<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9002090891
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
901022
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, October 22, 1990
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo RUSTY KENNEDY Associated Press
Photo GARY HERSHORN Reuters
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


:
 Series most valuable player Jose Rijo, holding his son Jose
Jr., is congratulated  by his wife, Rosie.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1990, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
RED-LETTER DAY FOR UNDERDOGS
CINCINNATI STEALS A'S SERIES HOPES,
AND EVERYTHING ELSE
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
Oakland Calif. --They had already stolen Oakland's crown, Oakland's
reputation, and Oakland's thunder. Now the Cincinnati Reds were taking
Oakland's stadium. One by one they came bursting from  the dugout like enemy
soldiers storming the castle, to the raucous applause of about 300 Cincinnati
boosters -- the only fans left in the Coliseum. It was like a private party
late Saturday night. Simply  Reds. And soon, the field was a small ocean of
Reds jackets, Reds hats, Reds T- shirts.

  Red October.

  "Ri-jo! Ri-jo!"
  "Sa-bo! Sa-bo!"
  "MARGE!"
  This was more than an hour after the Reds  had completed their stunning
execution of the World Series, a four-game sweep, leaving the once-mighty
Oakland Athletics shredded like coleslaw.  In the years to come, this Series
might grow in legend;  it might rank with the 1969 Miracle Mets or the 1966
Orioles (who swept the supposedly mighty Dodgers -- Koufax, Drysdale, et al).
But for now, in the cool October night, the scene was . . . Red Alert.
  Here was Billy Hatcher, the hottest bat in town, waving to the fans with
only his right hand, his left tucked under his shirt, still throbbing and
swollen. In the first inning of Saturday's Game 4,  he was hit by a pitch from
Oakland's  Dave Stewart. Twenty minutes later, Hatcher was in an official car,
being raced to Merritt Hospital -- along with teammate Eric Davis, the Reds'
star outfielder,  who had bruised his ribs and a kidney while diving for a
ball.
  "There was no radio in the car," Hatcher said.  "We kept saying, 'What's
going on with the game?' This guy had a walkie- talkie, and  he kept giving us
updates."
  Whoa. Is this baseball, or M*A*S*H? Updates at the hospital? Well. Was that
any less probable than Jose Rijo, who used to pitch for Oakland until they
traded him away,  now winning the World Series Most Valuable Player Award with
two brilliant efforts against his former team and -- get this -- giving all
the credit to his father-in-law, Juan Marichal, who now works for Oakland as a
scout.
  "It is funny," said Marichal, a former Giants star, who was on the field
hugging Rijo, his daughter, Rosie, and his grandson, Jose Jr. "When Rosie
first started to see Jose,  my wife and I were not very happy about it. My
wife said, 'Rosie, please. Do not marry a baseball player.'
  "But Rosie didn't listen. And once she married Jose, I liked him very much.
  "And of  course, I had to help him."
  Yeah. Here is how much Marichal helped Rijo: 15 1/3 World Series innings,
one run, a slider so deadly it ought to come in bullet casing. Saturday,
during the Reds' final  victory, Rijo retired the last 20 Oakland batters he
faced. In a row? The last 20? The Athletics may dock Marichal a paycheck for
that kind of help.
  But wait. As Rijo lit up yet another cigar and  hoisted his baby over his
head, the small crowd erupted. Chris Sabo had surfaced. Now. Here was really
all you needed to know about this Series: The Oakland Athletics were supposed
to be baseball's answer  to Thor, the Norse god of thunder.  Canseco. McGwire.
 Henderson.  But the power king of this World Series turned out to be this
little guy they call Spuds, who looks like he cuts his hair with an electric
razor and shops for eyeglasses at Snorkels 'R Us. Chris Sabo? Two home runs?
Five RBIs? Power king? Chris Sabo? 
  "We won -- we won fair and square!" Sabo screamed, hugging just about
everybody. "Oakland  has a great team, but they were second best!"
The 'other' Jose gets lost 
  Ah, yes. What about second best, the suddenly dethroned Oakland Athletics?
As the Reds partied on their field, dripping champagne, high-fiving their
owner, the Athletics were licking their wounds. Some were looking for quick
exits. Jose Canseco, their newest goat, obviously found one. No one saw him
after the game. He  had been benched for the finale, supposedly because his
nagging back was limiting his play. More like his play was limiting the
Athletics. As this World Series developed, Canseco became symbolic of the
Oakland demise: a big fat reputation doing absolutely nothing.
  "I felt Willie (McGee) could do a better job defensively for us," manager
Tony La Russa said. But it sounded like  a thin explanation.  The truth is,
after getting blown out in Game 1, losing Game 2 in extra innings -- thanks
largely to Canseco's misplay of a Hatcher drive -- and blowing Game 3 in a
single inning in which the Reds scored  seven runs, La Russa probably figured
the only way to save the Series was a complete mental turnaround. The pitching
wasn't holding. The hitting was last seen on the side of a milk carton.
  How  better to trash it all and look for new inspiration than by benching
Canseco, whose second-guessing of La Russa and consistent failure at the plate
had become a cancerous reminder to the Athletics that  they weren't what they
-- and everyone else -- figured they were?
  And it almost worked. The Athletics had a 1-0 lead into the eighth inning
Saturday with their money pitcher, Stewart, pitching his  guts out. But, oh,
these Reds. They play as if they're equal-opportunity employers: so Herm
Winningham (who is in the game only because of the injury to Hatcher) lays
down a beautiful two-strike bunt  and beats the throw to first base. And, with
the bases loaded, Glenn Braggs (who is in the game only because of the injury
to Davis) grounds to shortstop, driving in Barry Larkin on a fielder's choice.
 And then Hal Morris (who  batted a whopping .071 for the Series) drives a
Stewart pitch all the way to the warning track, allowing Winningham to tag and
score the clinching run of the 1990 World Series.
  Herm Winningham? Hal Morris? Glenn Braggs?  
  Geez. Who's next? The batboy?
Reds teach A's, us a lesson 
  And here came the batboy. He bounced from the dugout, dripping from
champagne. He  raced past Mariano Duncan, who wore a Hawaiian lei around his
neck, and past Rob Dibble and Randy Myers, super relievers, arms around each
other, and past Winningham, who was doing a TV interview with  former Reds
star Ken Griffey. "What's my share come to?" Herm was asking. "A hundred and
twenty thousand? Is it that much?"
  Truth is, this can't be measured in money. What the Reds did this past
week was more than turn the baseball experts on their collective ear. They
brought a sense of excellence -- and surprise -- back to what had been a
pretty dreadful baseball season, a season in which  many teams didn't seem to
want to win, or know how.
  But the Reds. Wow. They poured gasoline and then dropped the match. They
beat the defending World Series champions in a blowout, in extra innings,
another blowout, and a squeaker, they did it one night with pitching, next
with hitting, they did it with regulars and substitutes, with starters and
with that incredibly nasty bullpen. They even got  a crucial hit from a kid
named Billy Bates, who looks like he sounds. I think he's still in high
school.
  So much for the experience factor that was supposed to be Oakland's big
edge. You know how  many Reds had ever played in a World Series before this?
One. Danny Jackson.
  Oh. Wait. One other. Lou Piniella.  Only now, he isn't a player; he's the
manager. A few days ago, I asked if he ever felt like jumping from the dugout
and getting into the action. "Nah," he said.  "Playing was more fun. But
managing is more satisfying."
  Now he was out on the Oakland field, soaking in the most satisfying  moment
of all, the celebration, the victory, an underdog team that took center stage
and just blew the audience away. Somebody once said you play the World Series
-- even the predicted blowouts -- because  the beauty of sports is you never
know what's gonna happen. Thank you, Cincinnati. We'd almost forgotten.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
CHAMPION; BASEBALL
</KEYWORDS>
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