<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9502030249
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
951026
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, October 26, 1995
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1995, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
COLD-WEATHER KID AVERY BURNS CLEVELAND HOPES
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
CLEVELAND --  He was a cold weather kid throwing a cold weather ball, and
this was just fine with him, he liked it, it reminded him of the days back in
Michigan when his high school team would play  in the snow. How could there
ever have been a question about using Steve Avery in this World Series? Under
a black Midwestern sky? The wind whipping off Lake Erie? The autumn chill
nipping at the earlobes  and leaving them numb?

  Why, he was born to a night like this.

  And he lived up to it. Avery, the downriver kid out of John F. Kennedy High
School in Taylor, lit the floodlights Wednesday night  in Game 4 of the World
Series. He pitched out of trouble in the early innings, and he pitched into
glory in the middle, striking out the fiery Kenny Lofton on a hard inside
pitch, and striking out the  brutish Albert Belle with a ball so well- placed,
all Belle could do was look at it and walk away. You could blow smoke on this
night. Or you could throw it.
  Avery threw it -- at least often enough  to get his team onto safe ground.
He knew when he took the mound Wednesday that he had to last awhile, he had to
last until the seventh inning, because the bullpen was weary from the night
before, the longest World Series night game ever. This is not an easy task
against the likes of Lofton, Belle, Baerga and Murray.
  Never mind that. And never mind that Avery hadn't thrown a pitch that
counted in 10 days. And never mind that there was doubt as to whether he
should start. Never mind. He was a good soldier, and he did his duty. He
blanked the best batting order in baseball for five innings,  made one
mistake, a solo home run to Belle, then put them down again. 
  Six innings, one run, three strikeouts. When Avery sat down to start the
seventh inning, Bobby Cox, the manager, and Leo Mazzone,  the pitching coach,
told him, "That's it. You've done enough."
  And Steve Avery pulled on his jacket, dug his hands into the pockets  and
waited to see if history would give him credit.
  The game  was tied, 1-1. If the Braves did not score in this frame, someone
else would get the decision. Avery would simply be the pitcher who started the
game. That was nice, but not what he wanted, at least  not deep down. He had
started World Series games before.
  Remember 1991? Avery pitched twice against the Minnesota Twins, in Games 3
and 6, but didn't get a decision. The following year, when his  Braves faced
the Toronto Blue Jays, he again started Games 3 and 6, and again, came out
without a victory. In that last Game 6 appearance, the Braves had looked to
him to keep their season alive. Avery  couldn't do it. He lasted only four
innings. By the end of the night, the Blue Jays were celebrating the first
world championship outside American borders. 
  Avery got on the plane and went home.
  So it had been a long wait for this chilly night. And it didn' help that
the Braves weren't sure they wanted to use him. He had not had a great regular
season. When the Braves got into the postseason,  there were a lot of people
thinking Steve Avery should only come out of the bullpen.
  Ah, but they were forgetting something. This is the season for Michigan
kids. The turning leaves, the graying  skies, the sniffing, the pumpkins, the
overcoats. This is when we kick into gear.
  And so Avery did. He did some relief pitching in the first round, and in
the league championship series he started  the clinching game, and he didn't
give up a run. He shut out the Cincinnati Reds, and he joined the pile of
happy teammates when the game was over.
  They were going back to the World Series.
  Avery  was getting another chance.
  So now he sat, in the chilly dugout at Jacobs Field, and he watched the
seventh inning unfold. He watched Marquis Grissom scratch a walk off Ken Hill,
and he was thinking,  "That's good, because Grissom can run." 
  And a few moments later, Grissom was running, all right, because Luis
Polonia had whacked a ball into the gap. Here came Grissom, around third, and
it wasn't  close, he was safe. He carried the lead across home plate and into
the arms of his teammates, including a particularly happy, young-faced pitcher
from Taylor.
  Understand something. When you are as  good as Steve Avery or John Smoltz
or Greg Maddux or Tom Glavine -- this dream team of a pitching staff -- you
are already rich and you are already recognized. There is only one thing left.
  A championship.
  The Atlanta Braves are within a victory of that now. They are there because
they hit the ball Wednesday night, yes, but they are mostly there because they
kept the mighty Indians from hitting it. And  as they gathered at the pitching
mound to slap each others' backs, the words that had never before been uttered
in a World Series game blasted over the loudspeakers: "WINNING PITCHER, AVERY
. . ."
  The cold weather kid gave a smile, and he and his warm weather teammates
went off into the Midwestern night, wondering if finally, this could be the
end of the rainbow.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
WORLD SERIES; STEVE AVERY
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
