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<UID>
8702200591
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
871025
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, October 25, 1987
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
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<ILLUSTRATION>

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<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
REPRINTED IN STATE EDITION October 26, 1987
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1987, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
HRBEK: MONSTER CUTS LOOSE
</HEADLINE>
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</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
MINNEAPOLIS -- He was lumbering around the base paths, his arms raised in
triumph, taking the bags the way a Mack truck might take speed bumps. What
could possibly interrupt Kent Hrbek now? Three  Twins were waiting for him at
home plate, the three he had just knocked in with a grand slam,  and the
Metrodome was an ocean of noise, music, pulsating madness. Here, in a single
thunderous moment,  had been the collision  of World Series destiny versus
World Series defense.
Want a hint? 

  Destiny was the one who weighed 250 pounds.
  Twins win. We go to Game 7. Was there ever a doubt?  Forget that Ken
Dayley, the St. Louis pitcher standing glumly on the mound, watching Hrbek's
parade, hadn't surrendered a left-handed home run in two years. Forget that
Hrbek did it on the first pitch.  Forget that the Cards had once held a 5-2
lead in this game -- and a 3-2 lead in the Series. Forget it, chuck it. Toss
it in a bucket. This is the Metrodome, where "sedate" means you don't use both
hands  when you scream. No way the Twins lose this one.
  "What were you thinking as you ran around the bases?" someone asked Hrbek,
whose sixth-inning slam turned a 6-5 game into a 10-5 blowout (final score
11-5) and ensured that, yes, the Twins would hear one more national anthem
this season. 
  "I was thinking," he said, a smile coming across his beefy face, "that I
wished I could go around the bases  twice instead of just once."
  Well. Once was enough for the Cardinals. Did Minnesota really do this
Saturday afternoon? Eleven runs? Fifteen hits? A two-run homer by Don Baylor?
A 4-for-4 day by Kirby  Puckett? To paraphrase Dorothy in the Wizard of Oz,
"Toto, we're not in St. Louis anymore."
  Not even close.
  "They seemed to know every pitch before it came in," lamented Whitey
Herzog, the St.  Louis manager, who probably didn't enjoy dinner too much
Saturday  night. After all, one of the few things he had going for him was
that the Twins' big bats had been unusually silent. Particularly those  of
Kirby Puckett, Tom Brunansky and Hrbek -- a slump that  helped the Cardinals
win three straight in St. Louis.
  On Saturday, however, the above-mentioned trio was a combined 6-for-12,
with six RBIs.
  Hey, Whitey.
  They're ba-aaaaaack.
  "I had been pretty frustrated,"  Hrbek, the meaty, 6-foot-4 first baseman,
admitted in the clubhouse afterward. "Following my third at-bat, when I flied
out,  I came back to the dugout and threw my helmet and my bat. That's the way
I get. I'm emotional.
  "But Roy Smalley said to me, 'Hey, you're swinging the bat good. Don't
worry about it.' And when I got  up there against Dayley (a lefty who had
entered  to face the left-handed hitting Hrbek) I knew he usually throws me a
fastball first pitch. . . . 
  He did again. Out it went. Someone said the decibel  meter -- used to
measure the noise level inside the Metrodome -- was busted by the reception
after Hrbek's ball cleared the center field wall. No surprise.
  "It's impossible to explain how good that  felt," said Hrbek, who has hit
more home runs in this park than anybody. "All my friends and family were in
the stands. I'll never forget that. I was pretty excited going around the
bases."
  We noticed.  It's hard to miss a behemoth pumping his fists from base to
base, particularly when it's such a good story: a homegrown hero, a guy who
watched the Twins as a kid, a guy who ultimately came to play for  them after
being drafted in  the lowly 17th round,  a guy who will long be remembered
here by the image of him spritzing champagne over the cheering crowd after the
Twins captured the American League  pennant. Unless this new image --
stomping on home plate and slamming five with his RBI'ed teammates (slamming,
not slapping) -- should replace it.
  "Whew," said Hrbek, between endless questions  from reporters. "Whew."
Someone passed him a beer. He took a gulp. Above his locker was a collection
of toy dinosaurs, for Tyrannosaurus rex, or T-Rex, a nickname.
  "My monsters," he noted.
  Right.
  Call his homer the monster mash.
  And call today the final chapter of a rather remarkable World Series story.
True, these are not the most popular teams in baseball. But the resiliency of
both in  the face of disaster (remember, St. Louis was down, two games to
none, at one point) has been something to see. The Cards, playing without any
power hitters of their own, had a nice lead halfway through  the game
Saturday. But what the Twins did was take the notion of defeat, grab it by its
neck, and say: "HA!" And then stomp that sucker flat.
  You name it, Minnesota overcame it. John Tudor, Cardinals ace? He was
history by dinnertime. The Cardinals' speed? Hey. They can speed all they want
when the Twins score 11 runs. Even Minnesota's  mistakes weren't enough to
sink its ship. The starting pitcher,  Les Straker, lasted less time than any
Twins starter this series. Greg Gagne stranded four men in his first three
at-bats.  Puckett made a rare overthrow of the cutoff man, which eventually
led to a  run. 
  And Hrbek? He may have been the guiltiest of all. In the second inning he
was picked off second base -- maybe the dumbest play of the Series -- killing
a scoring chance. But being blue means  never having to say you're sorry. At
least in this town.
  "I was watching Ozzie (Smith, the shortstop)," Hrbek admitted. "The guy is
so sneaky, you know. And then I saw Tudor spinning and throwing  (to the
second baseman) and it was all over."
  "You felt like you made up for it with the home run?" someone asked.
  Hrbek gave a look that answered the question. No words necessary.
  Call it  the monster mash, a ballyard smash. The were partying late here
Saturday night, looking for the quickest way to pass the hours until this
evening, when, for the sake of everyone's hearing, this World  Series must end
one way or another.
  And who knows how? St. Louis is in a bind with its pitching. The Twins have
their best in Frank Viola. The crowd will be simply beyond imagination. And
this entire  city now thumps with the belief that the Big Glory is possible
for its eclectic bunch of no-names -- a Bruno, a Kent, a Kirby, a Gary, a
Venezuelan, a Panamanian, a 37-year-old manager -- possible, and  more than
possible. Destined. Simply meant to be.
  And when think about it, and you massage your head and rub your eyes and
try to get the hearing back in your left ear, you realize, and this is the
scariest part:
  They may be right.
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