<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9201010771
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
920108
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Wednesday, January 08, 1992
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO EDITION
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color MARY SCHROEDER
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


:
Lions linebacker Chris Spielman  bears the scars of his
profession, but there's more than meets the eye.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SEE ALSO METRO FINAL EDITION, Page 1D
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1992, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
A LION OBSESSED
SPIELMAN BRINGS PASSION FOR PERFECTION TO HIS JOB
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
Alone in the dark he sits, behind the projector, his thumb clicking the
remote button as the players on screen move backwards then forwards then
backwards then forwards.

  "Corner trap (click,  click)," he says, "now a sprint 15 . . . see how
that guard rides the center up there (click) . . . now this is a 15 bend, see
that tight end (click) he's supposed to block No. 52 (click) he's gotta  get
his butt up there, right now! Look (click) he's hesitating (click) he's
hesitating (click) . . . GO, RIGHT NOW! (click) . . . too late!"

  Coaches do this kind of film watching, sipping coffee  and rubbing their
eyes. And so Chris Spielman, a coach's son, does it, too. He is the only
player in the Silverdome at this hour. It is Tuesday, "off day," the day when
other Lions are at home sleeping  or playing with the kids.
  And here is Spielman with his joystick.
  "This is Washington's draw play (click) . . . see that hole? Where that
guy is  going? (click) I gotta be there (click) . . . Ooh (click) I'll be
faster than that guy Sunday, guaranteed (click)."
  You might think this unusual behavior for an athlete, even during the
playoffs, but remember, we are talking about Chris Spielman,  a fellow whose
first tackle came at age  5, when he took down his grandmother. "She had just
walked in the door and I wanted to play football and I went" -- he holds his
arms out and leans forward --  "whompf!"
  "Jeez," I say. "Did you hurt her?"
  "Nah, she's still living."
  He flicks on the lights and laughs, his broad neck muscles rolling under
his T-shirt. His hair is matted flat,  his stubble is at least three days
thick, and there is a noticeable scar on his forehead. I ask Spielman the last
time he was without a scar someplace on his body and he says, "When I was
born."
  Meet the man who brings more spit and desire to the NFC title game this
Sunday than any player out there. Tough? Here is a story about Spielman's
toughness: When he was  3 years old, he was playing  a "kamikaze race through
the house" with his older brother, Rick. They were neck-and-neck heading for
the doorway, and Chris tried to squeeze past, desperate to win, he lunged
forward -- and ran smack  into the wall. Opened this bloody gash on his
forehead. 
  "Dad, does Chris have to get stitches?" Rick asked their father.
  "I think so,' his father said, frowning.
  Legend has it Chris said:  "Goody."
  But that's only a legend.
  And you can't believe every legend you hear, right? Otherwise, you'd think
Spielman, 26, is no more than a tightly wound instrument of destruction, a
walking  set of shoulder pads whose only form of expression is "GRRRRRR!"
  Not true. The linebacker factory-workers-most-love-to-root- for is also a
shy, patriotic husband with a thin tenor voice, a guy who  sees things simply
but honestly and without pretension. He sort of reminds you of the Tom Cruise
character in "Born on the Fourth of July" -- before he goes to Vietnam. Life
is black and white. You work  hard. You strive to be the best. And you do what
you have to do. Spielman does not enjoy neckties, but he'll wear one if he has
to. He is not much for books, but he went back to college to earn his diploma.
  He does not swoon at romance, but he has his moments. The summer after he
was drafted by the Lions,  Spielman proposed to his high school sweetheart,
Stefanie, the only girlfriend he's ever had. He  took her to a  miniature golf
course in Canton, Ohio, and when they reached the 18th hole, he told her he
left his keys near the green, could she please go get them? When she got near
the hole, she looked  down and saw an engagement ring wedged inside. She began
to cry.
  "Then what did you say?" I ask.
  "I said, 'Go ahead and putt."
  "No, after that."
  "Oh. I said, 'Stefanie, will you marry  me?' She finally said yes.
Afterwards, the place gave us a free game because we got engaged on their
putt-putt course."
  See? Told you he had a romantic side.
  "This place has good food," he  says, pulling open the door. "You ever
been here?"
  We are entering Klancy's on Opdyke Road, one of Spielman's favorite
restaurants -- largely because it's within a mile of the Silverdome. Klancy's
has a formica counter, booth tables and, according to Spielman, "great mashed
potatoes." It is busy, but one of the workers motions to a booth near the
back. Several waitresses say "Hi, Chris." The cook  pokes his  head out and
says, "Chris, how ya doin?' "
  Spielman sits down, looking sheepish.
  "I told them we were coming. They're kind of excited."
  Spielman does not do a lot of interviews  outside of the locker room. He
is painfully shy about his private life, mostly because when he was in high
school in Ohio, his picture was  on the cover of a Wheaties box -- part of the
cereal's efforts  to honor young athletes -- and instantly, his world was
turned upside down. People asked him to speak to Boy Scout troops, to make
appearances, to serve as an upstanding example of American youth. That's  a
tall order for a sweaty teenager who mostly liked to play football, lift
weights, and watch TV with his buddies. He would go out with Stefanie, and
guys would laugh behind his back and call him "the  Cheerios boy." He chose to
attend Ohio State, not far from home, and that only made his celebrity more
intense. He started his freshman year, and from that moment on, everyone on
campus knew who he was,  every class, every lunch room.
  "The hardest thing for me to do is to let people get close to me,' he
says. "Mostly  because of that Wheaties box thing. I only have about five
people who I really  let know me. With everyone else, I mostly talk football.
  "Maybe because of that, there's this misconception that I'm only a
football player, not a person. I always hear how intense I am, and my  wife
and I talk about that. She tries to get me to stop and . . . what is it, smell
the roses? But I can't do it. It's not me.
  "After a game, whether we win or lose, if there was one play I messed  up
on, it haunts me for days. I'm in this constant search for perfection, I don't
know why. When I come home from a game I start walking around the house in
circles. I go from the living room to the  dining room to the kitchen -- and I
don't even realize I'm doing it. Stefanie says, 'Chris, sit down.' And I say,
'Huh?"
  In order to understand this intensity, you must understand Spielman's
relationship  with his father, Sonny, a high school coach who once took his
4-year-old son to practice, pointed to a group of linebackers and said, "Go
watch them." Sonny Spielman demanded excellence and hard work.  When Chris was
11, he took a job raking baseball fields at a summer camp -- while other kids
his age were playing on them.
  "Responsibility," his father called it.
  You hear stories about Chris's  obsession with football: how he once
smashed a window in college to break into the weight room. How he would meet
the Ohio State coaches before sunrise to watch film. "My goal was always to
get to the building before (head coach)  Earle Bruce did," he admits. 
  That meant 6 a.m. He did it.
  Even now, he rises at that hour every day in the off-season to work out.
He is so consistently excellent,  that no one even bothers to ask coach Wayne
Fontes how  Spielman played this week. He does the film thing every Tuesday,
and calls out defensive signals in the two seconds between the time the
opposing  team drops at the line and snaps the ball.
  "He is unbelievable," his teammates will tell you, rolling their eyes in a
mix of admiration and disbelief.
  But he is also human. It is not hard to  see beneath the whiskers and the
piercing eyes, to find there a boy who is trying to earn the love of his
father. Is that so unusual?
  As he struggles to talk about himself at Klancy's, I notice he has pulled
apart several toothpicks and destroyed a straw. Nerves, he says.
  Nerves?
  Yes. And that's the thing about  Spielman. There are a lot of levels
operating here. There is the guy  who will be counted on to lead the Lions
defense against the Redskins this weekend, but there is also the guy who looks
down when people compliment him. It is true he won the Lombardi Trophy, NFL
Defensive Rookie of the Year and a Pro Bowl Selection for his never- ending
toughness. It is also true that he wears sweat socks under black dress socks,
because the dress ones are "too thin." He swears by his  country, his
religion, says he would have fought in  Vietnam ("definitely") but when I ask
what he would say if he had a son came to him and said "Dad, I want to be a
florist," this is what he answers:
  "I'd tell him 'Be the best florist there is.' "
  And ultimately, that is the core of Chris Spielman. His obsession comes
not from a desire to inflict pain, but from a desire to be the best, the  way
his parents taught him. Because of that, he is truly passionate about his
work, football, and there are those who say this is not the healthiest
obsession.
  You know what I think? I think in  an age of apathy, passion is not
something you take lightly. It could be in art, music, or football -- it is
still passion, and it should be celebrated, at least when it blossoms in a
fair and decent man, who doesn't ask for more than his share, and doesn't put
himself above the mashed potato-eaters.
  "I'm really not a grrrr person," he says, "it's just when I talk football,
I get excited . . ."
  We understand. You are what you are. So next time passion gets the better
of Chris Spielman, maybe you can forgive him.
  His grandmother did.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
DLION; CHRIS SPIELMAN; ATHLETE;Lions
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
