<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9201180692
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
920515
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, May 15, 1992
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1992, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
IT'S TIME FOR A BREAK FROM SPORTS DOLDRUMS
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
I am going away. Taking a break. When the biggest news on the sports page
is two boats sailing around a stick, it's time to take a powder.

  Besides, if I watch the Chicago Bulls win one more NBA title, I might jump
off a ledge.

  So I depart. Just for a while. In some businesses they call this a
"sabbatical" or a "leave of absence." In our business they call it "last seen
running down the  hall in a diaper, screaming about deadlines."
  To be honest, I wanted to go quietly. But my boss said I should mention my
departure in this column, just in case someone might miss me over the next
couple of months, or, more likely, your pet parrot looks in the bottom of his
cage one morning and doesn't see me there.
  He cares about animals, my boss.
  Being one himself.
  But I digress.  Where will I go? That is a good question. It will be far
away. A different time zone. A place where they don't get "Love Connection."  
  All I know is it's time for a break. I try to live by two rules on this
job: 1) Don't get stale in your writing. 2) Use all your comp time.
  Off I go.
  Besides, I have been doing this column pretty much non-stop for seven
years. I have seen the Pistons  win two titles, the Lions win the NFC Central,
the Red Wings win the Norris, the Wolverines win the NCAA basketball crown,
Tommy Hearns leave Emanuel Steward, Jacques Demers leave coaching, and Tom
Monaghan  leave the planet Earth.
  And now? Now the Pistons are done, the Red Wings are done, the Tigers will
have a really big party if they ever reach .500. Football hasn't started.
Colleges are out. Our  best young team, the Fab Five from Michigan, is
bouncing around Europe like something out of a Gidget movie, losing to a bunch
of teams whose names they can't pronounce.
  And the top story is the  America's Cup, two boats racing around a stick.
  As they used to say about Slim Pickens, "Hmm, that's slim pickens."
No butts about it
  By the way, one story about the America's Cup. Some of you might recall
that I went to  one five years and 8,741 lawsuits ago. The thing I remember
most is how the Italian boat was quickly eliminated from competition, and no
one knew why. Later we found out  why. In between "tacking" -- which is a
yachtsman's fancy way of saying "turn" -- the Italian sailors, who were pretty
bored with nothing to do but stand there hoping the ESPN cameras were on them,
would  light up cigarettes to pass the time. Then someone would yell "Tack!"
(or, in Italian, "Taco!") and they would throw their cigarettes into the ocean
and get to work.
  Well. The other teams caught  on to this and started watching the Italian
boat in their binoculars. Whenever they saw the sailors throw their cigarettes
in the water, they knew Italy was going to tack, and they beat them to it and
won the race.
  Great story, no? Only this year I see an Italian boat, Il Moro de Venezia,
is in the finals against America.
  Must have a no-smoking section.
  Anyhow, much as I dearly love yacht  racing -- I would be out there on the
high seas right this minute were it not for a pressing dental appointment -- I
would have to say, overall, our sports plate is a little empty now.
  What better  time for a break?
  Did I mention the predictions?
See you in the summer
  Hey. You didn't think I would leave without predictions, did you? I have
been concentrating really, really hard, in between putting up my hammock, and
I have determined everything that will happen while I am gone. So here it is:
  WEEK 1: Chuck Daly is offered the New Jersey job, the LA job and the NBC
job. Ron Rothstein  is offered the Pistons job and bursts into tears. "It's
such a . . . surprise!" he sobs. The Red Wings want to trade players. The
Tigers want to trade rosters. The Fab Five loses to a group of Somalian
monks. Two boats sail around a stick.
  WEEK 2: Your parrot really misses me.
  WEEK 3: Chuck Daly is offered the head of production job at Paramount
Studios. Ron Rothstein stops crying and orders  all Italian suits removed from
the locker room. The Fab Five loses to a group of Sherpa priests. Two boats
sail around a stick.
  WEEK 4: Your dog really misses me.
  WEEK 5: The Chicago Bulls win  the NBA championship in a dramatic seventh
game after Phil Jackson jumps on court, grabs the referee's whistle and starts
making foul calls himself. Baseball cancels its All-Star Game because it has
no stars left, only egos. The Red Wings and Tigers decide to trade with each
other.
  WEEK 6: I have no idea.
  WEEK 7: This hammock is stuck. Can you . . . 
  WEEK 8:  . . . give me a little help  here?
  WEEK 9: Summer Olympics. 
  There you have it. And now I go. Thanks for sticking with me. If something
big happens, I might fall into this spot for a day. Otherwise, I plan on doing
little  more than finding a quiet corner of the world, giving a seven-year
stretch, and dropping, head first, into a hammock.
  Once in awhile, maybe I'll tack.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
SPORT; BREAK; LEAVE
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
