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<UID>
8702200501
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
871024
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Saturday, October 24, 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>
NOW GAETTI HAS IT ALL --  INCLUDING RECOGNITION
</HEADLINE>
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<BODY>
MINNEAPOLIS -- And the winner is: Gary Gaetti. No matter what happens.
Three weeks ago he was a name heard only in Minnesota and a few select
baseball circles. And now you've got Whitey Herzog wishing  he had him and
Sparky Anderson wishing he had him and a nation's worth of media fantasizing
how great it would be if Gaetti graced their clubhouses during the regular
season -- and not just during this  wacky World Series.

  Hats off to Gary. Fielding? Hitting? Personality? Chalk 'em up. He has
lived a mini-career is this brief post-season. And the fact is, the Twins
could lose Game 6 to the Cardinals today, could surrender the Series, fumble
away a beautiful Cinderella story -- and Gaetti would still walk off in glass
slippers. Made in the shade.

  Which, come to think of it, is something he might  say. "Made in the
shade." Or: "More beer." And that is part of his appeal. Rarely in today's
baseball world of big shots and silent brooders do you encounter a regular guy
this . . . regular. Not sweet,  like those athletic bible-thumpers. Not crude,
like the rat-in-a-box Dave Kingmans. Uh-uh. Gary Gaetti is small-town fabric,
tough and true, the kind who'd wrestle you, beat you, drink you under the
table, then drive you home and say, "See ya tomorrow, OK?"
  There is a dash of Nicolas Cage goofball here, and some Tony Danza macho --
 but with a big nose and receding hairline to keep a human edge  on any
Hollywood fantasies. Just as well. Gaetti, 29, will probably never be more
than the face he sees in the mirror each morning.
  That, and a hell of a ball player.
He's there when it counts  "You can see it in his eyes," says Herzog, who,
remember, is managing the opposing team in this World Series. "When Gary comes
to the plate he's not just up there. He wants to beat you. Bad. We had  a
chance to sign him in the 70s. I wish we had."
  Why not? Think of a critical moment in this crazy Twins' post-season, and
more than likely Gaetti was involved. In the first game against Detroit  in
the AL Championships, somebody needed to prove that Doyle Alexander was
beatable, despite his 9-0 record. Enter Gaetti. Two home runs in his first two
at- bats. In Game 4, with the Tigers threatening  to even the series -- enter
Gaetti, who called for that fateful pickoff of Darrell Evans at third base.
  He had the winning RBI in Game 2 of this Series, smacked a two-run triple
Thursday off a smoking  Todd Worrell. He has been flawless in the field, is
batting .316 -- and  though his team has dropped three straight, if anyone is
likely to burst forth today . . . . "You learn as you go along in these
things," he says, "I think that's why Games 6 and 7 are usually best in a
series. I'm optimistic."
  Too often the word "competitive" in sports is just a euphemism for "total
jerk." Not so Gaetti.  Here is the son of an Illinois railroad worker,  a
tough guy who reeeeally wants to win yet was the first to  weep at the Twins
pennant-winning reception; a guy given the MVP award of the AL Championships,
who regretted that "the awards ceremony kept me celebrating with my
teammates." He is free agent after this World Series, on the brink of a mint,
yet after Thursday's Game 5 loss he said of a bunt single  by Ozzie Smith: "It
was my play. I vegged out. I blew it."
  Vegged out? Who was the last player to admit that? Vegged out?
He's frank and unpredictable  Well. You get that stuff from Gaetti. His
post-game interviews have become a favorite in this Series. He stands by his
locker, drags slowly on cigaret, like some crime boss in "The Godfather," and
answers slowly, frankly, unpredictably. He knocked  Tom Lawless for
showboating after his Game 4 home run. He said he might ask Smith to teach him
a back flip "but with me it would come out a forward roll." 
  Here was his reaction Thursday --  the  Twins' lowest moment so far -- when
someone asked could they win the last two at the Metrodome:
  "Yeah . . . yeah, yeah. We can. And -- that's what we're gonna do. Yeah!
We're gonna win two" -- his  voice was rising now --  "and . . . THAT'S . . .
A FACT . . . JACK!
  "I NEED A BEER!" he announced, grinning wildly, and marched through the
startled crowd of reporters in search of one.
  So much  for depression.
  On he goes. When the Twins began this post-season march, they were Kirby
Puckett and Co. No more. Gaetti has gained recognition he probably deserved
for some time. Air-tight defense.  Tenacious hitting. And spirit? Well. Both
Anderson and Herzog have been around too long to have their heads turned by
mere talent; what they see in this guy is liver, lungs, heart and kidneys for
the  game. You can't fudge that.
  So here come the Twins, what might be the last game of their charming
season, plucking the final leaf off destiny's clover. She loves them, she
loves them not. At least  she knows them now. The third baseman especially.
Hats off to Gary. The champion in this series is yet to be determined. The
winner is obvious.
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