<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9810260215
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
981026
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, October 26, 1998
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT; SPORTS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1C
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1998, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
HAVE YOU SEEN ENOUGH? MAYBE BARRY HAS, TOO
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
Ididn't think it was possible. But all the years of losing, embarrassment,
and one step forward/two steps back, have finally gotten to the most
even-keeled football player I have ever known: Barry Sanders.
  
"I just show up here to work," Sanders sighed Sunday, after the Lions' fifth
loss in seven games, a penalty-plagued affair that left fans booing, coaches
shaking their heads, and Sanders, the best running back in football, as close
to a tirade as he will ever get.

"The guys they chose to put out there are my teammates. I don't make the
decisions on things like that. I'd love to have that control, that would be
great. But I don't. I just show up and play with the guys they put out there.
  
"But it doesn't matter who you have out there if you're going to make
elementary mistakes like we did today.... We made errors today, God, you don't
see them in junior high or Pop Warner."
  
He sighed. "I can't explain it."
  
Congratulations, Barry. You are officially a Lions fan.
  
The problem is, he is also the Lions' best player. And when your best player
is feeling this way, like he can't do anything about it but just punch in and
punch out, then there is something seriously wrong.
  
Sanders had every right to be ticked off. The Lions played a strong first half
against the undefeated Vikings, went into halftime leading, 13-10, and then,
to quote Barry, "took the second half off."
  
How they could do this in front of a raucous, sellout crowd, in a game they
had to win, is beyond me. But it happened Sunday, as it has many times before.
Suddenly, the offense, which had outperformed the Vikings in the first 30
minutes, fizzled out like disco. Pick a category: first downs, passing yards,
third-down conversions. Detroit went backwards in every one.
  
Meanwhile, the defense, which had done a nice job on the Vikings' explosive
attack in the first half, couldn't find a shield in the second. It gave up 17
points in the third quarter -- thanks partly to a 59-yard pass-interference
penalty on Bryant Westbrook.
  
In fact, the only thing the Lions did as well in the second half as they did
in the first was penalties. They finished with 14 yellow flags, seven in the
first half, seven in the second.
  
So there's some consistency here.
  

  
Batch runs into rookie troubles
  
There's also this: Every time the Lions win one, they lose the next. Next
Sunday marks the halfway point of the season, and the Lions' longest winning
streak so far is one game. They are already in "must-win" mode. By that I
don't mean they "must win" Sunday. I mean they "must win" November and
December.
  
No wonder Barry is upset.
  
"I felt like I was very close to breaking something big," Sanders said, after
racking up 127 yards rushing and 51 receiving. "I felt if we had continued
with the running game, good things would have happened."
  
Unfortunately, the offense was sputtering with rookie quarterback Charlie
Batch at the helm. Batch experienced what he was due to experience, a dead
patch, a bad stretch, some ill-advised decisions, some busted plays. He began
the second half with two sacks, and it pretty much went downhill from there.
  
The final indignity came when he whipped a pass to Herman Moore, only to see
it stolen by Minnesota cornerback Jimmy Hitchcock and returned 79 yards for a
touchdown. Batch tried to chase him -- and ran smack into the massive arms of
Vikings lineman John Randle, who wrapped him up gently and shook his head, as
if to say, "Don't bother, kid, this one's history."
  
So, too, is the mini-euphoria that existed after the Lions' win over Green
Bay. A lot was made of that prime-time performance. Fans should know better
now. Beating the Packers is nice, but it doesn't mean what it did two years
ago. The Vikings are the best team in the Central Division, maybe in the NFC.
They are 7-0 and haven't scored fewer than 29 points in a game this year.
  
You want to measure yourself, you measure against purple now, not green.
  
None of which will make Detroit football watchers happy. Lions fans -- as well
as players like Sanders -- have been here long enough to remember when the
Vikings were mediocre, then good, then bad, then mediocre, and now, for the
moment, great. The Vikes are doing it with a coach who was almost fired
(Dennis Green), a quarterback who was out of football (Randall Cunningham) and
a receiver who was passed up by 20 teams in the draft, including the Lions
(Randy Moss).
  
Meanwhile, the Lions, with a new coach and quarterback, are 2-5. That is not a
"feel-good" number.
  

  
It might be over by Turkey Day
  
Nor is an upset Sanders a feel-good sign. Folks here live in fear of the day
Sanders says, "I've had it." And while it is Barry's habit to downplay
controversy and even to take back things that were said after a game,
nevertheless, I have not heard him say "I just work here" before. It is a bad
sign. It is a sign that at age 30, he may sense there is no land on this
ship's horizon.
  
"Minnesota looks like a really complete team to me," he said. "Could we be a
more complete team? I guess that's one argument. But it doesn't matter when
you make errors like we did today."
  
"How disappointing is this?" a reporter asked.
  
"How disappointing? I don't know. We have what, 11 games left?"
  
He stopped and counted in his head. "No, nine games left. We have nine games
left. I don't know. Maybe by Thanksgiving, this one won't be so
disappointing."
  
Then again, maybe by Thanksgiving, no one will be paying attention.
  
To leave a message for Mitch Albom, call 1-313-223-4581.
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<DISCLAIMER>
THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED ARTICLE.
</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN;DETROIT LIONS;FOOTBALL;BARRY SANDERS
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
