<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8902130337
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
891029
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, October 29, 1989
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1E
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1989, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
ATHLETICS IN A CLASS BY THEMSELVES
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
SAN FRANCISCO --  This was all you needed to see. Second inning. The
pitcher at the plate. For cripes sake, not the pitcher, too! Two strikes, two
outs, and the guy, Mike Moore, an American League  hurler, has only batted
once before in his career. He holds the bat like Mary Poppins held her
umbrella. A sure out, right?

  And here comes the pitch.

  And there goes the ball, to centerfield.
  And here come the runners.
  Bash goes the World Series. The 1989 Fall Classic will forever be marked
by two earthquakes, one by Mother Nature, the other by Mother Lumber, and it
belongs this morning  to the Oakland Athletics, who swept it like a janitor on
amphetamines. Four games and 32 runs and they were gone, world champs, proving
themselves not only a masterpiece of hitting and pitching, but  the only
American League team that can lose its designated hitter and have its pitcher
smack a double to drive in two runs anyhow.
  Bashed.
  "What did you think when you made contact?" someone  asked Moore in the
victorious A's locker room, after they won, 9-6, to capture the championship.
  "I didn't think," he said, grinning. "I ran. Isn't that what you're
supposed to do?"
  Well, yeah.  At least that's what his teammates were doing nearly every
inning. Here was Rickey Henderson playing his usual speed demon. And Dave
Henderson doing his Mr. October impersonation. And Dennis Eckersley,  once
again, closing the door, getting the last Giants batter on a grounder to
second, then rolling a fist at the Candlestick crowd as if to say, "Thanks,
it's been fun. Too bad we can't stay."
 Bashed.
We had the best hitting club in baseball, I think, for the last two years,"
said Mark McGwire in the jammed visitors' clubhouse. "And we're 1-for-2."
  One-for-two? Yes. The A's had the talent  but lacked the heart last
October to win it all. This time they had the heart. And the legs. And the
arms.
  Nothing would derail them -- not even a 10-day earthquake delay. Resuming
baseball for  Oakland was no harder than plugging in the TV set. On Friday,
without batting practice, they knocked around 13 runs. On Saturday, they had
an 8-0 lead by the sixth inning.
  "We lost to a great team,"  shrugged Giants manager Roger Craig. What more
could he say? This was not baseball, it was an air raid. It was the Notre Dame
against William & Mary. Or maybe just Mary. No knock on the Giants, who tried.
 But Humm- baby was more like Um, baby? Can we go home now?
  Bashed.
What a weird October. Ironically, the earthquake provided the only drama in
this otherwise dreadful postseason. Neither league  championship went beyond a
fifth game. The World Series offered few pivotal moments -- although it did
have some nifty but too-late Giant rallies. The only brilliant managerial move
was when Tony  La  Russa clapped his hands and said, "Let's play ball."
  It was awesome, head-shaking dominance. And yet, who could forget this
series? It was unique, over and over, unique because for the first time  in
memory, there was no champagne in the winning locker room, a wise gesture by
the A's, who knew that victory was still trivial in the shadow of disaster.
  It was unique because Game 3, the first  one, ended with players fleeing
the stadium with wives and babies in their arms. And unique because Game 3,
the second one, began with a moment of silence for the dead.
  It was unique because, in  the middle of the series, the A's went to
Phoenix, and the Giants visited earthquake victims in Red Cross relief
centers.
  And it was unique because it served a purpose that was more important than
 the record books. The completion of this series, baseball wise, was academic;
Oakland didn't even need to show up. But these final two games symbolized
human spirit, resilience, never more than Friday  night, when the 62,038 fans,
most of whom were in Candlestick when the earth moved 10 days earlier, joined
together to sing a campy old song from 1936, "San Francisco, open your Golden
Gate. . . ."
  Unique. There was a sign that hung in the  bleachers Saturday night. It
read "Earth Bats Last."
  Indeed.
But OK. Before we close the book on this strange sweep, let us salute the A's,
whose only  weakness may be their bus driver. Speed? Got it. Pitching? All
over. Power? Are you kidding? The team mascot should be a man craning his
neck. Whack! There she goes. It took all of 50 seconds before  the first home
run Saturday, Rickey Henderson's leadoff pop. Thank you. 1-0. Jeez. Basketball
teams don't score that fast.
  "I grew up around here, so for me, this was a little boy's dream," said
Henderson to an army of microphones. And don't look now. But this A's team may
soon hear the word dynasty, if not yelled, at least whispered. Were it not for
Kirk Gibson's emotion-sapping home run last  October, they would surely be
celebrating championship No. 2 this morning, instead of No. 1. Consider that
pitching staff.  Consider those hitters. Then duck.
  Is this lineup allowed? Henderson,  the leadoff man, whose happy feet make
pitchers sweat and catchers fidget, not only running but hitting .474 in this
Series? And he is followed by Carney Lansford, who just missed winning the AL
batting  title? And he is followed by Jose Canseco, who showed this Series
that he may give lousy phone, but he gives good bat.
  And he's not even the cleanup hitter.
  McGwire? Dave Parker? Dave (If It's  Postseason, I Must Hit Home Runs)
Henderson? Lord. Even Terry Steinbach and Tony Phillips, normally the Nos. 7
and 8 batters, had homers this Series. In fact, every Oakland starting batter
except McGwire had a home run. It went only four games!
  And that's not even touching the pitching staff, which, come to think of
it, was San Francisco's problem. Dave Stewart? Moore? Bob Welch?  Eckersley?
Come  on. There is not a team in baseball right now that deserves to shop in
the same stores as these guys.
  A moment here for Stewart. He earned his MVP honors. Not only for his
pitching, which was  indomitable,  and not only because he never wins the Cy
Young Award, even though he may arguably be the best pitcher in baseball the
last three years. He gets the vote because almost every night, late, when it
was dark, he visited the wreckage of the Nimitz Freeway, talked to rescue
workers, boosted morale. "It wasn't anything special," he said, "it was just
something, as someone who lives here, that I felt I  should do."
  Bravo.
As for the Giants? Well. The nicest thing that can be said is: They tried.
They rallied late. But even bringing Willie Mays out for the first pitch
didn't help. He threw the  ball into the lower deck. Say hey, Willie. The
Giants saw enough balls in the seats this Series.
  Enough. Oakland wins. And the pictures that endure of this Series are
many, from the blazing feet  of Rickey Henderson to the nervous walk of fans
as they headed for the exits after the earthquake.  From Stewart on the mound,
throwing smoke, to Stewart near the falling highway, watching the search  for
bodies. It was recreation and recovery, human drive and human kindness. Here
with an earthquake, was real life, sweeping sports under the rug like a cookie
crumb. And yet baseball proved a point.  It took its place in line, behind
human life, quietly, gracefully, correctly.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
BASEBALL;WORLD SERIES
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
