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<UID>
9202160303
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
921210
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, December 10, 1992
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1E
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1992, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
A MEMORABLE IMPACT IF WE CAN REMEMBER
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
I went to see Shaq.

  Watch him attaq.
He's got the knaq.
  And then we went smaq!
  Hey, I'm not kidding here. There we were, Corky Meinecke and I, at the
Palace to cover the arrival  of Shaquille O'Neal, check the kid out, see
whether he's all he's cracked up to be -- and next thing you know, he's racing
for a loose ball, heading right toward us, all 7-foot-1 and 300 pounds of him,
and wrapped around him is the leaping gnome, Dennis Rodman, all 6-8, 225
pounds of him, also going for the ball, and Corky and I are saying: "Oh,
they'll stop . . . they'll, uh, stop . . . they'll  . . . they're NOT
STOPPPING! MAYDAY!"  Now, I should say right here, even before he became part
of our furniture, the Shaq, only 20 years old, had already been impressive. He
won the opening tap. Then  dropped a lay-up over Bill Laimbeer. Then grabbed a
rebound over Rodman. Then Orlando Woolridge tried to drive and Shaq knocked
him down with one arm. His left arm. And he has a bandage on that arm.
 
  And then he scored and rebounded and blocked and then he ate the backboard
and attacked New York City and breathed fire and crushed taxicabs and Godzilla
came from outer space and they fought and Shaq  won and a lot of Japanese
actors said, "Oh! He is ve-ry pow-er-ful!" (Mouths keep moving.) . . .
  Well, that's what it felt like. No. Wait. I can tell you exactly what it
felt like, because, as I  said, right there, in the third quarter, the Shaq,
obviously taking a shine to us, decided to let Corky and me get close to him,
very close, extremely close, as in, "Hey, Shaq, had onions for lunch?"  
  Or, "CORKY! ABANDON SHIP!"
  
Duck! But not too soon . . . 
  Now, I know what you're thinking. You see two tons of fun flying your way,
why not flee? Dive? Hit the dirt? Well, getting attacked  -- or attaqed -- by
flying bodies is one of the risks you take sitting courtside. So is the chance
that the TV cameras catch you picking your nose. 
  But knowing this -- the TV part, especially --  you never want to duck too
quickly, because if the players running for the loose ball  actually  do
stop, you're left under the table, for no reason, looking like a little boy
hiding from his mother,  and you have to stay there the whole night until
everyone goes home, including the janitors, or else risk embarrassment not
felt since Milli Vanilli.
  So, naturally, being real men, Corky and I stayed  put until the very last
second, and then, showing the reflexes of your average household appliances,
we tried to duck. Too late. And here came the Shaq-Worm sandwich, flying,
crashing the table, kapow!  Kabong! KABLOWWWWEE! Chairs flew! Papers
scattered! And we were on the floor, and I looked down, and there was Shaq, at
my feet, like a beached whale.
  (What do you say at a moment like this? "Hey,  big fella?" Or, "So, you
covered for this?" Or maybe, "Oh! You are ve-ry pow-er-ful!")
  Who knows? Thankfully, no one was hurt, even though it took Rodman a minute
to remember what country he was  in. Fact is, even when they were rolling on
top of Corky, both Shaq and Rodman were complete gentlemen. And when Worm
finally rose, he held out a ripped notepad and said: "Whose is this?"
  Laimbeer,  on the other hand, was his usual compassionate self. He looked
at Shaq and Dennis, lying on the floor, then looked angrily at Corky and said:
"Corky! You're supposed to catch him!"
  Oh. Sure.
 Now you tell us.
Something bad had to happen 
  But this is the way it goes when you play the Shaq. You can't always do
what you want. And then he lands on you. For most of the night, he swung his
jumbo jet body around, slammed home dunks and slapped away shots. He is good
at slapping away shots. Once, when Woolridge tried him, he wiped the shot away
so completely, I bet if you check the tape,  the play is erased.
  But the Shaq is not perfect. And he is not unbeatable. For one thing, he
launches free throws like a tennis machine spits out balls. And Wednesday
night, in a close game, when  his team truly needed him, he fouled out.
  And the Magic lost.
  "Could you feel his strength?" I asked Laimbeer, who helped hold Shaq to a
below-average 17 points, 11 rebounds. 
  "Yeah. I felt  it when his elbow hit my jaw."
  "What were you thinking when you left the ground?" I asked Rodman.
  "I shut my eyes. I was holding 300 pounds, so something bad had to happen."
  "Hey, Corky,"  I said. "You all right?"
  "Of course, Mom," he said. "Don't let the school bus leave without me, OK?"
  So we'll have to work with Corky. And his computer. And his notepad, which
is history. But  hey. Who needs notes when you have memories? And bruises. So
when we look back on Shaquille O'Neal's Palace debut, I think we can say: We
came, we saw, we provided a cushion.
  I expect a thanq-you  note.
  (Mitch Albom will sign copies of his new book, "Live Albom III," at 7
tonight at Book Nook, Allen Park; noon Friday, Mickey's, in Detroit; Saturday,
1 p.m., B. Dalton's, Macomb Mall, and 3:30  p.m., Barnes & Noble, Rochester
Hills.)
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<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN
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