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<UID>
9401020149
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
940110
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, January 10, 1994
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1C
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<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


:
Cutline ran in Metro Edition only
  Chris Spielman:  "I think we could have done  better."
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>
Free Press columnist
</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1994, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
ONCE AGAIN, LIONS BREAK OUR HEARTS, AND THEIRS
</HEADLINE>
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</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

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<BODY>
The Last Man Out pulled his coat on over his sweatshirt, and his hood up
over his baseball cap. His jeans were zipped. His sneakers tied. He was ready
to go, but he sat down anyhow. As the few  remaining players headed toward the
exit, he bit a fingernail, nodded, and mumbled, "See ya tomorrow." 

Then he caught himself.

"Listen to me," Chris Spielman said quietly, "I keep saying see  ya
tomorrow."

After the Lions' season ran out of tomorrows Saturday evening, in a
heart-squeezing, last-minute, 28-24 defeat by Green Bay, some players dressed
and left quickly. Some answered questions,  and when the questions were
finished, so were they. Some nursed their aches and pains, and hobbled slowly
to loved ones waiting in the tunnel.

And Chris Spielman, who has long been the solar plexus  of this team,
took another shot to the gut. He stayed by his locker in the corner, the Last
Man Out, as if maybe, if he waited long enough, some ref would come running in
and yell, "It was all a mistake!  Sharpe was out of bounds when he caught that
touchdown! You guys won!"

An hour passed. No ref. Instead, someone turned on a vacuum cleaner, and
Spielman tried to talk over the whrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr.

"That feeling, when the ball was in the air, and you see the guy wide open
in the end zone -- it was one of the lowest feelings in the world. Your heart
sinks. It's the closest thing there is to being  told someone you love has
died. 

"I know people won't think its right to compare those things, but when you
live and die for football, it is."

He rubbed his unshaven face and pushed his fingers  through the hair
behind his ears. The vacuum was near his locker now, whirring away, and he
shook his head in the noise.

Doesn't it always seem to end like this? A Lions season? With some  sort
of heartbreak? Even in the playoffs? If it isn't Eddie Murray missing a field
goal against San Francisco, it's the Washington Redskins scoring their
umpteenth touchdown against the Lions' defense,  or, on Saturday, with a
minute left, Kevin Scott, slowing up, as if driving past an accident scene,
while Sterling Sharpe sneaks behind him into the end zone and catches a bomb
pass right out of the  sandlot.

Always something. Spielman has been here long enough to brace himself for
the cold months ahead, filled with "same old Lions" comments.

"Oh, I know it," he said. "But the way I look  at it, only one team in the
NFL each year is truly successful: The one that wins the Super Bowl. So we
haven't been truly successful yet.

"Still, I think we could have done better.  . . . "

There were theories offered from doughnut shops to radio talk shows Sunday,
theories as to why you shouldn't feel bad about the Lions' playoff exit:
  1) They would have lost to the 49ers, anyhow
  2) They would have gotten killed by the 49ers.
  3) They were lucky to be in the playoffs.
  4) What did you expect from Wayne Fontes?

None of these is necessarily true. None of them really makes you feel
better. But in their own weird way, they are part of the healing process. Talk
it out. Assign blame. Wrap up the season before you stick it in the attic.

Fans do it one way. Players  do it another. Rodney Peete, who had been
such a big part of this team the last few years, dressed quickly and said few
good-byes Saturday. He is a free agent, and when asked whether he'll be back,
he grinned and said,  "We'll see."

He seemed to be saying, "No way."

Next to him, Andre Ware, who was once celebrated as the future of this
team, buttoned his shirt for most likely the final  time in this locker room.
No reporters even spoke to him.

Some things change.  . . . 
 
And some things stay the same. Spielman got a grapefruit from the back
room and ripped off the yellow  skin and put the fruit into his mouth. He will
be in the Silverdome today and tomorrow and the next day, by himself, lifting
weights, getting sweaty, because he admits he is addicted to this game.

"I'm a prisoner of it," he says. "I can't let it go."

And yet even he has adapted. On Saturday, I asked his plans for the week.

"Wednesday night I start Lamaze class with my wife," he said.

Lamaze class?

"She's eight months pregnant."

Lamaze class? Chris Spielman?

"I know, I know," he said, chuckling softly. "But I've changed. Besides, I
always promised if I ever had a  family, it would come first, so I'm gonna
stick by that."

Maybe there's a lesson there. We can go with the old ways, kick and moan
about these luckless Lions, or we can adjust with age, admit that  at times
this team stunk, and at times it really surprised us, and it did win the
Central Division, and, good or bad, it gave us more to talk about than any
other Detroit team all year.

Choose your  poison. As he left Saturday night, Spielman threw the
grapefruit into a trash bin and headed for the door. A public relations man
yelled over, "It's locked, Chris! You can't go out that way."

They  can't go out that way. But year after year they do. These Lions. You
make peace, or you drive yourself crazy.

"See ya tomorrow," Spielman said instinctively. And he pushed through the
door to meet  his pregnant wife because, eventually, life does go on, win or
lose, for everyone, even the Last Man Out.
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COLUMN
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