<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9201300495
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
920813
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, August 13, 1992
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1C
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1992, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
ILITCH HAS GLOVE BACK; NOW HE WANTS FANS BACK
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
He gets the glove back now. Thirty-eight years after he put it in the
closet and decided that playing baseball was not going to pay the rent and
maybe he should try this pizza thing -- 38 years  later -- Mike Ilitch is
finally back in the game. Better. He's in the big leagues.  Thank you, fate.
We owe you one. It was a good day for baseball around here Tuesday, the day
the ownership committee recommended Ilitch to be the new boss of the Tigers.
Now maybe we can think about this franchise without throwing up.  Ilitch, a
one-time minor-league ballplayer who now owns the Red Wings, Little Caesars
and the Fox Theatre, has proven himself a low-key, thoughtful, sometimes even
visionary man. He will be many things as Tigers owner -- most of them good, I
believe -- but one thing he won't be is Tom  Monaghan. Not in pizza. Not in
sauce. Not in style.

  So you like him already.

  Although Ilitch, shy by nature, was reluctant to talk like an owner until
he gets the final approval -- attention, baseball: I had to twist his arm for
this interview, so he respects you, believe me --  we did speak about his
reasons for this purchase, his thoughts on the state of the game, Cecil
Fielder, what really went on with this Bo Schembechler-Jim Campbell deal, and
his hopes for the future of the Tigers.
  Here is some of that conversation, in his words. Because, as the guy who
finally gets the glove back,  I think he says it best.
 Q:  Why are you buying this team?
 A:  I'm doing it because I was swinging a bat before I learned my ABC's.
Baseball was something I did for the first half of my life, something  I
wanted to do always, my only real desire and goal in life.
 Q:  Do you feel you're completing something you started as a player?
 A:  Well, when I didn't succeed at the major league level, that's  something
that stays with you the rest of your life. To have the opportunity to come
back and perhaps restore the aura of what I consider one of the best
franchises in the country, that's something,  yes.
 Q:  Let's straighten out the Bo Schembechler-Jim Campbell situation. What
happened with all that -- and was any of it your doing?
 A:  Oh, no. Right from the start, Tom's  lawyers and people told us, "Bo
Schembechler is going to leave and Jim Campbell is going to retire." It was
never something I asked for.
  I was kind of surprised, to be honest. My first reaction was, "I guess
those  guys don't want any part of this new administration."
 Q:  Are you saying you actually felt rejected by their leaving?
 A:  Maybe, a little bit. But I just reorganized my thinking.
 Q:  Some people  thought you might be happy that Campbell was leaving because
he was instrumental in helping Monaghan -- and not you -- buy the team in
1983.
 A:  That is so false.  At the time, I only had one discussion with Jim. . . .
 We always got along. I got invitations to the Tigers party every year. We
never had a harsh word.
 Q:  Did you think of asking Campbell to stay around, maybe as an adviser?
 A:  I  never got the chance to do that. I was told right from the start he
was retiring, so I began laying groundwork for a new approach.
 Q:  Did this deal with Monaghan ever come close to collapsing?
 A:  Oh, it was off and on three or four times. They weren't gonna budge, then
we said forget it, then they said forget it.
 Q:  What were you disagreeing over?
 A:  Price. Mostly it was about price.
 Q:  Did you ever deal with Monaghan face-to-face?
 A:  No. We never talked face-to-face.
 Q:  Even the actual signing of papers?
 A:  That's being done with messengers back and forth.
 Q:  What type  of owner do you think you'll be?
 A:  The other owners asked me about that. I told them I was gonna be very
active, very involved, highly focused, really on top of it. I'll be running
this team, period.
 Q:  Paying baseball players isn't like paying hockey players. Wayne Gretzky
is the highest-paid hockey player, and he makes only an average pitcher's
income in baseball. Do you have enough money to handle  all this -- and the
Red Wings?
 A:  (Embarrassed laugh.) I wouldn't have gotten into the big leagues if I
couldn't play in the big leagues, let's put it that way. I'm not gonna say
I'll go nuts and  buy three or four free agents right away, but in the next
breath I'll say I don't want to just be competitive.
 Q:  How about Cecil Fielder? Would re-signing him be a priority?
 A:  I think that's  pretty obvious. I think anyone in their right mind would
tell you that.
 Q:  Sparky Anderson?
 A:  I haven't had any thoughts on Sparky yet. If I get the team, I'm gonna
sit down and make some judgments.
 Q:  Are you looking to move the Tigers?
 A:  No. My goal is to keep them in Detroit.
 Q:  How about Tiger Stadium? You told me once before you were basing your
purchase on the team playing at Tiger  Stadium.
 A:  That's right. My purchase is not predicated on a new stadium. That
wouldn't be smart. I mean, even if they started to build one right now, it
wouldn't be ready for several years. So I  had to make my decision to buy
strictly on that stadium right there -- in case nothing else happens.
 Q:  What about a new stadium?
 A:  Well, the way I'm answering that is I can't say, until I make  an
analysis of every situation that's brought to my attention. I have to look at
all the plans that have been done, the Cochrane plan, the Fox site; I've heard
the governor talking about an Eight Mile  Road site. So I don't know. It's not
fair to ask me now, because this thing isn't even final yet.
 Q:  Assuming you are approved by, say, mid-September, will you bring in your
own baseball people this  year?
 A:  Yes. I'd move right in and start to do some of the basic things I've got
to do, some of the foundation planning, and I'll bring somebody, my baseball
people, in this year.
  But you know,  I gotta find out from baseball yet what I can do. This still
is not a done deal, I have to emphasize that, until they all vote on me.
 Q:  What would be your top priorities as a new owner?
 A:  I've  got a lot of ideas in my head. Basically I see three categories. 1)
The fans. 2) The team. 3) The facilities and the future.
  My immediate task right now would be to deal with the fans. First, I have
to please them.  Second, I have to excite them. Third, I have to earn their
respect.
 Q:  How do you do that?
 A:  I have to make the place fun; I mean, really fun. They have to look
forward to wanting  to come to the games. They have to feel excited to see the
event,  excited to see the facility and the surrounding area. I want them to
come down next year and say, "Oh, look at this, look at that, this  has been
changed, that's been changed, this is brighter," you know, things like that.
  I want them to be prouder, I guess. 
 Q:  When you purchased the Red Wings, you called your family together  and
celebrated with a little toast. Have you done anything like that with the
Tigers purchase?
 A:  No, not yet. Maybe when it's finally approved.
 Q:  And if -- and when -- it is?
 A:  I'm fired  up. I'm ready to go.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN; MIKE ILITCH; INTERVIEW; QUESTION; QUOTE
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
