DESIGNS IN DECORATOR WOOD & LAMINATES, LTD. sports No. 6 Shows No. 6 How It’s Done STEVE STEIN CONTRIBUTING WRITER F It Doesn't Have To Cost A Fortune… Only Look Like It! Complete kitchen and bathroom remodeling as well as furniture design and installations including granite, wood and other materials. Lois Haron Allied Member ASID 248.851.6989 000000 34 February 22 • 2018 jn or a brief moment, the tables were turned. Lyle Schaefer loved watching Al Kaline play for the Detroit Tigers when Schaefer was a young Tigers fan. Earlier this month in Lakeland, Fla., it was Kaline watching Schaefer on the baseball diamond. Schaefer, 59, was one of seven friends who participated in a Tigers fantasy camp at Tiger Town, the team’s spring training complex. He was in the on-deck circle, get- ting ready to hit in a game, when ex-Tigers pitcher Dave Rozema, one of the coaches of Schaefer’s team, let him know that Kaline had arrived in a golf cart and was watching the game. “I couldn’t believe it,” Schaefer said. “I said to myself, ‘Please don’t strike out.” He didn’t. Schaefer smacked a two- run single with the bases loaded. “That was the only time we saw Al at one of our games, and I was one of two batters he watched,” Schaefer said. “Unbelievable.” Schaefer wore No. 6 on his fantasy camp baseball uniform. He picked No. 6 because that was Kaline’s num- ber with the Tigers. Moments like the at-bat Schaefer will never forget made the week in Lakeland a great one for him even though the Southfield resident was still sore and black-and-blue two weeks after returning from the fan- tasy camp. Playing four doubleheaders in four days on big fields with 90-foot bases took its toll on the 98 campers. “It got the best of all of us,” Schaefer said. “By the end of the week, our legs were like rubber. We had nothing left. I play ball a lot. I thought I was in good shape.” Schaefer is indeed an active guy. When he’s not making a living as a real estate broker and property manager, the 1976 Oak Park High School graduate plays in three softball leagues including the Inter- Congregational Men’s Club Summer Softball League, competes in the B’nai B’rith golf league and bowls in the Brotherhood-Eddie Jacobson B’nai B’rith bowling league. He was on the Temple Israel No. 5 team that won the Greenberg Division championship last summer in the Inter-Congregational League. He’s been the individual cham- Rick Sherline, left, and Lyle Schaefer, right, share a laugh with ex-Detroit Tigers pitcher Dave Rozema. pion twice and individual runner-up twice in the five-year-old golf league. He’s bowled seven perfect 300 games and six 800 series in his career. In 2005, he competed for the U.S. bowling team at the Maccabiah Games in Israel. But the fantasy camp was tough. And that was fine. “We got to spend a week with our heroes. Have breakfast, lunch and dinner with them,” Schaefer said. “Each one of the ex-Tigers I spoke with was so nice. Guys like Juan Berenguer, Nate Robertson and John Hiller. I took batting practice with (pitcher) Mike Maroth.” When the week was done, Schaefer said, “I asked my friends if we wanted to come back in the first or second week of the camp next year.” Schaefer said he previously partic- ipated in a three-day weekend Tigers fantasy camp at Tiger Stadium in 1998, a year before the stadium closed. Last year, he and friends Rick Sherline of West Bloomfield and Norm Cohen of Huntington Woods decided to attend the 2018 Tigers fantasy camp in Lakeland, which cel- ebrated the 50th anniversary of the 1968 World Series champs, and four other friends joined them. “We know Jerry Lewis, who runs the fantasy camp. We see him occa- sionally. We said, ‘Now is the time to do this,’” Schaefer said. “Sports has given me so many wonderful life experiences.” • Send sports news to stevestein502004@ yahoo.com.