<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8602220151
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
861117
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, November 17, 1986
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
STATE EDITION
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1F
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1986, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
FERGUSON FINDS BEING MIDDLE MAN IS JUST FINE
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
PHILADELPHIA -- He was the rusty model, the spare part you keep in the
garage, just in case. It is unlikely Joe Ferguson will even be around the
Lions next year, but on Sunday afternoon, his coach  came up and said the
words he figured were forever behind him now.

  You're starting.

  "When did you find out?" someone asked Ferguson, after he played the entire
game as Lions quarterback in their  awkward 13-11 win over the Eagles Sunday.
  "In the warmups," he said, then he grinned. "Late in the warmups."
  Late in the warmups, late in his career, and suddenly, Joe Ferguson was
going out  there again. Starting. Eric Hipple, the regular, was injured, sore
elbow. Chuck Long -- the rookie everyone was waiting for -- was not ready for
this step. At least not according to Rogers. "You're starting,"  the coach
said. And Ferguson, 36, was old enough to know better than to get nervous.
  He got nervous anyhow.
  "I'd forgotten how much intensity you need out there," he said afterward.
"I haven't  played in so long. In the early going, I'm thinking, 'If I go in
there and make a mistake, am I gonna be out again?' I just didn't want to make
any mistakes."
  He spoke from the Lions' locker room,  with Hipple getting dressed on his
right and Long getting dressed on his left. The questions came, and he smiled
when he answered.
  Why was he smiling? On paper he had been awful. Threw 33 passes  and
completed only 10. Was sacked three times for 30 yards. And on a critical
fourth-quarter drive, he threw an interception that could have sealed the
Lions' defeat.
  He was sweaty. He was sore.
  Don't you get it? That's why he was smiling.
Tough to be a Lion  Joe Ferguson has not had an easy time as a Lion. He came
in a trade that Darryl Rogers pushed for, but by the time the 1985 season
started, Hipple was Rogers' starter. Ferguson wore a cap during games and kept
his arms folded.
  Then 1986 came around -- the final year of Ferguson's contract -- and, of
course, the Lions drafted  Chuck Long as the heir apparent.
  So now Ferguson is merely the man in the middle, the forgotten quarterback
between the present, Hipple, and the future, Long. Going into this game, all
the talk in  Detroit had been when will Long come in, when will he play?
Ferguson, who was starting in the NFL  when Chuck Long was in fourth grade,
barely heard his name. 
  "It's been a frustrating year for me,"  he said, "I have to be honest with
you. I didn't know if I'd start a game again."
  "Were you happy with your performance out there today?" he was asked.
  "No, not at all," he said. "I was rusty.  I made some mistakes."
  He paused. "But it's gonna feel nice to look at the stats and not see 'Did
not play' next to my name."
  There was almost "goat" next to his name. In the fourth quarter, score
11-10, Eagles, with the Lions in good field position, Ferguson threw an
interception. "My poor judgment," he said.
  Two minutes left. That looked like the game.
  "He came off the field and he was  down," Hipple said. "I told him, hey,
keep your head up. We're gonna get it back."
  Ferguson has been around too long to believe that stuff. But then Eagles
quarterback Randall Cunningham  scrambled  for yardage when he should have
just fallen on the ball -- a youthful mistake, ironically -- and he was
stripped, the fumble was recovered, and Ferguson snapped up as if two tanks of
liquid oxygen had  just been injected into his body.
  The Lions' offense went back out, and a few plays later, Eddie Murray
kicked the winning field goal with 12 seconds left.
What about next week?  There have been  days for Joe Ferguson when he just
felt like, "what the heck?", days when he didn't want to see any more
reporters, days when he didn't want to talk.
  He is playing mostly for numbers now -- "I would  really like to get 30,000
yards before I leave the game" -- and Sunday he passed Terry Bradshaw for 13th
place on the NFL's all-time passing yardage list.
  "I left a lot of room for improvement out  there," he said. "Which there
will be . . . "
  He hesitated, then added quickly, " . . . if I start next week."
  If. When. Who knows. Detroit is in for another six days of wondering who
their quarterback  will be. So be it. This day was Ferguson's, lousy numbers
and all.
  On one side Eric Hipple was slipping on his coat. On the other side, Chuck
Long finished tying his shoe.
  The man in the middle  was still in his underwear. He sat down and smiled.
He looked young.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
