<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9909280135
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
990928
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Tuesday, September 28, 1999
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo GABRIEL B. TAIT/Detroit Free Press;Photo JULIAN H.
GONZALEZ/Detroit Free Press;Photo ERIC SEALS/Detroit Free Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

Fans reach for a ball during the Tigers' game against the Kansas City
Royals. The turnout at the last game at Tiger Stadium was 43,356.

Kirk Gibson, a member of the Tigers All-Time Team, looks back as other former
Tigers line up for a group photo after the game Monday. The Tigers beat the
Kansas City Royals, 8-2.

Douglas Pettinga, 27, of Dearborn lets his sign speak for him before the start
of the game at the Corner.

Tiger broadcaster Ernie Harwell tells listeners what's happening on the field
as the Tigers battle the Royals. (PHOTO RAN IN STATE EDITION, PAGE 6A.)
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
TIGER STADIUM COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1999, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
GRAND FINALE
SLAM, SMILES, TEARS . . . A FOND FAREWELL FOR THE CORNER
LOOK THERE, AND THERE: FACES OF THE PAST ARE HERE
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
LOOK, THERE'S your father, sitting in the rightfield seats, handing you a hot
dog and telling you be careful, don't get mustard all over your shirt. And
over there, near the third-base line, that was your grandma, holding her
little pencil and writing names delicately in her scorecard, "Kaline, RF,
Horton, LF, Freehan, C . . ."

And out there, in the bleachers, wasn't that your first girlfriend, looking
the way she did back then, her hair in a ponytail, her eyes feigning interest
as you pointed out the players and proudly quoted their statistics?

Didn't you see them all there Monday afternoon, taking their place with the
rest of the remembered, the living and the ghosts, the players and managers,
the umpires and owners, all of whom came to wave good-bye to an 87-year-old
fading blue palace called Tiger Stadium?

Didn't they gather early at the corner of Michigan and Trumbull, gazing up
fondly at the light towers and the peeling-white walls? Didn't they come
through the turnstiles and immediately inhale, sniffing the smells of history
mixed with sausage grease?

Didn't they roar for the old players who gathered at home plate before the
national anthem? Didn't they laugh and point when Mark (The Bird) Fidrych ran
out to the pitcher's mound and scooped up a last bag of dirt? Didn't they get
a chill when the great Al Kaline, speaking for everyone who ever wore a Tigers
uniform, said, "I again find myself humbled by this place . . ."

Didn't they jump up, the way all baseball fans jump up, when the first pitch
was smacked toward centerfield -- Could it be a homer? Will it be a homer? --
and didn't they applaud when it came down in the glove of a Tigers
centerfielder?

Today, that centerfielder's name is Gabe Kapler, a muscle-bound, 24-year-old
stud out of Reseda, Calif. But not long ago he was Chet Lemon, and before that
Mickey Stanley and before that Johnny Groth, Hoot Evers, all the way back to
the ornery batting champion, Ty Cobb, who patrolled this same grass in this
same building in the 1910s.

On Monday afternoon, Kapler, the kid, seemed to travel through time. He was
wearing Cobb's uniform -- no number on his back -- and for a moment, as the
ball dropped out of the sky, it might have been the Georgia Peach himself
squeezing it for the out.

History? The place is history.

"You remember the first time you ever saw this stadium?" a 70-year-old man was
asked on this farewell day.

"The first time? Oh, yeah," he said. "I was in high school, and I cut class
and sneaked down here with a friend. And of the 50,000 people here, who should
we run into? His mother! We didn't know what to say!"

The 70-year-old man laughed. His eyes got that hazy look. Just for a moment,
he was by himself, gazing toward the outfield.

His name is Mike Ilitch.

He owns the team.

That was his friend out there, in the bleachers, did you see him? The
red-faced teenager trying to explain himself to Mother?



A low ceiling

Look, there's your pal from the old neighborhood, grinning as his hand dove
into your popcorn. And over there was your uncle, waiting in his Chevrolet,
parked by the church where he said he'd meet you after the game.

There, in the upper deck, weren't those your schoolmates on Safety Patrol Day,
having made the long bus trip down from northern Michigan? And down there,
along the outfield wall, wasn't that your kid sister, leaning over the rail
during batting practice, her big glove dangling from her too-small hand?

"Hit one here!" she squealed to the players. "Hit one here! . . ."

Weren't they all there for the final game Monday afternoon, a day that was, in
many ways, perfect for a funeral, so much life-affirming joy to lessen the
coming sadness; a sky the color of blueberry ice cream; a breeze that cooled
the 84-degree sun; an adoring crowd that included former players Ron LeFlore,
Mark Fidrych, Jack Morris, Kirk Gibson, Cecil Fielder, Darrell Evans, even
Billy Rogell, the shortstop and former city councilman who played for this
team -- in this stadium -- in the 1930s.

The 1930s?

History? The place is history.

"What's funny is how little I thought of this stadium when I first saw it,"
said Alan Trammell, a guy who played his entire career in this park and was
voted by fans the best Tigers shortstop ever. "I came from Southern
California, and we were used to big, new stadiums, big parking lots, and I
drove by here and the cab driver said, 'That's Tiger Stadium,' and I said,
'Where? That thing? It looks like a fortress!' ''

He laughed. "I love it now, but, to be honest, a lot of time I played here, we
dreamed of having a new stadium. I mean, for years, we didn't have an indoor
batting cage. If it was raining before the game, we didn't get a warm-up. Your
first swing of the day was one that counted.

"And then there's that dugout. It's the worst. It's tiny and cramped and the
ceiling is so low, you can't see anything but third base."

Trammell got that hazy look.

"I can't tell you how many times guys forgot about how low the ceiling is, and
something would happen and they'd pop up to see and -- BAM! They'd bang their
head on the concrete. Especially big guys like Lance Parrish. Oh, man, that
happened all the time!"

Trammell, grinning, was looking off now. Wasn't that his former teammate,
rubbing his head, cursing out loud? Out there in the dugout? Did you see him?



Why we cry

Did you see Joe Louis on Monday afternoon? He was there, boxing in a makeshift
ring in the outfield, knocking out Bob Pastor, the way he did in 1939. Did you
see Jake LaMotta, winning the middleweight crown? Did you hear Billy Graham
preaching to the bleachers? Did you see the Lions' Chuck Hughes, lying on the
football field, dead of a heart attack he suffered during a 1971 game?

It wasn't just baseball within these walls. It was concerts, football games,
prize fights, high school championships, even a summer series called "Opera
Under the Stars."

But whatever took place here, it was ours. This city. This state. Find another
person from Michigan, from a town as far away from yours as you can get. Then
find the one place you've both been.

Even money it's Tiger Stadium.

Which is why, at 7:07 p.m. Monday, when the final game ended -- a Tigers
victory, which included the perfect parting shot, an eighth-inning, monster
grand slam hit off the rightfield roof by a rookie named Robert Fick, who
lives, curiously enough, in the same California town as Sparky Anderson --
when that was over, nobody left. Nobody moved. Flash bulbs popped. A small
cheer went up and then the fans seemed to pause and fall silent, the way you
do at an airport gate before letting your loved ones fly away.

Finally, the centerfield gates opened. And one by one, the players who made
history here came running out onto the field, squeezed into their old
uniforms, Tigers from the '80s, '70s, '60s, '50s, middle-age men playing boys
one more time.

Here came Mickey Lolich, chugging to the mound. Here came Dan Petry, waving
his cap. Here came Tom Brookens, Frank Tanana, Willie Horton, Gates Brown,
Elden Auker, all of them smiling, some of them crying.

It was like watching a rewind reel. And as they ran to their old positions and
the sky turned dark and the stirring music sang over the loudspeakers, the
crowd fell into a church-like reverence. It was so quiet, you knew what people
were doing.

They were remembering their own lives.

You ask why people cry when baseball stadiums close? This is why. Because some
of us found our childhoods inside them.

And some of us left them there.



A new beginning

Look, there were your children, tugging your arm, asking you questions, who is
that player, where is the mascot, when can we eat, where is the bathroom? They
are the ones you will take with you next year, to a new place, a new stadium
just a mile from this one. There, the walls will not be peeling, the pipes
will not be exposed, the sausage fumes will not be melted into the tiling and
the dugouts will not cause cranial injuries.

It will not be the same building, but it will be the same idea. You make your
memory, and you savor it for years to come. Baseball connects us that way.
Just as one day this winter, Sparky Anderson will be sitting on his back porch
in Thousand Oaks, Calif., sitting in one of two old wooden seats he owns as
souvenirs from Tiger Stadium. He will be thinking of the past.

And across town, the rookie, Fick, will be dreaming of the future.

History? The place is history. It is championship celebrations in 1935, 1945,
1968 and 1984. It is Ernie Harwell's voice over a car radio. It is Cobb,
Greenberg, Aguirre, Newhouser, Cash, McLain, Lolich, Gibson, Trammell,
Whitaker, Morris.

It is the rightfield porch, the flagpole in the middle of centerfield, the
girders that block your view, the home plate that was taken during Monday
night's ceremonies and transported to a new park for a new millennium.

It is Opening Days in snowstorms, and a closing day of 84 degrees. It is hot
dogs, beer, caramel corn, Cokes, pennants and peanuts, foul balls and
souvenirs. It is a house of fun, and a home of memories.

Some you couldn't forget if you tried.

"Hey, Lance," someone said, spotting former catcher Lance Parrish. "Trammell
was talking about the dugouts here. He said you have some special bruises."

Parrish grinned. He instinctively grabbed his head. "I banged into that
ceiling so many times, I have a permanent lump."

Don't we all?

There was your father, and there was your mother, holding your hand as you
walked through the tunnel and saw the dazzling green grass for the very first
time. Baseball in Detroit is done for this century. And so is the house in
which it was played. We take a new walk now, a mile down the street, and as we
glance one more time over our shoulders, at the corner of Michigan and
Trumbull, with a lump in our throats -- or on our heads -- we say good-bye.



MITCH ALBOM can be reached at 313-223-4581 or  albom@freepress.com. Listen to
Mitch's radio show, "Albom in the Afternoon," 3-6 p.m. weekdays on WJR-AM
(760).
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>
THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED ARTICLE.
</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
BASEBALL;TIGERS;TIGER STADIUM;CLOSING;SPT
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
