<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9201290459
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
920805
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Wednesday, August 05, 1992
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1C
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
BARCELONA '92
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1992, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
LEAN ON ME, A FATHER TELLS HIS INJURED SON
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
BARCELONA, Spain --  The son went down as if he had been shot, grabbing
his leg, falling to the track. The father, watching from the stands, felt
something sink in his stomach. He lowered his head.  The memories flashed
back: the park, near the old house, the boy, 6 years old, racing alongside
him, grabbing his body.

  "Where's the finish line, Dad?" he would say, laughing. "Carry me to the
finish  line . . ."

  The finish line. The noise of the crowd snapped him back to reality.
Cheering? What were they cheering? He looked up to see his son, face twisted
in pain, rising to his feet on the red oval track, waving off the medics who
carried a stretcher. Derek Redmond, a British sprinter whose Olympic dream was
over, whose right hamstring had just snapped like a Popsicle stick, was trying
to  complete his 400-meter race. He had half that distance to go. Because he
couldn't walk, he began to hop. He hopped like a wounded fugitive. One step. A
grimace. Two steps. A yell.
  The son was crying.
  And the father had to come.
  He doesn't really remember all the steps down from section 131, row 22,
seat 25. He doesn't really remember leaping over the railing or landing on the
field, or pushing  off security guards who were too stunned to stop him. The
Olympics? He was not at the Olympics anymore. Jim Redmond was a parent outside
a burning house, hearing a cry through the window. And all he knew was "my
son, I had to get to him."
  And suddenly, he was alongside him.
  "Dad," Derek said, grabbing him, throwing an arm around his shoulder, and
burying his head to hide the tears. "Dad . . . get me back to Lane 5. I want
to finish."
  And leaning on each other, just like the old days, father and son made
their way down the track, while stunned officials looked on, frozen, and the
crowd, and the whole world watching, got this lump in its throat.
Heroes just seem to answer the call 
  You can set the stage for heroism. You can plan your Olympics for maximum
exposure, light  the skies with fireworks, invite kings and queens and NBA
stars. But you can never create the magic of real life. It just happens.
  "If I tried to do that again, I don't think I could," Jim Redmond  would
admit after this burst of real life was over Monday night, after he had taken
his 26-year-old son where his son wanted to go, across the line, into the
finish area, where the medical staff once  again came running with a
stretcher.
  "No stretcher!" the father barked.
  He knew what his son wanted. He had been with him all these years, through
the good times, when he made the Olympic team, when he set the British record
in the 400, and through the bad times, the four operations on his Achilles
tendon, the countless other injuries that left him on crutches, unable to run
as late as six  weeks before these Games.
  "Derek's pride was at stake out there. If he had been taken out on a
stretcher he would never have run again. We had agreed, no matter what, that
he was going to finish  the race. He was going to say he got through the
semifinal of the Olympic 400 meters.
  "All he needed was a little support. I'm his father. I'm supposed to
provide it."
  And so he did. And when  he was sure his son was OK, when the hamstring
had been iced and wrapped and the tears had dried, Jim Redmond made his way
back to his seat, stopping to apologize to every official along the way,
because,  "I didn't want the British to get a bad name for disrupting the
Olympics . . ."
Redmond & Son, together again 
  You couldn't make up a story like this. Back in North Hamptonshire, in the
small village  they call home, Redmond's wife, daughter and son-in-law were
watching this whole drama on TV. The daughter, nine months pregnant, saw her
brother crying in agony, then saw her father, filling up the  screen with his
heavy-set form, the crowd rising to applaud him -- Dad? On the track? -- and,
apparently, this was all too much. She felt this sudden spasm. Next thing you
know, the doctor was at the  door, ready to deliver a baby . . .
  As it turned out, that was a false alarm. But the idea was wonderfully
real. Right here, in the middle of an Olympics that is weighted down with
commercialism,  sagging with drug rumors, fighting its own largess, here we
have a plain old family in a plain old town that seems so tied into one
another, when one feels pain, the other twinges. And goes to help.
  Even if it means leaping onto the Olympic track.
  "In an emergency," Jim Redmond said, "you don't need accreditation."
  He is almost 50 years old. Two decades ago, he started a business he
still owns. A machinery shop called "J. Redmond & Sons."
  "I had hoped Derek would take over, but he has other ideas. That's OK.
He's a good kid. He keeps my name clean. You can't ask for more than  that."
  Or more than this, maybe the best story of the 1992 Games. Like most
Olympians, Derek Redmond came here dreaming of gold, the fantasy, the end of
the rainbow. Instead, he got his own back  yard. Here they were again, arm in
arm, headed for a finish line; J. Redmond & Son, together as usual.
  Come to think of it, what could be more golden?
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN; OLYMPICS
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
