<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8802150867
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
881021
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, October 21, 1988
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
THE TRIALS OF REGGIE ROGERS
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1988, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
AFTER THE WARNING SIGNS, THE NIGHTMARE HITS HOME
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
OAKLAND, Calif. --  The call was long  distance, it began with a question
-- "Did you hear about Reggie?" -- and I knew the sad truth before the words
were even spoken.

  It's our nightmare now.  Blood has been spilled. It was late at night,
somebody ran a red light, and this morning three teenagers are dead, while
Reggie Rogers, the Lions defensive lineman, who was allegedly driving drunk,
lies  in a hospital, his neck fractured, his right thumb sewn back on his
hand. Police are expected to charge him today in connection with three deaths.
And we awake this morning to a funeral song that will not go away, not
tomorrow, not next week, not for a long time.

  Our nightmare now. For in certain ways, we knew this was coming. Didn't we?
 We live in a time where life goes so fast, where having  fun is so important,
that warnings and cautions get a shrug and a quick goodby kiss, and then the
next thing you know, somebody's dead.
  It has happened. We saw it elsewhere -- with Bruce Kimball, charged with
killing  two teenagers in a drunken-driving incident this summer. And with
David Croudip, of the Atlanta Falcons -- one of Rogers' peers -- who sat down
after a game two weeks ago, mixed  a cocaine cocktail, and killed himself.
Were there no warnings about drunken  driving before Kimball? Was cocaine
introduced the day Croudip died? 
  Of course not. And around the country Reggie Rogers  will be a small
headline today, people will shrug and say "another pro athlete who couldn't
handle it" and go on.
  We do not have that luxury in Detroit.
  Not anymore.
  It's our nightmare now.  Horrible and awful and real.  Rogers gave us
warning signs. He had been troubled almost from the day he arrived in Detroit.
 He missed practices. He disappeared unexplainably. He suffered from
depression,  his performance was poor, he was benched. The Lions gave him more
chances, because pro athletes, especially the good ones, always get more
chances. And yet anyone who knew Rogers, a likable guy, would  not use the
word "stable" to describe his personality.
  Tragedy already had sat upon his doorstep. His older brother Don, a
defensive back with the Cleveland Browns, died from cocaine in the summer  of
1986. I remember the day Reggie came to the Lions offices for the first time,
draft day 1987, and how uncomfortable we were asking him about his brother.
  "That's behind me," he said, claiming  to have learned a lesson and asking
that the subject be dropped. We agreed, not wanting to rehash painful
memories. After all, you would think his brother's death would have made him
smarter. Unfortunately, living with trouble doesn't always mean you learn from
it.
  Sometimes it only means you are doomed to its shadow.
  Which is what we must consider now. This is not fun and games. This is not
a subject  for debate. These are someone's children who died.  They will be
listed in the newspaper, not in the sports pages, but the obituaries. And
those of us who are tired of hearing about the dangers of drunken  driving are
going to hear about them again, because families are weeping this morning, and
at the very least, they deserve that much.
  Did a siren go off when you heard this news? Drunken driving? Sports stars?
Anyone who has read the papers recently knows the ongoing trouble the Red
Wings have had with star players Bob Probert, an alcoholic,  and Petr Klima,
a more-than-social drinker. Each  has been arrested on a  drunken driving
charge, each has been, at some point, suspended, lectured, fined, punished.
They keep getting into trouble -- until fans begin to grow weary. Some grow
weary of  the players; some grow weary of the lectures. 
  "Leave 'em alone and let 'em play hockey," people cry. "They're just having
a few beers with the boys. Give it a rest."
  No. You cannot give it a  rest. How many times have people said, "God
forbid Probert or Klima gets on the road and kills somebody"?  There is no
satisfaction this morning in saying, "See? Told you."  But it has happened,
Detroit  has been bitten, tragedy has cut our flesh. And anyone who turns his
head at warning signals can no longer be forgiven.
  Listen to Red Wing coach Jacques Demers, when he learned of the Rogers
tragedy:  "Every time something has happened to one of our players, and I've
gotten a call at one or two in the morning, the first thing I think is
hopefully it's not a drinking incident. And that nobody got  hurt.
  "When I got the call about Probert, the first thing I asked was, 'Was
anybody hurt?' That's my No. 1 priority. That somebody will get hurt --
especially innocent people."
  This is not  a police officer talking -- this is a hockey coach.  Here is
what our sports world has come to. The phone rings, and the coach prays nobody
died.
  Reggie Rogers, who is a troubled young man, deserves  both our sympathy and
-- if indeed he was drunk and still driving -- our scorn. But what he deserves
is less important than what is owed to the three teenagers who will not be
coming home, ever again.
  Whatever happened to games, you ask? Whatever happened to sports that were
just runs and hits and touchdowns? They are played by men, and men are human,
and humans die when you crash into them with  a car.
  It's our nightmare now. We can do nothing but grieve for it, learn from
it, and please, please, listen -- so that it does not happen again.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN;AUTOMOBILE;ACCIDENT;DEATH;MULTIPLE;INJURY;REGGIE
ROGERS;SPT
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
