<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9302080466
</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>
LUCK, AND THE SERIES, RUNNING OUT ON PHILS
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
PHILADELPHIA --  The magic ran out after midnight, with the soft thud of
the ball in the catcher's mitt. Lenny Dykstra didn't even look. He heard the
umpire yell strike three, and he dropped his  frozen bat and just walked away.
After all he had done, including two home runs and four RBIs in this game,
after all his team had done, scoring 14 runs in seven innings, sending runners
home as if opening  a pigeon coop and yelling "Fly, birds, fly!" -- after all
that, it was strike three, looking. The throats were dry, the tank was empty,
and Dykstra heard the distant sound of a glass slipper breaking.  

  The magic ran out.

  And the World Series was over. Not officially. Not even technically. Even
after Veterans Stadium emptied sadly Wednesday night, final score Toronto 15,
Philadelphia 14, there was at least one more game to play in this Fall Classic
-- not that "classic" should be associated with a game in which 29 runs are
scored. "Football" might be a better word.
  Still, after all the  carnage, the Blue Jays had only a 3-1 lead. They must
win one more to pop champagne. And yet, you know they will. You know this is
over, history tells us so. You lose a game like this, a game that you  figured
was done, over, in your pocket, well, you don't come back -- you have a hard
time breathing, let alone coming back. 
  The Phillies, a wonderful collection of characters, had been living on  a
spit-and-glue spirit, and had they held on to the lead Wednesday night that,
at one point, was 14-9, they would be snorting and huffing this morning, ready
to kill.
  They didn't. And they're not.
  The magic ran out, some time after midnight.
 Win, and let's have a burger
  "Do you ever remember a team coming back from a deficit like that?" someone
asked Toronto's Devon White, who tripled  in a six-run eighth inning that
secured the Blue Jays' victory. "Have you ever been involved in a game like
this?"
  "Well, I never played Little League," White said, laughing, "so I'd have to
say  no." 
  Little League. A good comparison. This was one of those games where it felt
like the last team up would win and then we'd all go to McDonald's. Pitching
excellence? Forget it. Pitching competence?  Forget it. 
  This was pitching nonexistence. I half expected to see the fathers standing
behind the backstop yelling, "That's OK, Bobby, just try to get it over the
plate!"
  Eleven pitchers appeared  in this game. Only the last guy standing was
memorable. Duane Ward got the final strike on Dykstra in the eighth, and the
last three outs of the ninth. The rest of the pitchers were pretty awful.
  "It seemed like every guy who came in was going to give up at least a run,
or two, or three, or nine," Ward said. "It was all over the place."
  Indeed. And it started right after the national anthem. Philadelphia's
Tommy Greene loaded the bases, then walked in the first run, a bad sign if
there ever was one. 
  Three runs later, in the bottom of the first, Toronto's Todd ("Where's the
Plate?")  Stottlemyre began a debacle of his own, throwing something like
1,457 straight balls, walking everybody, giving up four runs in the opening
frame.
  In fact, thanks to the no-DH rule in National League  parks, Stottlemyre
got to show his incompetence in two disciplines -- pitching and base running.
As a career American Leaguer, Stottlemyre has run the bases about as often as
Elvis ordered the diet plate.  It showed. He tried to go from first to third
on a single, dove headfirst towards the bag,  and came up bleeding from the
chin. Trainers rushed out. Stottlemyre was dazed. He said he didn't know where
 he was.
  Considering the way he was pitching, I'd call that selective amnesia.
  By the way, he was out at third.
 
 Wild Thing can share this one
  But by the time this game was over -- which,  I believe, came about the
time "Morning Benediction" appears on TV -- Stottlemyre was a distant memory.
There had been Al Leiter, who was useless, and David West, who was useless,
and Mitch (Wild Thing)  Williams, who was clueless. Williams got tagged with
the loss, although, truth be told, a collapse like this should be shared with
everyone.
  And it will be, on the radio talk shows here in Philly,  and in the acerbic
newspaper columns, and in the saloons and corner taverns that keep this city
breathing and arguing the way it has for years and years -- in all those
places, the Phillies will be written  off. Thanks for a wild and crazy time.
It was fun while it lasted. But when you can't hold a 14-9 lead in your own
stadium, you are not destined to win anything.
  At one point during this game, the  phone lines between the dugout and the
bullpen went down. And then it started to rain. And then came that moment in
the eighth, when Dykstra -- whose tobacco drool and nail-like attitude had
come to  symbolize this team --  struck out looking with the Phils behind by
one.
  Some will call that coincidence. Not me. 
  You know what I call that?
  Sign from God.
  The magic ran out. It's a  trot to the finish line now, and a Canadian
sunset, yet again, over autumn's last ballpark.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
WORLD SERIES; BASEBALL; COLUMN; PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
