<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8502110745
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
851015
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Tuesday, October 15, 1985
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
4D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1985, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
TARP TELLS ALL: 'WHY I ROLLED OVER COLEMAN'
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
ST. LOUIS -- At first, the tarp wasn't talking.

  "Get away from me," it mumbled. "I don't need no cheesehead reporters
around me now."

  Hours earlier, the tarp had committed the most heinous  crime of this NL
playoff.  During batting practice, it had rolled up the leg of an unsuspecting
Vince Coleman, the Cardinals' prize rookie, trapping him under the weight of
its 1,200 pounds until teammates  could pull him free.
  Coleman escaped with minor bruises and cuts, but was forced to miss
Sunday's and Monday's games. Now the police were bringing the tarp down to the
station. The charge: attempted man-smother.
  Suddenly, the tarp made a break for it. It hopped into the stands and tried
to hide as a foul pole. The police spotted it when it began to flap in the
wind. They slapped on the cuffs, which wasn't easy, since the tarp was 180
feet long.
  "Why'd you do it?" a reporter screamed.
  "Did you mean to roll over all of Coleman, or just his legs?" another
hollered.
  The tarp was silent,  as tarps will be.
  "Were you trying to make a political statement?"
  "What did you plan to do with him once you had him rolled up?"
  "Mr. Tarp, I'm from People magazine. Is it true you only  did this to
impress Jodie Foster's pillowcase?"
  The tarp shifted uncomfortably. There was an awkward silence. Finally, it
spoke.
  "Look," it said, "if you want to ask me questions, at least ask  them to my
face. You're all standing at the wrong end."
  The reporters scurried to a more appropriate position.
  "It's a frame-up," the tarp began. "I was just doing my job. It rains, I
unroll.  I'm automatic. It ain't my responsibility to look out for dumb
rookies."
  "But isn't it a strange coincidence that it was Coleman -- the Cardinals'
best base-stealer -- that you trapped?" someone  asked.
  The tarp said nothing.
  "Someone said you were seen talking with Tommy Lasorda the other night."
  Silence.
  "And how come you're blue? Shouldn't you be red like everything else here?"
  More silence.
  "Hey! Lookit this!" a reporter hollered. He'd found a tag in the tarp's far
corner. It read Made In Los Angeles.
  "Let go! Let go!" the tarp yelled, its voice unsteady. "OK. I give.  A
guy came by Saturday night wearing a Dodgers jacket. I was just hanging around
my cylinder. He pulled out $500 and said it was mine if I could take out
Coleman, who was burning the Dodgers  with his speed.
  "Do you know what $500 means to a poor tarp like me? I live in a hole, for
cripes sake. I never seen that kind of money in my pockets. Come to think of
it, I never seen my pockets."
  The tarp grew somber. It wrinkled up.
  "This ain't an easy life, you know. Rainy days always get me down, so to
speak. How would you feel if every time you came out, people booed? Then you
just  lie there, face in the dirt, soaking wet.
  "I coulda been somebody. I coulda been a parachute, maybe. But no. I came
from the wrong side of the mats.
  "My dad was a shower curtain. My mom was  a rubber sheet. What chance did I
have? Now I'm going to the Big House. I've heard stories about that place.
They cut you into place mats, rags, Hefty trash bags."
  The policemen took their positions  around the tarp, getting ready to carry
it off.
  "Coleman!" a reporter yelled. "Quick, tell us about Coleman!"
  "I didn't mean to hurt him," the tarp said. "But when I came out of my hole
on Sunday,  there he was, so near, so easy, so unsuspecting.
  "I couldn't help myself. I rolled onto his shoe and I lost control. Next
thing I knew it was the ankle, the shin, the knee. I heard voices inside  my
head saying, 'Go for the nose!'  I was mad! Mad! Ahhhahahhaha . . . "
  The thing was coming unraveled. Everywhere. It rolled left, then right,
then left again. A temper tarptrum.
  It took 37  policemen to finally lift it and slide it into a converted
moving van. "Watch your hands and feet," the sergeant said, "it could still be
dangerous."
  "What a life," mumbled  the tarp.
  The squad  cars were started. The sirens whirred. Justice would be served.
Baseball would go on.
  "Any last words?" a reporter hollered.
  "Yeah," grumbled the tarp, as the truck pulled out. "No offense, but  I
hope it rains all day."
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>

</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
