunday as
jubilation breaks out.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
MAJOR STORY;DTIGERS;BASEBALL;GAME;PLAYOFF;SPT;COLUMN;Detroit Tigers
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
