STEVEN D. GRANT, M.D. IS PLEASED TO INTRODUCE THE MEDIFAST PROGRAM out to the field after Labor Day, if I don't see anybody, if there isn't a game, it's a real letdown. It's a long drive back home." "Tabak?" says Goodman. "He's obsessed. He goes down to Florida each winter and plays ball down there." However, Goodman, now 50, knows the dream; he would have tried out for the Tigers after high school, but "I was never that good. I was too small — I was 5 feet 6 when I graduated high school, but in my second year of college, I grew six inches." With many of the Sunday morning bunch, it's a secret dream. `There's . always something hidden with these guys. They love it," says The ' Commish. "It's a kids' game, no ques- tion about it, but all they talk about is playing ball. "These are 'kids' who are 50 and 60 years old who don't want- to grow up. There's no talk about where they had dinner the night before — it's baseball, baseball, baseball." And they call it baseball even if, technically, they're playing softball. Harvey Saperstein, 55, a Goodman "regular" for many years, is so much a hardball fan, he's attended five of the last six Tiger Fantasy Camps, where a guy lives the dream by training under, and play- ing against, former Tiger stars. "I doubled off John Hiller two years ago. It went over Willie Horton, hit the wall," he says. A podiatrist, he plays baseball on Saturdays, softball on Sundays, even has his own picture — in a Tiger uniform — on his own trading card, which doubles as a businesscard. Competition_ "adds to the fun of it, creates interest," says Saperstein. "You're play- ing to win, and you get caught up in it. The old playground days come back to you:' In a recent doubleheader, Saperstein revisits those "old days." Made leadoff batter, he responds by blasting three doubles, a triple and three singles — 7 for 9 at the plate "and I'm not that fast on the bases." Of the rigors of weekend ball, Saperstein, a longtime tennis buff, says, "I'm still young enough, it doesn't af- fect me too much. "You lose a step here and there, you lose a little eye/hand coordination. But I'm going to play (softball and baseball) until I can't:' Goodman and the others get concerned if one of their number is late on a Sunday morning. They all remember only too well the fellow who was pitching one morning. He struck out the batter. His right arm shot straight up, then his left. They all thought he was celebrating the strikeout. He wasn't. His body stiffened and he keeled over backwards, dead of a massive heart attack, right there on the mound. Scene III: The ball diamonds in Farmington Hills and Farmington the same Sunday morning. Twelve. teams, over 180 players in all, go at it in two divisions of the Greater Detroit B'nai B'rith Softball League which "The Commis- sioner," Marty Melton, helped found 17 years ago and still directs and plays in. Granted, it's slow-pitch soft- ball — same as they play at Warner. It's easier to get hits and score runs. And there are rules that prohibit base- stealing and sliding, that per- mit base-overrunning and that prevent collisions at home plate (tag the plate, not the runner) to minimize chances of serious injury. But players still swing bats, run bases, stretch for wild throws and try to scoop up grounders. For many over age 35, the two seven-inning Sunday con- tests can mean some misery on Monday. But that doesn't stop them from coming back each weekend and each season. "It's the fun, the camaraderie of it," says Melton, 44. "We go out for breakfast afterward. A lot of the guys like the breakfast a lot better than the softball." Norm Michlin, 67, a longtime player and sup- porter of the B'nai B'rith League, is a catcher for the loop's Marshall/Detroit team and also plays in a senior league. In a recent double- header, he smacks four hits in seven trips to the plate for Marshall/Detroit. He doesn't mince words. "I certainly haven't lost the competitive urge. YOu can learn a lot about people when you see them in competition." Still the first one in the of- fice in the mornings, Michlin exercises regularly, plays volleyball and annually backpacks in Algonquin Park, Ontario. He says he's not sure which he enjoys more in softball, the com- petitiveness or the camaraderie. But the physical exertion doesn't bother him. "I haven't been sore since my younger days when I didn't loosen up before football. I don't feel my age. I hear others complain- ing that 'this aches and this SAFE AND EFFECTIVE MODIFIED FASTING SUPPLEMENT FOR RAPID AND CONTINUOUS WEIGHT REDUCTION COMPLETE MEDIFAST TEAM OF PHYSICIANS, NUTRITIONISTS, EXERCISE PHYSIOLOGISTS AND PSYCHOLOGISTS STEVEN. D. 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