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<UID>
8602170797
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
861022
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Wednesday, October 22, 1986
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
4D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1986, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
NO ONE CAN STEAL BOGGS' ARTFUL CALM
</HEADLINE>
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</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
BOSTON -- There was fever. In the streets, in the shops, in the dirty
hallways of Fenway Park and in the Red Sox clubhouse, where reporters darted
like waterbugs, player to player, gathering news  for the third game of the
World Series. The Sox had won the first two in New York. Now they were home.
The town was juiced. The town was electric. There was fever everywhere.

  Except here, in the  lazy slouch of Wade Boggs, who stood alone by the bat
rack, sifting through the lumber, looking for the handles marked "26."

  His number.
  "What are you doing?" someone asked.
  "Just making  sure they're all here," Boggs said.
  "Your bats?" he was asked.
  "Yeah," he said, finding one and taking a half-swing. "I always check my
bats after a road trip. In case somebody steals one."
  "Does that happen often?"
  "Sometimes," he said.
  "Right from the clubhouse?"
  "Yep," he said.
  "Do you ever get them back?"
  "Nope," he said, looking up. "Once they're gone, they're gone for good."
  Gone for good. It might well be his epitaph.  To Boggs, there is what can
be done, and what can't be done, bats here, bats not here, a pitch that is
coming in, and a pitch in the mitt, gone for good.
  He won the batting title this season, for the third time in four years. He
drove in Boston's first earned run of this Series with a double down the line
in Game 2. He made three  dazzling plays at third base -- a bare-handed grab,
a dive, a backhanded scoop -- all fired to first in time for the out.  So?
  "They're all here," he said of the bats.
  And he walked away.
  Ego is a clay that hardens with the heat, and Wade Boggs, under the
lamplights of pressure, only gets harder, tougher. He is all parts ego. That
is what allows him to be so calm, so prepared. Dancing  with a .400 average
does not make his palms sweat. He is secure in the idea that hitting
excellence is what he is meant to do, not something he happened upon.
  And so he is not satisfied. Not with  his 3-for-12 and two RBIs in the
first three Series games. Not satisfied, and not showing it. "I'll do better,"
he said. He counted his bats and took his warm-ups, and .400 or .100, World
Series or exhibition, you will not tell the difference.
  He is a part of the Red Sox that wasn't always here in previous talented
teams. A steady, quiet, confident part. He and Roger Clemens, in particular,
Mr. Hit and  Mr. Pitch, do little screaming, little surfing on the emotional
waves.
  "What's the difference between a Series game and a regular one?" Boggs
was asked.
  "Here I have 50 guys around me asking  questions," he answered. "That's
all."
  He is self-absorbed, and self-absorption is the ground floor of ego, the
part that makes Boggs, 28, one of the game's best hitters.  There was a blip
on his  screen this summer, when his mother was killed in an auto accident. He
spoke of it recently. But even that he spoke of as simply something he had to
get over. 
  "There was a time right after that,"  he said, "when I couldn't concentrate
on the game. For a week or so. That's never happened to me before.
  "Anybody can hit .357 and win a batting title. That's easy with no
distractions. Just go out  and do it. But having to regain your concentration,
that was the hardest thing I ever had to do."
  Anyone can win a batting title?
  But this is Boggs. He follows every pitch from the mound until  the mitt or
his bat. He rarely swings and misses. His career average is .352. He is so
good. And he is so rare these days, in that he is far more a hero for his
on-field performance than any off-field  image. Would you know him without a
bat?
  On Monday, a crowd of reporters was asking about his improved fielding,
some even suggesting he deserved the Gold Glove award. "I think I had a Gold
Glove  year at third," Boggs said, shrugging. "But that's not in my hands.
Managers and coaches vote. I'm glad the batting title isn't like that. The
batting title, you have to win."
  And that has been done.  This season's is in his pocket. Gone for good. Now
there is a World Series to capture, and it is impossible to stand near Wade
Boggs, even if he is just checking his bats, and not sense that he is going
to do something about it. You catch the scent of ego. Not the boastful kind.
The kind tangled up in destiny.
  These Red Sox are not an Impossible Dream team. This whole thing is very
real for them.  As real as the fever.  As real as the count of the bats.
  What will be for Wade Boggs here? Could there be a Gold Glove in all this?
Could there be a 5-for-5  night? A game-winning hit? The face  is quiet. The
bats are all here. There could be anything. Anything he wants.
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