<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8702180374
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
871012
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, October 12, 1987
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1F
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SPECIAL SECTION: AL PLAYOFFS '87;; REPRINTED IN STATE EDITION October 13, 1987
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1987, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
CAN EVANS, TIGERS RISE FROM DIRT?
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
He was on his knees, sunk in the dirt, the weight of the Tigers' season
seemingly on his shoulders. What had he done? Darrell Evans? The veteran, the
leader, the symbol of the Tigers' experience  . . . had been picked off at
third base, caught in a mistake, gunned down by an alert catcher and a deadly
accurate throw?
Out?

  Out.
  "That doesn't happen," Tigers fans seemed to whisper.  "It just doesn't
happen."
  It happened. Tigers lose. They are one game from elimination in these
American League playoffs.  Not because of that one play. Not because of Evans'
failed belly-flop back  to third that left him only dirty, sorry, and out --
and deflated a potential rally. Uh-uh. Not because of that one play. 
  But because of what it symbolized -- which is what had been happening all
night.
  "The Tigers don't do that," whispered the fans.
  They did. All the things they're not supposed to do. All the things they
hadn't done in building the best record in baseball. They blew  scoring
chances. Their big hitters were not big at all. Men were left on base like
forgotten car keys. The staring pitching did not hold.
  And their opponents are playing like the favorites. 
  Who are these guys anyway? The Minnesota Twins? Or some ghosts from the
past in young, fresh-faced bodies? They have outplayed, outhit and outpitched
the Tigers in three of four games, and they lead  this unexpected series, 3-1.
  "Not supposed to happen," the fans repeated, shaking their heads.
  It happened.
  Shock," said Evans quietly into an army of microphones. The game was over,
the  game was lost, 5-3, and what happened in that sixth inning was merely one
of a number of bad occurrences. Evans had been on third base, Dave Bergman on
second, Lou Whitaker at the plate. One out, Tigers  trailing by a run. On the
first pitch, Evans tried to get aggressive. He leaned just a tad too much. And
suddenly here was catcher Tim Laudner up and firing toward third baseman Gary
Gaetti -- a called  play, Gaetti would admit -- and Evans, too late, too late,
was tagged out. 
  "Shock is mostly what I felt. You don't figure it's gonna happen  . . .
It's a mistake. I wish I could have it back. You just want to dig a hole and
bury yourself."
  It did not lose the game. But ultimately, the game was lost. And the
feeling now is like spotting an "E" on your gas tank with 100 miles of highway
to  go. Three straight? Is that really the only way the Tigers can stay alive
in this once-magical season? Three straight? What happened to all the World
Series talk? What happened to the best record in  baseball?
  This is what happened: Somebody began a new season. And all the old stuff
went out the window. Suddenly, the Tigers are no longer chock full of dominant
starting pitchers.  Suddenly, they have no big bats in the No. 3 and 4 spots.
"We're just not doing what we normally do," said cleanup hitter Alan Trammell,
3-for- 15 in this series. "I don't know why. I wish I did. I'd like to show
the  country what kind of team we really are."
  So far, they have not. And the Twins? Those terrible road- playing Twins?
Those we-don't-really-have-pitching Twins? Too young, too inexperienced, not
ready  for prime-time Twins?
  They have shown exactly the opposite.
  Here, in Tiger Stadium, was Kirby Puckett cracking a solo home run off
Frank Tanana. Here was Greg Gagne, the No. 8 hitter, doing the  same. Here was
reliever Juan Berenguer, the hate raining down on him from his former fans,
shutting down the Tigers for 2 2/3 innings.  "I don't think there's any doubt
they've played better than us,"  said Kirk Gibson, who struck out in the
bottom of the ninth for the final out. "And as for our situation, I think it's
pretty bleepin' obvious."
  A  moment here for Evans. He did not deserve this.  He has played so well
all year, led the team by example, proven those wrong who said he was too old
(40) to do what he used to. How terrible must he feel this morning. How hard
was that walk from third  base back to the dugout, his uniform covered in dirt
from the failed slide, his face the picture of frustration -- with himself,
with the situation, with everything. "Look at him over there," said Trammell
in the clubhouse, motioning to the crowd of reporters around his teammate.
"He's sitting there, taking it. I can't say enough about him. He's been our
leader all year."
  Unfair. He deserves better.  But this is a game, not a courtroom. You get
what you get.
  Yes, there were plenty of other failed moments. The very next inning,
Trammell -- the Tigers' MVP candidate -- grounded into a double play  with one
on and nobody out. Earlier, in the fifth, Larry Herndon had lined out on a 3-2
picth with the bases jammed. And back in the first, Evans, once again, had the
bases loaded and lined out.
  The whole game was like one of those dreams where you are running in slow
motion, where you can see your goal, but you just can't reach it. Before it
began, Sparky Anderson had admitted losing this would  "be almost impossible"
to overcome. Correct. Not only for the difficulty of three straight victories,
but because two of them must come at the Metrodome, where, if you wear a
foreign uniform, just breathing  is hard enough. "What choice do we have now?"
asked Trammell. "We have to win three straight. It's been done (1985 by Kansas
City, in the playoffs over Toronto)."
  And it must happen again, if the  Detroit baseball season is to continue.
Didn't the Tigers have the best record in baseball? Didn't Minnesota have the
worst record of any division winner? Yes. Yes. And what does it matter? This
is  a seven-game season now, not 162.  The stage has changed; and so,
apparently, have the players. 
  Why has it happened?
  It has happened because Detroit's starting pitchers, supposedly their
forte,  have been average or less against Minnesota batters -- Doyle
Alexnader, Jack morris, Walt Terrell and Frank Tanana, all unable to last a
game or earn a victory.
  It has happened because every time  it looks as if the Tigers should score
in bunches, they score in drops. "And when we score," admitted Chet Lemon,
"they seem to come right back and score themselves."
  It has happened because of bad  things at bad times, and because of
aggressive, no-fear play by the Twins. And in the end, all that counts is that
it has happened. And the Tigers now need a miracle, three times, to get out of
it.
  How sad a scene Sunday night: Evans, caught, out, nothing he can do about
it, sunk in that dirt around third base with his head lowered to his chest,
the crowd too stunned to react. It was one play,  not the only play, but a
symbolic play, symbolic of the feelings, the situation, everything.
  If this were Hollywood, it would simply be part of a great script, the
moment for a classic turnaround,  a Rocky-like comeback, a fitting end for a
season that has been like a mountain climb in your socks.
  But this is not Hollywood. This is Detroit. Three games more, at best, and
the Tigers must win  them all. If that sounds almost impossible, it's because
it is.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN;REACTION;DARRELL EVANS;BASEBALL;DTIGERS;MINNESOTA
TWINS;OUT;Detroit Tigers
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
