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<UID>
9002120822
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
901112
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, November 12, 1990
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO EDITION
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
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<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SEE ALSO METRO FINAL EDITION, Page 1D
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1990, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
NO MIRACLES FOR ANDRE; NO EXCUSES FOR DEFENSE
</HEADLINE>
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<CORRECTION>

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Andre Ware stood on the sideline like a man who had just been scolded. He
crossed his feet. He uncrossed his feet. He folded his arms. He unfolded his
arms. His jaw was tight. He stared out into  space.

  "Depressed?" he would say later, after being benched in the Lions 17-7
loss to Minnesota. "Yes, I was depressed." Ware, like most young people, felt
the lights would always turn green for  him. He figured once he got past the
politics of who sits and who starts -- and after all, why shouldn't he start,
why else were they paying him all that money? -- well, then things would fall
into place.  Things would be good. Things would be like the old days, when he
was making quarterback miracles in college and high school.

  Welcome to the big leagues, kid. Just 30 minutes after Ware burst through
the NFL curtain and into the big room, he was told to sit down. He was
watching another man quarterback the team. And while he would not use this
word, the feeling he felt was failure. It hurt. So he  looked down, he looked
away, when coaches approached and whispered encouraging words he nodded but he
did not look at their faces. Inside he seethed. What do they know?
  It is no secret I never thought  Ware should have started this game. But
the mistake was not his. The mistake, I felt, was with Wayne Fontes' decision
to start him in the first place. It created bad feelings. It embittered Bob
Gagliano,  it made Rodney Peete wonder about his future. And, even worse, it
was playing craps with Ware's confidence. The plain fact is, the kid probably
wasn't ready. Fontes admitted as much when he removed him  after the first
half Sunday following two interceptions and no points.
  "Andre was missing a lot of open men," Fontes would say. "He wasn't seeing
things that well." Translation: he wasn't ready.
  But the failure Ware felt, he should not feel alone. Had he looked
carefully from that sideline, he would have seen a Lions defense that could
not shut down the Vikings when it had to. Over and over,  third down after
third down, fourth down after fourth down, the Vikings converted. They stayed
on the field. Sure, the Lions allowed only 10 points -- a heavy improvement
over last week's Disaster In  The Dome. But let's remember, these were not the
Washington Redskins. These were the Minnesota Vikings, a team that, going in,
had: 1) a worse record than Detroit; 2) A coach who is on the chopping block;
3) A "star" running back whose most recent Sports Illustrated article was
entitled "I Am Not A Dog"; and 4) A placekicker who just got indicted for
smuggling heroin.
  Three weeks ago, the Lions beat  this team in Minnesota. Yet Sunday, at
home, they could not shut them down. What does that tell you? The Lions let
Rich Gannon scramble, they let Anthony Carter catch passes, they let some guy
named  Allen Rice break tackles. Third down turned to first down. Over and
over.
  "You only have to look at my face to see how much that bothers me," Fontes
admitted. "That's what's killing us now. I cringe.  I'm hoping it might be
third down-and-40, and they might make that too."
  And here, Lions fans, is really where the problems lie. Put a sock in the
offensive talk for one moment. You build NFL winners  with defense. Always
have. Chicago Bears of the '80s. Pittsburgh Steelers of the '70s. Green Bay
Packers of the '60s. It's as old a lesson as there is. And right now, the
Lions defense, on good days,  is adequate, on bad days, it's awful. And no
matter what the day -- even though it makes some plays -- it never seems to
make the play. The big sack on third down. The crushing hit that forces a
fumble.  The interception that preserves a victory. Chicago Bear hits. New
York Giant hits.
  Those things are the margin of victory. 
  The rest is just playing out the clock.
  None of which makes Andre  Ware feel any better. He answered questions
after the game like a school kid explaining his side to the principal. "I had
just started feeling comfortable and confident. . . . I felt I should have
stayed  in. . . . He (Fontes) is worried about my confidence, but to do me
like that, well that shakes me more than anything. . . ."
  Frustration. Anger. Depression. Andre, like a good kid, had brought his
mother up from Houston for this game. After all, she was with him for the NFL
draft and he was a first-round selection. Happy moment. She was with him for
the Heisman Trophy announcement, and he won.  Happy moment. 
  But life is not all happy moments. That's the first lesson of adulthood.
And for all the recent fuss, let's remember: Andre Ware is only  22. He's
really just a kid.
  You want  grown-up problems? Take a look a few lockers down. Here was Bob
Gagliano, holding his infant son, Gage, looking into the child's soft face and
trying to forget what had just transpired on the football  field. Sunday was
another nightmare for the 32-year-old Gagliano. Once again, he answered the
bell for Fontes -- even though he felt like saying, "You want a relief
quarterback? Look in the Yellow Pages"  -- and he led the Lions to their only
touchdown. But two ill-advised passes ended in the arms of Vikings defenders.
Interceptions. One was returned for a touchdown.
  "And what do you think people  will remember tomorrow?" he said, sighing.
  Unlike Ware, Gagliano is no kid. Unlike Ware, he doesn't have a
multi-million dollar contract. He has a wife and son to support, maybe a few
years left  in this league. Sunday, when he took the field, the fans booed. 
  Bob Gagliano did not bring his mother to the game. 
  "This is really frustrating," he said.
  "I'm really frustrated," Ware  said.
  "It's frustrating," Fontes said.
  And the season continues. Fontes has opened Pandora's Box now. Should he
let Ware continue his education or return to Peete to try and win? The defense
 once thought it was the strong point of this team, but now it ranks near the
bottom of the league. Ware has felt the first serious bump in his football joy
ride. Gagliano wonders about his future. Peete  is nursing a bad hamstring.
  The point is, everybody's got problems.
  That's pretty much the story of the Lions, isn't it?
 
  Mitch Albom will sign copies of his new book, "Live Albom II,"  at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday at B. Dalton, Livonia Mall, and 6 p.m. Friday at Community News
Center, Ann Arbor.
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