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<UID>
9501160173
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
950427
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, April 27, 1995
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
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<PAGE>
1D
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<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color LOIS BERNSTEIN Associated Press;Photo
Color
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


:
Anaheim:  Fans  were front and center Wednesday night before
the Tigers' season opener. Above, Sparky Anderson hugs Ann
Meyers Drysdale, widow of former Dodgers pitcher Don Drysdale.
Drysdale died two years ago.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SIDEBAR ATTACHED AT END OF TEXT
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1995, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
STARTING OVER
'LIGHTS ARE DIMMING' FOR SPARKY, BUT OPENING DAY IS STILL
A THRILL
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

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<BODY>
ANAHEIM, Calif. --  He buttons his shirt and pulls a tie over his head. It
is seven hours before the first pitch. The stadium is just across the street.
Still, he moves like a man with a plane to  catch.

  "Let me grab my jacket," he says. The hotel suite is large, and the table
holds the remains of breakfast: croissants, fruit, coffee. It is Opening Day
of baseball across America, the start  of a season many thought would never
come.

  Yet here we are, back again.
  And here he is, back as well. 
  It is hard to say which is the bigger surprise in a Detroit uniform: the
real Tigers  or Sparky Anderson. Just weeks ago, some swore his Tigers career
was over, after his spring- training walkout.
  Now he taps his chest and stomach, as if checking to see if he's all there.
He finds  his pipe and matches. His white hair is combed back. His face still
shows the Florida sun. I ask if he heard the news from home: Don Chaney,
Pistons coach, was fired.
  At this, Anderson seems to slow,  as if learning of a death. He nods, then
drops into the couch. "He was a good man, you know." He shakes his head.
"Mmm-hmm. A good man."
  Since he took over the Tigers in 1979, Anderson has seen six Detroit
basketball coaches, nine Detroit hockey coaches and two Detroit football
coaches hired and fired. He befriended Chuck Daly, then watched him go. He did
commercials with Jacques Demers, then  watched him go. He knew Darryl Rogers,
Bryan Murray, Ron Rothstein, Monte Clark. They are all gone.
  Sparky is still here.
  "Luck?" he says when you ask him why, but he knows this is a feeble
explanation.  Luck is working for one owner who loves you. Anderson has had
three different owners in Detroit, and he only delivered the big prize for one
of them, Tom Monaghan, in 1984, when he won the World Series.  
  That seems long ago. The last six years have finished badly -- sometimes
even in last place. Chaney, Rothstein, Demers, Murray all got fired during
that time for seasons that weren't any worse.
  Sparky is still here.
  "You know I get as nervous now as I did for my first Opening Day."  He
puffs quickly on his $20 pipe. He does not buy expensive pipes because he goes
through so many. Besides,  the pipe thing is not about looking smart or
distinguished. "It's a crutch, that's all. It calms my nerves.
  "I'm tellin' ya, my nerves never stop. I get that cup of coffee in the
clubhouse, my hands  are shaking. I don't fill it up, because I'll wind up
with coffee all over me.
  "It ain't changed. I remember in Cincinnati, my first year, my daughter at
the breakfast table saying, 'Mama, why is Daddy's orange juice shaking?' "
  He puffs deeply and disappears in a cloud of smoke. This does not suggest
the world's most stable man, yet pundits suggest he is exactly that, a guy who
needn't worry  about his next job, because any team would have him.
  That's why, they say, Sparky was able to walk out of spring training
rather than coach replacement players. That's why he could go home while
every other manager had to deal with those hacks. Sparky didn't care if they
fired him. Heck, he wanted it -- so he could take a better job.
  Not so, Sparky says.
  "I never believed for a second  that I could find work quickly elsewhere.
That's easy to write, but it ain't so easy to find the club to hire you.
  "There were many times I didn't think I'd be here after what I did. I told
my wife,  'You know, I may never go back.' Those were the consequences. I knew
it. I never said what I did was right, but it was right for me.
  "Then, that (final) weekend (when the strike was settled), I didn't  know
until I got that phone call from John McHale what would happen.
  "The first words he said to me, I will never forget them. He said, 'We want
you back.'
  "I can't tell you what that meant."
  I have a theory about Sparky's longevity. I think he has reached such a
venerable place in baseball -- he will soon be the third-winningest manager in
history -- that owners are afraid to fire him.  They don't want to be the guy
who told a legend good-bye.
  "I don't think that's true," says Anderson, 61. "What may work for me is
the record thing. Maybe they respect that.
  "But if they want  to get rid of me, they will. Believe me."
  We'll see. On Tuesday, Sparky said of his Tigers career, "I can see the
lights dimming." For now, he has this season left. He admits he wanted to
finish his contract -- so at the very least he won't be fired, just not
rehired. He also admits he has no idea what will happen. "I made a deal with
John not to talk about it. I won't and they won't. Not during  the season.
When the season is over, we'll see what happens."
  We go downstairs, get in the car, and ride to the stadium. It is still more
than six hours until game time. Sparky gets out, and a small  band of fans
rush him for autographs. 
  He has a bad club again this year, light on talent, lucky to finish fourth.
How can he look forward to this?
  "Nobody likes to lose. But I look at my job  this year as developing the
kids. I have to make sure they are better at the end than at the beginning."
  I tell him that is exactly what Don Chaney said. I tell him it didn't help
-- Chaney was still  fired.
  He thinks about this.
  "Maybe so. But Don was right."
  He walks into the stadium, and another season begins.
  He is still here. 
  He may outlast us all.
 
STAYING POWER
Detroit  coaches in major sports who have come and gone since Sparky Anderson,
right, arrived in June 1979:
* LIONS: Monte Clark, Darryl Rogers.
* PISTONS: Dick Vitale, Richie Adubato, Scotty Robertson, Chuck Daly, Ron
Rothstein, Don Chaney.
* RED WINGS: Bobby Kromm, Marcel Pronovost, Ted Lindsay, Wayne Maxner, Nick
Polano, Harry Neale, Brad Park, Jacques Demers, Bryan Murray.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
LIST;  DTIGERS; COACH; INTERVIEW; SPARKY ANDERSON; BASEBALL;Detroit Tigers
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
