<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9302080331
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
931021
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, October 21, 1993
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1H
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1993, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
ON-OFF DH MAKES A MOCKERY OF SERIES
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
PHILADELPHIA --  So here was Cito Gaston, stepping into a mob of reporters
and saying in a quiet voice that he'd been up all night but he'd made the
decision: He had to put Paul Molitor into the  lineup.

  And here came Molitor, humble and grateful, saying he was ready to try
third base and give it his best effort, even though he hadn't played that
position regularly in four years.

  And  here came Ed Sprague, humble and understanding, saying he knew he had
to sit down and let Molitor take his spot. What could he do?
  The reporters fired questions. The players and manager answered  with
patience. This went on for 20 minutes, and the whole time I'm thinking: Is
anyone gonna ask the one thing here that really needs to be asked?
  Why are we putting up with this nonsense?
  Two  sets of rules in a World Series?  A designated hitter some games? No
DH the other games? Pitchers sit some games? Pitchers bat the others? This is
the dumbest concept since somebody said, "Talk show  host? How about Chevy
Chase?"
  And yet they do it, both halves of baseball, without review, as if this
were some sort of cute tradition that should be tolerated, like kids soaping
windows the night  before Halloween.
  Sorry. But this is a different kind of whitewash. It covers the muck of a
game that still divides itself by old league loyalties and doesn't have enough
gumption to put a man in charge who might make a decision. A commissioner --
at least a real one -- couldn't help but see the lunacy of the designated
hitter mess in the World Series. And he -- or she -- would be compelled to  do
something.
  Especially after what almost happened here with Molitor.
 
Make room for Molitor
  Molitor is arguably the best story going in this series. He is 37, an age
by which many baseball  players are selling cars or learning the insurance
business. Yet Molitor has endured, all those years in Milwaukee without a
title, all those years knocking out .300 seasons in relative obscurity,
suffering through injuries, coming back, over and over. 
  Finally, after 15 seasons in the beer capital of America, he joins the Blue
Jays, and voila  --  here he is in a World Series, smoking the ball, writing
a wonderful climax to his career. Tuesday night, in Game 3, he hits a triple
in his first at-bat, and later a home run and a single. His batting average is
over .500 for the series. He's an inspiration  to his teammates. Even Philly
fans applaud him.
  And when the game ends, the TV guys grab him for an interview and they say,
"Great performance, Paul. Do you expect to play tomorrow?"
  "No," he  says.
  No? There's no place for him in the lineup? Since when do you bench your
best player?  Did Magic Johnson come off a brilliant night in the NBA Finals
and say, "Too bad I can't play next game"?  Does Mario Lemieux knock in three
goals in the Stanley Cup finals, then say, "I'm finally healthy. I wish I
could get in there tomorrow."
  Think how stupid this is. You go all year with a DH, you mold your offense
around him -- and then, in the biggest moment, he's out. Or this: You go all
year with your pitchers never touching a bat, then, in front of a worldwide
audience, they have to try to  hit a 90-m.p.h. fastball.
  Thanks to this foolishness, we got to see Todd Stottlemyre, the terribly
ineffective Toronto pitcher, come to the plate Wednesday night and reach base
on a walk. Stottlemyre,  an American leaguer his whole career, runs the bases
about as often as Elvis ordered the diet plate.
  But here he was, rounding second, foolishly trying to reach third on a
Roberto Alomar single.  Stottlemyre dove into the dirt, landed on his face,
got tagged out, and came up bleeding from his chin. He was dazed. He told his
trainer he "didn't know where he was."
  Considering the way he'd been  pitching, I'd call that a case of selective
amnesia.
 
One game, one championship 
  The point is, what's he doing in there? And why did John Olerud, the
American League batting champion, have to  sit out Tuesday night? And why did
Sprague have to sit Wednesday, while Molitor, a DH whose defense has been
limited by injuries the last few years, took his place at third base, the hot
corner, and  whispered to himself that old Little League mantra "Hit it to
someone else. . . . Hit it to someone else. . . . "
  "If I were in charge?" Molitor, always a gracious man, had said Tuesday.
"I'd make  it one game. Either we all have DH or nobody has it. We have one
players union, one TV contract, but we have two different leagues with two
different  rules. It doesn't make any sense."
  It sure doesn't.  Especially from a game that claims "tradition" counts
more than life itself. What kind of tradition do you have when, in the World
Series,  you arbitrarily give one team four games in its familiar style  and
another team three? This DH nonsense has been going on for two decades. And
still nobody fixes it.
  Come on. Championships are supposed to celebrate the things you've done
well all year --  not  rearrange them. Fans are lucky they're getting to see
Paul Molitor's talent reach full bloom in this series. 
  Baseball --  as long as it practices hypocrisy --  doesn't deserve that
nice a story.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN;  DESIGNATED HITTER; BASEBALL; WORLD SERIES; RULE; PAUL;MOLITOR
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
