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<UID>
9402060840
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
941017
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, October 17, 1994
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1C
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photos MITCH ALBOM Free Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1994, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
IT'S A GAME AGAIN!
SOMEWHERE, THE SUN IS SHINING ON BASEBALL
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
DATELINE UNKNOWN --  This is how it began. They put their hands on a bat,
one at a time, rising up the neck, a black hand, a white hand, a young man's
hand, an aging second baseman's calloused fingers,  up, up, until there was
room for just one more. All eyes turned to, of all people, Michael Jordan, who
smiled, because it was his turn. He grabbed that handle like a climber
grabbing a mountaintop.

  "We're the home team," he declared.

  "National League bats first," Ryne Sandberg said.
  "OK," Don Mattingly said, standing up and looking over the group, "are we
ready to do this?"
  It is  hard to describe the electricity that tickled the air at that very
moment, the feeling that something heavenly was about to happen and only these
lucky few knew it. Kirby Puckett lightly tapped Jordan's  hand, as if to rub
off some good luck. Roger Clemens smacked a fist into his glove. Young Mike
Piazza seemed in awe of the event, so did a kid named Pokey Reese, and Matt
Williams and Barry Bonds.
  Ozzie Smith, the veteran shortstop, broke the silence.
  "Ladies and gentlemen," he said, cupping hands around his mouth to mimic an
announcer, "welcome to the Secret World Series!"
  There were  no fans, no TV cameras, no billboards. The sun was out. The
breeze was warm.
  They took the field.
In the beginning
  What these 21 baseball players are doing here -- what I am doing here with
 them -- will not be quickly explained, and let me apologize if things seem a
little helter-skelter. I never intended to be writing dispatches this week
from anywhere, much less an unofficial and highly  secret series of baseball
games that, unless I miss my guess, these ballplayers are hoping will count
one day as the 1994 Fall Classic. The real one, of course, was crushed by the
tidal wave of the baseball  strike. October used to be a month for words like
"Series hero" and "MVP." Now it's an endless economics lecture. Salary cap.
Arbitration. Small-market revenues.
  No one could stand it.
  I couldn't.  It was why I was on a plane, last Friday, headed for vacation
in a destination that I must, for the moment, keep a secret (and will explain
in due course).
  Everything was normal until I caught sight  of two familiar faces, Alan
Trammell and Kirk Gibson, sitting side by side in first class. Odd, I thought.
They're wearing sunglasses.
  "Hey, Elvis?" I said. "What's up? They settled the strike and  nobody told
me?"
  They looked down to avoid me, which was also odd, since I've known these
men for a decade. Finally, Gibson said, "We got a card show."
  "All the way in ----?"
  "They pay a  lot of money."
  I shrugged, moved back to my coach seat, and didn't think twice about it,
until hours later, halfway through the flight, when I was nudged from a bumpy
sleep. The two of them were leaning over me.
  "What?" I said.
  "We have a proposition," Trammell whispered.
  They beckoned me to the back of the plane. And there, at 30,000 feet, in
the din of the engines where no one  could hear us, I was made an offer I
won't forget: Give up my vacation for the next seven days, and they would let
me join them on a story. "A real rare story," Gibson said,  as if I'd be a
fool to say  no.
  Here were the conditions: I was to tell no one where we were going -- not
even my newspaper. And I was to keep track of everything. That was crucial.
They needed someone "to keep a record of  all the things that happen."
  "What things?" I asked.
  Gibson shook his head. "Yes or no?" he demanded. I realize now he was
testing me, and it's probably best he didn't say what they had in mind,  for I
might have blurted it out and the whole plane would have heard it and then,
who knows, they would have stuffed me in the lavatory toilet, I guess.
  Instead, I looked at these two aging ballplayers,  balding now, no longer
the peppy kids I remembered from the 1984 World Series, when they were
arguably the two best performers on the winning Tigers team. The strike might
have ended their careers, and  what a lousy finish for men who loved the game
the way these two did. No good-bye parties. No night at the ballpark. Just
fade away.
  "Well?" Trammell said. "Yes or no?"
  Gibson studied my face,  then grinned, not even waiting for my reply.
  "He'll do it," Gibson said.
  Well. Heck. It was my vacation.
In the shadow of a valley
  I should stop here to give you a few facts of record, because that is part
of the agreement. The starting pitchers for Game 1 of the 1994 World Series --
or at least the only World Series that we have -- were Jim Abbott of the
Yankees, for the American  League, and Greg Maddux of the Braves, for the
National League. The first pitch was thrown at 1:31 p.m., under a warm sun
that glazed the field in fine light, and that pitch was a fastball from Abbott
 to Tony Gwynn of the Padres, which Gwynn smacked into centerfield for a clean
single. It was the first of four hits on the day for Gwynn, who would later
boast, "If this were still the season, I'd be  up near .400 by now."
  Of course they weren't playing the season. The season was destroyed, and
players had scattered to their winter homes, sleeping in, getting soft,
snacking on pizza and seeing  more golf courses than Fred Couples.
  Which explains my surprise when the Jeep we had rented Saturday pulled up
to a small field in the shadow of a valley, where the grass was green and
lush, and nearly a dozen familiar major league faces were already waiting,
with bats, balls and gloves. They nodded at the Jeep, and Trammell rolled down
his window.
  "You didn't use your real name, right?"  said a man whom I immediately
recognized as Cal Ripken. And it was true, Trammell had gotten the Jeep at the
airport using a phony identity, calling himself "Pio DiSalvo," the name of one
of the Tigers' trainers. He also produced Pio's driver's license with a
doctored photo, don't ask me how.
  Now Ripken spotted me in the back.
  "Who's this guy?" he said.
  What followed was a heated discussion  between the players that made me
feel like a refugee at the border.
  "We said no reporters!" one of them groaned.
  "Once there's one, there's a million!"
  In the end, it was Gibson, of all  people, who talked them into it.
Something about "trust" and "making it official." This was almost funny, since
Gibson used to terrorize sports writers.
  Things change, I guess. Ripken came back to  the Jeep, opened the door, and
welcomed me -- under the same conditions that Gibson and Trammell had laid
out. I shook hands with Puckett, Gwynn, Mattingly, Ozzie, Maddux, Abbott,
Lenny Dykstra, Roger  Clemens, and a tanned and weathered fellow who at first
I thought was someone's father, but then I recognized as Nolan Ryan. He was
chewing gum.
  "You got a camera?" he drawled.
  "In my suitcase,"  I said.
  He nodded.
  "Got film?"
Kelly's corner
  It was an odd collection of players, and as of this writing I cannot tell
you how they all came to be here. There has been talk about some  fax that
each of them received, but when I asked Ripken who sent it, he said he thought
Puckett did, and when I asked Puckett, he said he thought Ripken did. Strange.
  What's easier to figure is the  motivation: Mattingly, for example, has
never played in a World Series, and Jordan would do anything to get near one
-- and he has the money to make it happen -- Williams, Gwynn and Ken Griffey
Jr. were  all on record paces when the '94 season was killed, so maybe this
was a makeup for them. Gibson, Trammell, Puckett, Ripkin, they love the game
enough to try something this crazy.
  "You know why I'm  doing this?" Trammell had said on the plane. "Because
it doesn't seem right that a year comes and goes and there's no World Series.
Honest to God, if they had enough players without me, I'd say fine.  Just as
long as the thing is played."
  So this was all I knew. As of Sunday morning, when we made the trip to the
cemetery to dedicate this Series -- more on that later -- there were 15 major
leaguers,  one retired pitcher, one former NBA superstar-turned-minor-leaguer,
and one complete stranger. The stranger's name is Kelly, Mike Kelly, a big,
strapping guy with a mustache and a pet monkey. The record will show that Mike
Kelly played catcher for the American League in Game 1 of the Series. The
reason is simple.
  He owns the field.
  And it is a magnificent field, with emerald grass, tapered base  paths, a
gently sloping mound of dark dirt. The farthest fence is 409 feet to dead
center, and on the other side is one of the prettiest views a person could
hope to see.
  "It's like God's ballpark,"  Mattingly said.
  There are no lights -- thus, all the games will be played during the day,
"the way it should be," Ripken said. There are no billboards on the field,
nothing commercial of any kind. There are a few small bleachers, made of
plywood, and a spring- fed well not far from third base, complete with rope
and bucket, for thirsty players.
  There is only one road in.
  "Can I help you  gentlemen?" Kelly had yelled. We had been on his property
for half an hour, marveling at the site, a few of the guys tossing the ball
and playing pepper. Everyone thought it was a public field. Now Kelly  stood
there with his arms crossed, the monkey at his feet.
  "This your place?" Ripken said.
  "It is."
  "How much would you charge to rent it for a week?"
  "Well," he said, grinning, "that  depends on what you plan on doing with
it."
  "We want to play baseball, dude," Dykstra chimed in, spitting a wad of
tobacco juice.
  Kelly looked at him and winked. "I'll thank you not to soil my  field that
way, Mister."
  Dykstra swallowed.
  "Now then," Kelly continued, "you want to play baseball. Well. I like a
good game now and then. That's why I built this place. Matter of fact, I'm  a
bit of a collector."
  Kelly invited everyone into his rather large farmhouse and down to the
cellar, where he revealed an incredible collection of old-time outfits, pants,
tops, leggings, the works.
  "This stuff is worth a fortune," Roger Clemens marveled.
  "Well, I'm not much interested in money," Kelly said. "These uniforms have
been in my family for some time."
  "What are you, Babe  Ruth's grandson or something?" Gibson said.
  Kelly laughed. "Not quite. Anyhow, here's my proposition. You can use the
field, and the uniforms, you can even stay in the guest house across the way,
free of charge, for one week, under one condition."
  "What's that?" Mattingly asked.
  "I get to play," Kelly said.
  The major leaguers looked at one another and shrugged. The monkey jumped
up and down and made a "kweeeee kweeeee" sound.
  "What position you play?" Griffey asked.
  "Catcher is my specialty."
  Gwynn said to Griffey, "You guys need a catcher."
  "Oh, thanks a lot,"  Griffey shot back. "Stick him with us."
  "It ain't gonna make a difference, we're gonna kick your butt."
  "In your dreams, old -- "
  Ripken interrupted. "Hold up! Look. We need a field more than anything.
This place is perfect. It's private, and it's regulation size. Mr. Kelly here
can play with us on the American League team."
  "Yeah," Puckett laughed, "we're already letting Jordan play with us."
  "Listen to you," Jordan said, smirking.
  Ripken offered his hand, and Kelly shook it heartily.
  The funny thing was, Kelly never asked who the players were.
Something wild
  OK. I am ignoring my obligations to the game, which, after all, is why I
was brought here. The rosters were increased about an hour before the first
pitch, when a rented Mercedes pulled up to the  field and out stepped Barry
Bonds, Sandberg and an older fellow, in a suit. He smiled, and a happy mumble
went through the squads.
  Ernie Banks.
  "Ryne called me and told me what y'all were doing,"  Banks said. "He said
he was canceling his retirement just to play in one World Series, and I wanted
to come just to watch, seeing as I never got to a Series myself.
  "And when I asked if Barry was  playing and Ryne said no, well, I had to
call him up and tell him, 'Son, you cannot miss this. You never know if it
will be your last chance.' "
  Bonds, wearing sunglasses and jewelry, admitted he  didn't want to come. He
looked like a kid who'd been dragged to his aunt's house.
  Two more cars pulled up. The first was a Cadillac with a Hertz sticker on
the window. Out stepped Jose Rijo, the Cincinnati pitching star, along with a
young man with a round face and sad, sleepy eyes. "Hey, man, this place is
hard to find," Rijo said.
  "Who's your buddy?" Smith asked.
  "This is Calvin Reese,  but everyone call him Pokey. He's a heck of an
infielder in our farm system. They say he's the next Ozzie."
  Smith grinned. "Aim higher, kid."
  Pokey smiled back. "Is it OK if I play?" Something  about the way he asked
it, or maybe because he looked like a good athlete, but everyone just sort of
nodded. We would later learn that Pokey had lost the mother of his child just
a year earlier and was  still trying to deal with the grief. Maybe that's why
Rijo brought him.
  The last car was a jalopy, a Volkswagen with no muffler. It banged to a
halt.
  "Oh, cripes," Dykstra said.
  Out stepped  Mitch Williams, the pitcher. His hair was long and his beard
unkempt. He had a tank top, baggy shorts and two new tattoos. The last time I
had seen him was in the SkyDome in Toronto, when he threw a  pitch to Joe
Carter that Carter smacked over the wall to end the 1993 World Series. Because
of that, Williams had been crucified in Philadelphia. Fans egged his house,
cursed his name, he wound up in  Houston, pitched badly there and was cut. You
could easily see his reason for wanting to play another World Series -- even a
World Series like this.
  He slipped on his glove.
  "When do we start?"  was all he said.
Swing time
  Which brings us back to the first pitch. Oh, I almost forgot. Nolan Ryan
said they should sing the National Anthem, even if they were in ----. He took
his hat off and  started singing, pretty badly, and the other guys joined in.
It was kind of nice to hear all these off-key voices, wafting up into the
turquoise sky. Never mind that Bonds forgot the words.
  After  that, Ripken said, "Someone should throw out the first ball, to make
it official," and everyone looked to Ernie Banks.
  "I'd be honored," he said.
  Ernie tossed that ball in, and the game began,  as I mentioned, with a
clean shot by Gwynn up the middle. This was followed by another single, by
Dykstra, and then Matt Williams, who sent the second pitch offered him over
the fence for a home run,  the first of the "unofficial" postseason.
  National League 3, American 0.
  "Take that, Griffey!" Bonds yelled from the bench. "Hoo! Big Matt's gonna
beat you to the home run title here, too!"
  When Abbott finally retired the side, he came back to the bench and went
right to his catcher, the mysterious Mike Kelly.
 
  "Hey," Abbott said, "what kind of signals are those?"
  "Signals?" Kelly  said.
  "What you're doing with your hands."
  "Oh, I was just swatting at a fly."
  The next few innings saw the American League score its first run on an RBI
double by Puckett. But the Nationals  came back with two more, on Gwynn's
second hit of the day, a two-run triple. It was 5-2 after four innings, and
the AL was in trouble. Jordan had struck out twice, and Abbott looked tired.
  "I guess  now is when we'd go to a middle reliever," Trammell said.
  "If we had a middle reliever," Gibson answered.
  The fact was, each team had only three pitchers. So it was pretty much up
to each starter  to finish his game. Abbott settled down in the later innings,
and Maddux seemed to tire. In the eighth, Griffey hit a solo home run -- "I'm
right with you, Matt," he said as he passed Williams on third  base -- and
Puckett, Ripken and Gibson came through with doubles, knocking in two more.
The score was tied, 6-6, going into the ninth.
  This is when the most remarkable occurrence of the day took place. Because
there were no umpires, the catchers had been calling the balls and strikes.
There were a few disputes, but, for the most part, things went OK.
  Then Kelly came to bat in the ninth,  and Mike Piazza got a little too
competitive. A ball that was clearly low, Piazza called strike one. A pitch
that seemed far outside, Piazza called strike two. Kelly stepped out of the
box and looked  at him.
  "You care to take that last one back?" he said.
  Piazza sneered.
  "One more time," Kelly said. "You care to take that one back?"
  Piazza said, 'Hey, pal. It's strike two."
  "Very  well," Kelly said.
  Now I should say that in his three previous at-bats, Kelly had struck out
badly. I mean, not even close. Wild swing. No contact. The guys in the field
hid their laughs behind their gloves. But now he dug his feet into the dirt,
and he clenched his jaw, and he waited for the 0-2 from Maddux, a fastball,
and uncorked the sweetest swing this side of Duke Ellington.
  Pow! The ball  flew -- I mean flew -- over the centerfield fence and out of
sight. All we heard was a small splash. Kelly rounded the bases to the dropped
jaws of the other players. He stepped on the plate, looked  at Piazza and
walked into the arms of his teammates.
  And that is how the game was won.
  "Who is this guy?" Ripken whispered to Puckett.
  "Who cares?" Puckett said. "He's on our team -- and  we just won Game 1 of
the World Series!"
  They slapped hands in the dying sun and joined their teammates, who were
mobbing this strange, mustached man. On the sidelines, Ernie Banks was
smiling. "You  know," he said, "if I didn't know better I'd swear that Kelly
guy was . . . ."
  "Who?" I said.
  "Never mind," he said. "It's impossible."
  At that moment, "impossible" seemed a somewhat outdated word.
PROBABLE WORLD SERIES PITCHERS
Game 2 today
        '94 overall  '94 vs. opp. last 3 starts
TEAMS  PITCHERS  W-L  ERA  W-L  IP  ERA W-L IP  ERA
American  Clemens (r)  9-7  2.85 ---  ----  ----  ---  ---- ----
National  Rijo (r)  9-6  3.08 ---  ----  ----  ---  ---- ----
Michael Jordan secures the top spot and  home-team advantage for the American
League during the bat toss before Sunday's Game 1. That's Barry Bonds on the
left, Kirk Gibson next to Jordan and Ryne Sandberg on the right.
Jim Abbott was touched  for three runs in the first inning, but the Flint
Central product went the distance and held on for the victory.
Ernie Banks, who never appeared in the Fall Classic, tosses out the first
pitch of the  Secret World Series on Sunday.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
SECRET WORLD SERIES; MITCH ALBOM; COLUMN; GAME; BASEBALL; MAJOR;;FANS
</KEYWORDS>
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