<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8502130483
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
851027
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, October 27, 1985
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1985, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
IORG SAW SETINY COMING AND WENT OUT TO MEET IT
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
KANSAS CITY -- They passed in the tunnel. Charlie Leibrandt was being
shuffled out to the field by a horde of interviewers. Dane Iorg was being
shuffled back in by a horde of interviewers. They saw  one another and  leaped
above the throngs of microphones to slap their hands in a high five.

  "Hey, Charlie!" Iorg yelled over the din of cheers still echoing outside,
tribute to the most dramatic  ninth inning the World Series has seen in years.
"I knew we would win, man! We couldn't let you lose another heartbreaker. No
way!"

  Leibrandt smiled and  started to say something,  but they were  already too
far  apart.  He looked back over his shoulder, then turned forward. No matter.
There'll be plenty of time for words. What could he say,  anyhow? "Thanks?"
Too small. "Thanks a million?" Too  small. For with one broken-bat pinch-hit
swing, Iorg had exorcised the demons that had haunted Leibrandt and the Royals
since Game 2 of this Series, when the Cardinals' bats stabbed them in the
heart  in the ninth inning.
  Finally, finally,  Kansas City  got the break. Finally, finally, this thing
is going to where it should be decided  -- a seventh game with the two best
pitchers available squaring  off.
  Finally, finally.
Leibrandt a hard-luck Charlie 
  Let's follow Leibrandt for a second. He was ushered back out to the field
to do a radio interview, but the electric-blue crowd behind the  Royals'
dugout simply refused to leave and refused to shut up. They chanted,
"CHAR-LIE! CHAR-LIE!" -- much the way the St. Louis crowd had chanted Ozzie
Smith's name not long ago.
  But turnabout is  certainly fair play in the case of one Charlie Leibrandt.
Remember that he was the pitcher who was one out away from a victory in Game 2
when the sky fell in. And the worst part was that that wasn't  the first time.
Leibrandt had lost four straight post-season games  in which the Royals scored
a whopping total of four runs for him. How much better did he have to pitch?
Perfectly? "OK," he seemed  to say. "I'll be perfect." He was perfect for five
innings Saturday night. But the Royals scored zero runs.
  And he left the game in the eighth having surrendered one run -- one
stinking run -- and  it looked as if he would  lose again.  Royals Stadium was
near tears.
  But then came the ninth.
  The entire crowd was  on its feet, chanting, screaming, going dizzy. The
Royals'  fans  were three  outs away from going home for the winter,  and if
there  were any way a crowd could figure in a win, they were going to.
Trailing 1-0, the Royals sent up Jorge Orta to pinch-hit for Pat Sheridan. He
reached base on an infield hit. Next came Steve Balboni -- the man they'd been
laughing at across America. Where was his bat? Bye-Bye? Ha, ha. But he singled
and the night air was one unending roar.  One out later, a passed ball moved
the runners to second and third, Hal McRae was intentionally walked, and --
shake the mountains and wake up the gods -- we had the situation that every
sandlot kid with a  $3 glove dreams about.
  Bases loaded, bottom of the ninth. We need a pinch hitter, kid. Go and do
it.
Iorg wasn't even nervous 
  "I knew it was going to be me," Iorg said. "I looked down the bench, and I
was the only guy left there.
  "I'd been dreaming of that situation forever. I wasn't even nervous. I just
went up there and knew what I had to do."
  He swung. The ball lifted toward  right field  -- "I knew it was a base hit
as soon as I connected," Iorg said --  and he watched as one Royal then, yes,
yes  . . .  two Royals came streaking home. The throw came in to try to catch
the  second runner.  "SAFE!" The umpire screamed, but all anyone could see was
the hand signal, and then the place exploded.
  They had won! Finally, finally, and Leibrandt must have felt like the
weight  of the world was off his shoulders. The entire team poured out of the
dugout and celebrated in a joyous heap on the infield.
  "It's the greatest feeling," Leibrandt said.
  "It feels unbelievable,"  said Iorg, whose nose was bloody from a
teammate's overly joyous squeeze. "Maybe this evens us up for what happened
last Sunday."
  Maybe it does. Revenge is a dish best served cold, the sages say,  and the
Royals had six days to let theirs chill.  All St. Louis could do was swallow
this time.
  We're going to Game 7. Tonight. The high five in tunnel had proved it.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>

</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
