<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8602180038
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
861024
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, October 24, 1986
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1986, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
RED SOX BOUNCING BACK WITH OLD-TIME ENTHUSIASM
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
BOSTON -- Dave Henderson bounces. He is young and muscular and slides into
the bag like a Boeing jet crashing in some distant desert, but then, whoop,
he's back up again, springing to his feet --  so quick the dirt doesn't stick.
Up, down, up. The perfect slide for the man from nowhere.

  Where did he come from, this guy Boston suddenly knows as Hendu? Twelve
days ago he was a part-time player  on the Red Sox's bench. Then Tony Armas
went down with in an injury in a California playoff game  forever known around
here as "Game 5," and Henderson came in and soon he was the last hope for the
Boston  season. Ninth inning, two out, two strikes, and he hit a two-run home
run that led to a victory and more victories that didn't stop until the Sox
had a 2-0 lead in the World Series.

  Where did he  come from? Nobody cares. He has played every game since, and
he came into Thursday night's Game 5 with the best average on the team, .429.
And, as if on cue, there he was, second inning, poised on third  base with a
triple off the Mets' Dwight Gooden, watching Spike Owen lift a sacrifice to
left field.
  Take off! Henderson charged the plate, the throw came in, he crash-landed
and, whoop, he was back  up, hands high, like a rock star saying goodnight.
The Red Sox had their first run in this  crucial game.
  And pitcher Bruce Hurst went out and shut the Mets down.
Buckner scores! Mercy!  Bill  Buckner doesn't bounce. Bill Buckner doesn't
spring. What words would you use for that painful picture  of the 36-year-old
Bucker rounding third and heading for home on a Dwight Evans  single in the
third Thursday -- as Len Dykstra threw from center for a play at the plate?
  How painful was it? How many injuries does the guy have? Ankle, leg. "They
should shoot him for mercy," the latest joke goes. He can barely walk. He had
special high-top shoes made so he could limp passably. And here he came
charging home, racing the throw, as if every disappointment ever suffered in
Boston was strapped  to his ankles. Lumbered? Trudged? Surely it was not
running.
  The ball reached the catcher's glove and Buckner did what comes naturally.
He slid -- only with Buckner, it wasn't as much a slide as  a landlocked
bellyflop. Splat! Yes. Splat! was the word, but splat was good enough. The
throw was high, Buckner touched the plate and the second Boston run had
scored.
  When he rose to his feet, slowly,  his uniform  was covered with his
effort. Dirt sticks to Buckner. It looks a lot like blood.
  And Hurst went out and shut the Mets down.
Laughter is for winners  Jim Rice neither bounces nor trudges. His is the
elegant gait of a man who knows his ball is over the fence, beyond the wall,
no need to get dirty. He is  33 years old, playing in his first World Series
(he was on the Sox but injured in  1975). Quiet, sometimes haughty, and he
runs with dignity -- even when he slammed a ball to the deepest center field
in the fifth inning, and it caromed off the wall, one foot from being a home
run.
  Even then Rice came into third base standing, head up, proud as ever. No
slide, no flop, no bounce. He would score the Red Sox's third run -- which
would be one more than they would need this night  -- on a Don Baylor single,
and he would go into the dugout and point to Baylor and laugh.
  Laughter? Yes. Here were the Red Sox trying to regain the saddle. Here was
Bruce Hurst trying to become the  first Red Sox left-hander since Babe Ruth to
win a World Series game in this park. He was brilliant, pitched a complete
game, striking out the Mets when they threatened most, hearing a chorus of
"BRUUUCE!"  with each out.
  The Sox fans were louder than they had been all Series. Why not? The home
boys came in with a 2-0 lead, and since when has Boston known how to behave
with an advantage?  But tie things up, as the Mets did, slam the Sox against
the wall, give them their last game of the year in Fenway Park -- with the
ugly prospect of returning to New York having to win both games -- and, hey,
there's  something Sox fans can relate to.
  In the end, they got the win they desperately wanted, 4-2. "Too much Bruce
Hurst," Dave Johnson, the Mets' manager would say. And Boston goes to New York
up, 3-2.  And sitting in the stands Thursday was a man whose silent nod said
it all.
  Ted Williams.
  Whatever happens now, they got something to remember, these Fenway fans, a
World Series win in Boston  -- the first in 11 years --  from this, perhaps
their most uncharacteristic Red Sox team. A pastiche of young and old and
injured, symbolized best Thursday by the three slides of Henderson, Buckner
and  Rice -- and the tireless arm of Hurst, who had old timers here dreaming
of a championship, and thinking about The Babe.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN
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