<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9102020538
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
910829
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, August 29, 1991
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo United Press International;Photo Color JOHN STANO
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>



Lions teammates notice more smiles this year from running back
Barry Sanders, who says: "I guess I am getting more comfortable
being with people. Before I almost preferred to be alone, but
that's not the case now. It's different."
Barry Sanders on running: "I'm just trying to avoid the guy out
there tagging me, that's all."
At  Oklahoma State, Sanders took dead aim at the Heisman
Trophy.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
FOOTBALL '91 SPECIAL SECTION
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1991, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
GAME-BREAKERS
STILL ELUSIVE BUT LESS RECLUSIVE,
HE'S BECOMING ONE OF THE GUYS
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
Barry Sanders has something on his mind. He walks over to Jim Arnold, the
punter, and sits on a stool nearby. Arnold is talking to a reporter, but his
words grow jumpy as he glances at Sanders just  sitting there -- What does he
want? Why doesn't he interrupt? -- and finally, Arnold stops talking to the
reporter altogether. It is damn near impossible to ignore Barry Sanders, even
if he is  sitting  still.

  "What's up?" Arnold asks.

  "I need a favor from you, man," Sanders says.
  "Name it." 
  Sanders grins, sort of embarrassed. "Nah, really, man," he says.
  "Really," Arnold says.
  "OK. Yo, um. . . . "
  Sanders rubs his face. His eyes dance back and forth. Arnold leans in.
What is this favor, for god's sake? Lend him money? Kill somebody? What?
  "Lemme have one of your  cookies, man," Sanders says.
  Cookies? 
  Arnold grins and drops his head. He reaches into the back of his locker,
finds a small box and pulls out a fat, round, chocolate chip cookie. He hands
it over.
  "Thanks, man," Sanders says, lifting it to his mouth. "I just had to have
one of these."
  He takes a bite and grins like a kid riding his first bicycle.
  "You're OK, man," Sanders  says as he walks away.  "You and me are gonna
be all right."
  Arnold beams.
  Barry Sanders is coming out of his shell, and not only when his sweet tooth
acts up. He no longer sits with his back turned. He actually initiates
conversation. True, you still won't find him at nightclubs, and he is hardly a
ladies man, and he dresses, well, "casually" is a nice word, and last year,
when the police  stopped him for speeding, and the officer looked at his
license and said, "Are you the  Barry Sanders?" he would only say, "Um, my
name is Barry Sanders." The officer shrugged and wrote out the ticket.
  "You big dummy!" safety William White, who was in the car, said afterward.
"All you had to do is tell him who you were and you would have gotten off!"
  "Nah, I can't do that," Sanders said. He  paid the ticket.
  And that's not even the best story. 
  "The best story," says White, who has grown close to Sanders recently, one
of several signs that the recalcitrant superstar is finally  reaching out,
"the most unbelievable story, is when this Jeep dealership called Barry up and
was gonna give him a free Jeep -- brand new! -- just for signing autographs at
their place for an hour and  a half. That morning he asks me if I could drive
him over there. But that afternoon, he said, 'I don't think I'm gonna do it.'
  "And he didn't. Passed it up. I guess he didn't feel comfortable or
something. I couldn't believe it! A free Jeep? That had to be worth close to
$30,000! For signing autographs? I said to him, 'Man, if you don't want the
Jeep that badly, you could have given it to me!' "
  White laughs and shakes his head. "But that's the man. B. Sanders. Yes,
sir, he is unique."
Humility is no act
  Well. No argument there. It's not everyone who wins the NFL rushing title
in  his second season, after missing it by only 10 yards as a rookie. It's not
everyone who stands 5-feet- 7 (don't believe the publicity reports), weighs
203 pounds and has barely an ounce of fat. It's not  everyone who can
accelerate from the backfield, leave one defender groping, another defender
reeling, another defender falling -- and none of them touches  him. 
  Still, there are changes in  Sanders.  They  show that, in addition to
being perhaps the best at his position, he can  be one of the guys. Sanders is
loosening up. Lightening up. Growing up, too. "I'm the big two-three now," he
reminds us, referring to his age, 23, and if that seems a funny statement,
remember that when the Lions drafted him,  he was only 20. How mature were you
at 20?
  "What I've learned since then, man, it's so much,  it's unbelievable," he
says. In his rookie season, Sanders was an emotional hurricane in a solid
steel case. He had a million thoughts -- on religion, football, fame, money --
but he never felt right  talking about them, or talking about much of
anything, for that matter. Quiet. Quiet was better. For years he had watched
his mother, with 11 sons and daughters, take on life with a shield of quiet,
while his father screamed and tried to beat the crap out of it. Barry
preferred his mother's way.
  So when he left college early, and the critics said, "Mistake" -- he kept
quiet. And when he held  out that first year, wanted more money, and people
called his house and said, "Shame on you"  -- he kept quiet. And when he
finally joined the Lions, and he took his first handoff and scampered 18 yards
against the Phoenix Cardinals, he returned to the huddle, breathing hard --
and kept quiet.  "Even now, I never say anything in the huddle," he admits.
  But the huddle is not real life. Real life  calls for interaction. And in
his third year of professional sports, Barry Sanders is lowering the gloves.
He is letting people inside. But here's the surprise: What's behind the facade
is often the  same as the facade.
  "People think Barry is putting on an act with that humble stuff," says
White, grinning. "But I'm telling you, he really is that humble. He's too
humble, probably. Like my wife sometimes will tell him, 'Barry, that was a
great run you made against Washington, you ran for a touchdown!' And Barry
will say, 'Is that right?' "
  White cracks up. " 'Is that right?' " he mocks.  " 'Is that right?' That's
like Barry's favorite thing to say."
  Is that right? 
Thinker before doer
  Here are pieces of conversation from an hour with Barry Sanders:
  "Most people don't  know this, but as a kid, I used to get whuppings every
day of my life. I was always doing something wrong. I was loudmouthed.
Fighting. Discipline problem. Got suspended from school. I remember this  one
time, in junior high, I called my gym teacher a punk. He didn't pick me for
the ninth-grade basketball team and I was upset, so in class, in front of
everybody, I called him a punk. I can't believe  I did that.  . . . 
  "When I run with the football, it's this feeling, man, I can't really
describe it. It's like being a kid and playing tag, and that fear you have.
I'm just trying to avoid the  guy out there tagging me, that's all. . . . 
  "If I could change anything in football, it would be how people worship
the athletes. That's wrong. I go to Winans concerts, and I like them a lot,
but  I don't worship them. I know they're no different than the desolate man
in the street. . . . 
  "When people ask me for an autograph I say to them, 'Why is this piece of
paper any more valuable if  I write my name on it than if you do?' And most of
the time they can't answer. That's amazing to me, man. . . . "
  Between these sentences, Sanders looks at his feet, bites his lip, nods
with a faraway  look, as if listening to a running voice inside his head. This
is Barry Sanders, too. More than just "Is that right?" Fact is, he can talk
philosophy longer than the average athlete. And when it comes  to religion, he
can talk you under the table. He wonders about the fate of man, he wonders how
we can adore the beautiful and ignore the ugly. He says things like "when you
are treated special like athletes  are, you don't have to develop any
character." Maybe part of the reason he likes to be alone so much -- and you
wouldn't say this about every athlete -- is that he likes to think.
  Then again, given  his refrigerator, he's not exactly expecting company.
  "You go over to Barry's house, all he has in there is apple juice, water
and banana pudding," says White, laughing. "And maybe some four-month-old
milk."
Rich contract, austere life  Which brings us to the money thing. Certainly,
Sanders can afford to stock the fridge with Dom Perignon (if he drank it,
which he doesn't) and caviar (if he ate  it, which he doesn't). He earns, on
average, more than $2 million a season. But it did not come easily. For the
second time in three years, Sanders held out of training camp because of  his
contract.  Teammates were supportive. Fans were divided. One disgruntled
person drove by Sanders' house and yelled out the window, "There ought to be a
salary cap for you guys!"
  Sanders shrugs. He says this  renegotiation was planned all along. He says
the contract he took as a rookie (five years, $5.9 million) was less than what
he thought he deserved, given his college statistics at Oklahoma State, where
he won the Heisman Trophy. But he figured,  fine, he'll play two years, prove
himself, and then, like The Terminator, he'd be back. Make no mistake: Barry
might be shy, but he will go to management when  things get serious. He did it
when he thought he wasn't getting the ball enough. And he did it this summer,
after gaining 1,304 yards and the rushing title last season.
  "I wasn't breaking a contract,"  Sanders says. "The Lions agreed to
renegotiate. They felt something should be done, too. The only difference was
how much. People forget that. This was a mutual thing."
  The funny part is, you wonder  where the money goes. Not for  groceries,
obviously. And not for  clothes. "I went clothes-shopping with Barry not too
long ago," White says, "a really nice store in Birmingham. Great stuff. And he
picks  out the ugliest sports jacket in there; this thing looked like some old
English professor would wear it. Tweed job, had patches on the sleeves.  I
said, 'No. NO! You are not buying that! Put it back.'
  "He ended up getting a nice blazer and a couple of slacks. He was gonna
buy two suits, but then he said it was cheaper to get one jacket and two
pants. It's funny. Everything he looked at, he still  checked the inside
sleeve for the price. I think it goes back to when he didn't have any money,
his mom and dad and all."
  Those were the Kansas days, the cement of Sanders' life, the days when he
and his brothers would follow their father to a roofing job, working with the
shingles in the hot sun, hours at a time. Barry never got an allowance --
"Your allowance is that I pay the damn bills around  here," his father would
say -- and never spent a penny foolishly, not without repercussions. To this
day, Sanders admits, "I basically live on about $30,000 a year. That's all I
need. The rest is put away or shared with others." He still gives 10 percent
of everything he makes to his church. He owns  no fancy cars. Even with his
new contract, Sanders still drives an Acura, eschewing Mercedes, Porsche,
BMW, Jeep.
  "Hey, if they still made the Pinto?" says safety Bennie Blades. "Barry
would be driving a Pinto, guaranteed."
One of the guys now
  But wait. What's wrong with that? Isn't it nice  to have an athlete who
doesn't think wearing a jockstrap puts him on a throne? Isn't it nice to have
a guy who refuses to be moved from coach to first class? Isn't it nice to have
a guy who puts a clause  in his contract that guarantees $10,000 for each of
his starting linemen should he break 1,000 yards rushing in a season?
  So he'll never be John Salley. So he'll never grab the microphone and tell
 the city how wonderful it is. Big deal. What you get with Sanders is real.
And as time passes, we are getting more.
  "I think deep down he always wanted to be one of the guys," says Lomas
Brown,  the offensive tackle. "It just took him awhile to get comfortable."
  "He's looser now," White says. "He feels more relaxed around us. The dude
has a sense of humor, too, and he doesn't even know  it."
  The man with the normal car and the apple juice in the fridge only shakes
his head and laughs at himself. "I guess I am getting more comfortable being
with people. I guess . . . um . . . before  I almost preferred to be alone,
but that's not the case now. It's different."
  He sighs. He smiles. "It's good," he says finally, and it is. Fall is
coming. Football is here. And the biggest player in the room is getting comfy
with his life, one cookie at a time.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
MAJOR STORY; BARRY SANDERS; DLIONS;Lions
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
