<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8702190770
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
871020
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Tuesday, October 20, 1987
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1987, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
MAGIC OF SERIES TOUCHES SMALLEY IN VERY BIG WAY
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
ST. LOUIS -- The moment came in the bottom of the eighth, and from now
until he is an old man, the time, the circumstances, even the words -- "bottom
of the eighth, World Series, 1987" -- will forever  tickle a certain fancy. He
was sitting on the bench. The manager came over. "Why don't you bat for.  . .
."

  Roy Smalley is too old to be excited by this kind of thing -- a pinch hit.
For Pete's sake,  the guy played three years with the Yankees. Steinbrenner.
Billy Martin. What could he possibly have missed? And that's not counting the
six years with Minnesota before, and the three years since he  has  been back,
plus the stint with the Chicago White Sox, and the minor league years in
Pittsfield and Spokane. Excited? Hey. You reach 34 in this game with a career
batting average of .257, and you  get excited 1) when spring training is over,
and 2) when the checks arrive on time.

  But the World Series. Ah. Well. Never let anyone tell you this is just
baseball in cold weather. The whole thing  may come into your living room as a
spectacle, huge, glossy, a swirling mega-show of TV lights, cameras, action.
  But here is a little story of what it's really about. An infielder, winding
down his  career, who only wanted to get in there, one swing, one World Series
at-bat. A guy too old to get excited about this sort of thing.
  And in the bottom of the eighth. . . . 
He's been to the Big One
  Consider that the average player never knows whether  he'll even make the
big leagues until he does. For him, the dream of a World Series is distant,
movie-like. Not so the son of a major league shortstop.  Not so the nephew of
a major league manager.
  Roy Smalley is both. His father, Roy Sr., played in the National League for
11 years. His uncle, Gene Mauch . . . well, you know Gene Mauch. Played for
nine years, has managed for 26 -- and you know the knock against him: Never
Been To The Big One.
  So young Smalley knew plenty about the World Series. Knew it was out there,
like a mountaintop. And  that bad directions seemed to run in the family. In
his 13 major league seasons, he, too, had never seen a post-season at-bat.
  And here he was, sitting in the dugout Sunday night, watching the moments
slip away. He had made it, like the first kid to go to college, he was in a
World Series. But he hadn't played. Not a minute. Once, he was an everyday
shortstop. An All-Star. But now, he watched as his  Twins were beating the
Cardinals, 8-4, and he knew the eighth inning would likely be their last
at-bats this game.
  "Tom (Kelly) had told me the inning before that I would bat in Randy Bush's
spot  if they brought in a right-hander," he said. But the Cardinals did not
bring in a right-hander. And Smalley stayed seated. He watched as Gene Larkin
-- who batted for Bush instead -- flied to center.
  One out.
  In came right hander Todd Worrell. "Great,"  thought Smalley, "now they do
it." He looked over at his friend, Don Baylor, the 38-year-old veteran.
  "At least we get to see Worrell,"  Baylor said.
  "Yeah," sighed Smalley. "I was kinda hoping I'd see him a little closer
up."
  Tom Brunansky grounded to third. Two out. Smalley looked down. And
suddenly, Kelly was leaning toward  him. "Why don't you bat for (Steve)
Lombardozzi?" said the manager. And Smalley, whose insides went electric,
blurted: "Fine with me." And grabbed a bat.
  When he walked out, the crowd exploded. After  all, Smalley really grew up
in Minnesota as a player. "I felt so good," he said, "just to get in the game
and hear that crowd, I almost didn't care what I did."
  Almost.
He doubled his pleasure
  Here is what he did: a fairy tale. Sent the first pitch into the
left-center gap, rounded first base, slid into second as the throw reached the
fielder's glove  . . . safe! A double. The crowd drenched  him with noise. He
jogged to the dugout (lifted for a pinch runner) and slapped hands with his
teammates.
  "That easy, huh?" greeted Baylor. "First at-bat, first pitch. Hit for a
double. Hmph."
  Smalley laughed.
  In the clubhouse afterward, he was surrounded by reporters. But tonight he
will be back on the bench, and the story will be someone else.
  So be it. "This might have been my  biggest thrill in baseball," he said.
"I know my dad and uncle were watching. Sixty years of baseball between us,
and this was the first. . . . You always dream about the World Series.  . . .
Well,  let me tell ya, it's a wonderful, wonderful feeling." 
  One at-bat. One hit. Roy Smalley is not a kid anymore, not at 34 and on the
bench. But he felt like a kid for a moment. And whenever he blows  on these
embers -- "bottom of the eighth, World Series, 1987" -- he will again. That's
the best you can ask of baseball. It really is.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN;ANECDOTE;ROY SMALLEY;BASEBALL
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
