<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9002140004
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
901121
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Wednesday, November 21, 1990
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1990, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
MEMORIES OF FIELDER WILL BE MOST VALUABLE
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
You knew by the way he walked down the hall. Cecil Fielder, wearing an
olive suit with an olive tie, had that slow gait, a shrug in his step, as if
he were walking back to the dugout after striking  out.

  "Do you know yet?" he was asked. 

  "Uh . . . no . . . not yet . . . " he said, opening the door to the press
conference.
  He lied. He knew. He had been sitting in the office upstairs,  waiting for
the phone call. When it came, his heart raced, because this could be the
perfect ending to his story. A guy who no one wanted, a guy who spent a year
in Japan pounding the ball before someone  offered him a job in the major
leagues -- and now he could go all the way, top of the tower, home run leader,
RBI leader, now this: the MVP award. Perfect script, right? The office door
opened. . . .  
  "They gave it to Rickey," he was told.
  And there went the fairy tale. Now, here was Fielder, all dressed up and
nothing to show. He straightened his tie, leaned into the microphones, and
tried to sound as if his heart was not broken.
  I suppose we should know better. I suppose we say this is just an award,
voted by writers, and, no matter how much we talk,  it isn't even a speck in
the real world of baseball. You can't hit with it. You can't throw it. It's
just an award.
  And yet . . . this needs to be said.  Fielder should have won. Better
said: he should not have lost. It would  be hard to claim that Rickey
Henderson, whose very name makes pitchers sweat, is somehow unworthy.  But
there were some thickheaded voters -- and I'd like to get their names so I can
stop buying their newspapers -- who didn't vote Fielder second, they didn't
even vote him third. They put players such as Roger Clemens and Bobby Thigpen
-- Bobby Thigpen? -- higher on the list.
  For them, a little  lesson in what MVP means:
 What's an MVP all about? 
  First of all, it means a difference. And Cecil made a bigger difference
than Henderson or any one else on that list. Few of the voting writers  were
around here in 1989 -- why would they be? -- but Detroit, one of the oldest
and proudest baseball cities in America, was in the mud. As low as it goes.
The Tigers lost 103 games. You had as much  reason to go to the ballpark as
you did a Milli Vanilli concert.
  And then along came  Fielder. Big guy. Friendly giant. He brought back the
oldest reason people used to carry their kids through  the turnstiles and
teenagers used to sit in the bleachers, slapping their gloves. The slugger.
The home run hitter. Suddenly, even on the dullest nights, there was a reason
to be there,  because Cecil  might crack one.
  In fact, he cracked 51, more than any American Leaguer in nearly three
decades. The Tigers won 79 games, 20 more than the season before --  and that
was with their pitching ace,  Jack Morris, making more headlines with his
mouth than with his arm.
  Fielder was the difference. You take him away, the Tigers might fall off
the map. Not so with Henderson. The Athletics, even  without him, would have
succeeded. You shouldn't punish a guy for being on a great team; you
shouldn't reward him, either. 
  Another point: tangible contributions. Sure, Henderson is a demon on  the
base paths. He led his league in stolen bases. But how many did he steal, only
to be stranded on second or third? In effect, those made no difference in the
game. They were empty notches on his gun.  But Fielder? Every home run, every
RBI -- and he led not just the league but the majors in both categories  --
every one of those was worth at least a run, and sometimes the game. Something
 tangible.  That's what Fielder provided. The notches on his gun all drew
blood.
  Another point: pressure. Did Henderson have to play all year with an
international mob asking, game after game, "Tonight? How  many tonight?" That
might be reason enough to give the award to Fielder.
 He wouldn't change a thing 
  Still, there was one more thing, one thing the dim bulbs who went with
Thigpen clearly don't  understand. It has to do with memories. It surfaced
beautifully in that little room at Tiger Stadium Tuesday night, when Fielder
was asked the most important question of the day.
  "If you could win  MVP, but only if you gave back the last night of the
season, would you do it?"
  The big man looked down. He allowed a smile. And then Fielder, the best
story in baseball, said:  "I wouldn't change a thing."
  And there is the final trump card in this MVP business. Years from now,
nobody will remember  Henderson's season. Not even in Oakland. It will be just
another another pile of statistics.
  But, years from now, in this city, and all around the country, they will
remember Cecil Fielder. They will remember the tingle when he came to the
plate, and the the balls that went over the wall,  over the stands, over the
roof. They will remember that final night in Yankee Stadium, when, down to his
last two at-bats, he found something special, he blasted one for history, and
then another for  the hell of it.
  "I did everything I could do,"  Fielder said Tuesday, and then he went
home. He lost. But he won. Because long after that trophy is collecting dust
in Henderson's house, baseball  will remember the magic summer when the balls
went flying, one by one, as the big man rounded the bases. And remembering
summers, not taking home trophies, is still what the game is about.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN;  CECIL FIELDER; DTIGERS; BASEBALL;Detroit Tigers
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
