The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - October 2, 1989 - Page 3 Richard Eisen ax: gmexall1lallolFar Bo6fee . F ler The former Clevland Indians pitcher lets people know exactly how he feels With the baseball's regular season concluding yesterday, we felt it would be timely to find out what one of the game's greats thought of this eventful baseball year. Daily Sports Editor Mike Gill turns to former Clevland Indian great and Hall-of-Famer, Bob Feller, for his observations. Feller was selected as baseball's greatest living right-handed pitcher in 1969 as part of the sport's centennial. Feller teamed with Bob Lemon and Herb Score to form possibly the toughest pitching staff ever. Daily: May I ask you a few questions? Feller: Not necessarily so.... Hell, I get calls from you kinds of people all the time. How much time do ya need? D: Ten minutes. F: You got five and I'm watching the clock. D:With all that has happened to Pete Rose, does he deserve entry into the Hall of Fame? F: You can scrub that question. As far as I'm concerned, only time will tell, like it does with anything else in life. Only time will tell. That's the best answer I can give you. D: What is your opinion though? F: I told you, that's it. D: Okay. Well, as far as the baseball season's concerned, what ever happened to the Cleveland Indians and what do they have to do to turn it around? F: Well, they need a stronger bench. They * have to have fewer people on the 21-day disabled list. That's the main thing. The catching, shall we say, has been average. 'Baseball never missed Pete Rose. They got along without Babe Ruth, Judge Landis, Abner Doubleday - they'll never miss him....Christ, we got along without George Washington and everybody else.' The weak bench, too many pitchers came down with bad arms or problems, the hitting was streaky, and didn't have any consecutive hitters - in other words they'd get nine hits, but they'd be in all different innings. That's the main thing. It's a combination of a streakiness, and the inability to hold a lead. D: Are you surprised the Detroit Tigers had such a downfall this year? F: I was very surprised. And I was very surprised that Sparky Anderson couldn't take the facts of losing. I'm very surprised. D: Do you believe Anderson left because of exhaustion or did he just want time off from the losing? F: I don't know because I don't know that much about it; if it was exhaustion or what he was doing, but he probably took it all too serious. After all, it's only a game. I mean, * everyone works hard at it, but he never said no to 4l these social engagements and extra-curricular activities, which is hard to do sometimes, but you have to do it. First thing you know, your extra-curricular activities are going to be superseding your business that you are supposed to be taking care of. That happens to ballplayers and professional people from all walks of life. You can get all in- volved in charities and front-runners and free load- ers. You have to be able to say no and mean it. D: When you were in your heyday, was this a problem or has this just recently become a problem? F: Oh, it's all about the same. You have to get rid of the freeloaders. A lot of times, the ones you consider your best friends are your worst enemies. They want to be seen with you and they want to take you around to exploit you. They are still pretty good friends with you but they kinda like to be seen and bask in the glory of someone in public life. It goes on all the time in all sports and all businesses. Everyone wants to be a frontrunner. D: How were you able to distinguish who were sincerely your friends and who were trying to use you? F: Well, if you have a decent background, brought up by parents, they teach you that when you were a kid. You have to make that decision yourself. It's not all that tough - knowing human nature. It's not all that tough. It really isn't that hard. But some are pretty persistent and all you have to do is be firm. To be a loner is not a bad idea. Most all great people of all walks of life were successful are loners basically. They have to have their own private time. You have to have your own private time to organize plan and think and to put your act together. You can't be around with all these people who are frontrunners. You see around the college campus anybody - the football heroes and all this, that's the problem. It's in all sports and in all business. You've got to make up your mind that you're going to be a loner part of the time and have your own private time and stick to it and don't waver. D: On a ballclub, how many would be loners compared to those who would hang with a crowd? F: I don't know different percentages. I wouldn't know what it is. Most all the young guys go through a period of time where they have to sort out the free loaders and ne'er-do- wells, and promoters and so forth. They get too involved in signing autographs in department stores or at card shows. Off-season, it's okay. I don't have any idea what the percentage would be. Too big a percentage, incidentally. More than it should be. D: Returning to this year's baseball season, do you have any doubts that baseball can or has recovered from a very tough year with Pete Rose, Wade Boggs, Steve Garvey, the death of the... F: Baseball never missed Pete Rose. They got along without Babe Ruth, Judge Landis, Ab- ner Doubleday - they'll never miss him. Sad but true. That's the way it is. Christ, we got along without George Washington and everybody else. The worst thing that happened was that the commissioner died. He was a great man, not only for baseball, but for the United States of America. He was a great man. When I talked to him at Cooperstown and visited with him - I gave a talk at the Hall of Fame - he asked me to speak. I told himthen that he would dothe right thing. I still think he did. Completely correct. Completely right. D: I heard him speak at Michigan. He had complete control of the language and was very interesting. F: He was very intelligent and I think he would have probably been the best commissioner baseball has ever had including Landis. D: Just because of his feelings for the game, or because he put his foot down on Pete Rose? F: Feelings for the game, nothing to do with Pete Rose. But he showed guts. D: They say the new commissioner (Fay Vincent) is supposed to follow in Giammatti's footsteps. F: I think the new commissioner is going to be as good a man. Nobody's gonna duplicate Giammatti. The new commissioner, knowing him as I do, will do an excellent job. D: Do you expect in future years they will look at the gambling rule and change it, since you can be a drug addict and not be kicked out? F: I would hope not. I would hope not. Because of the decline of morals all across the world, it's possible. It's not a good thing. I would hope not. D: Well then, on the other hand, would you wish they made the drug rule stricter? F: I would like to see them give them at least one chance to make a comeback. If not, when the employee's best interest becomes more important to the boss or the people in charge become more important to them than the individual, the employee, then it's time to shake hands and part company. I think that goes in most any business. Give them one chance. D: What's the biggest change in the game you've seen since you retired? F: The media, show business. It's stayed about the same between the white lines - with a lot of exceptions, but not that many. The numbers are getting to be a big joke, like guys stealing bases when they are down by ten or ten ahead with two outs in the ninth. You're running up numbers. Statistics are highly overdone but they are even worse in Japan than they are here. I coached over there one year and they had more crazy statistics there that mean absolutely nothing - except it fills up a lot of books. D: How do you keep busy lately? F: I just came back from London. We played an exhibition game over there with some major league baseball players' alumni group. We played over there and I pitched an inning in Manchester. We played the British Olympic team. It was the 25th of September. D: What's your opinion of the new senior league that is starting up in Florida? F: A lot of the guys on this trip will be there. I think it will be a lot of fun and be great for autograph hounds. I think there will be some successful teams and some not so successful teams. I'm glad to see it work. I hope some of my friends make some money on it. It'll give them the opportunity to play ball for a few more years and make some money. A lot of them can use it. But what do you do when it's over - go home. It's not really a big deal unless they get some TV money. I think it will go for a year or two maybe, but I don't expect it to be a permanent venture. D: You see it as a novelty venture? F: I think so. I may be 100 percent wrong, I've been wrong many times before. I would say it might work for a while, I hope it does for the benefit of the fellas who are participating in it and for their vestures. D: With the saturation of major league talent, will there ever be a day with a pitching staff comparable to the one's you pitched on in Cleveland? F: There aren't many good arms around any more, that's the problem. There aren't that many good arms and there's a lot of overmanaging in cases. A lot of managers are overmanaging. It's because they have a lot of mediocre players, 'You have to get rid of the freeloaders. A lot of times, the ones you consider your best friends are your worst enemies. They want to be seen with you and they want to take you around to exploit you., journeyman players. You don't have any outstanding set lineups like you used to have. When you've got so many journeymen, you throw all the names up in the air and the nine that hit the deck first, that's your nine for the day. You used to have the great ballclubs over in Detroit and New York, and Cleveland and everywhere. They had pretty much a set lineup. Not so much anymore because so many players are about the same - not the same, should I say. Journeyman. D: Where have you seen the greatest examples of overmanaging?. F: I wouldn't specifically say in any particu- lar town where it happened. I've seen it happen from time to time and not any specific ballclub. And if I did, I wouldn't tell you anyway. Making too many moves, too early in the game. It's because they are frustrated, the managers. D: Do you go along with all the righty, lefty pitching changes - and pinch-hitting for that reason, or should the best man play? F: As far as changing pitchers in the eighth or ninth inning it's probably a pretty good political thing for the managers because if they've got an outstanding relief pitcher and they leave the starting pitcher in there and they lose the game - he's likely to get fired by the owner or general manager because it's his responsibil- ity. But if their hot-shot, high-paid relief pitcher in there and he loses the game, he takes the baby off his lap and puts it on his relief pitcher's knuckle lap. Then it's the relief pitcher's loss, not the manager's. Do you see what I mean? D: Sure. Was that the way it was done in your day? F: Hell, no. Nope. I've pitched more complete games in 1946 than anyone since 1914. D: What was the highlight of your career? F: Highlight? That's very difficult. Probably my first start in Cleveland when I struck out - when I was the youngest pitcher to ever start a game, win a game, and complete a game. Struck out 15. Won the ballgame 4-1. Six hits. That was back in 1936. That is what got me going. I had a lot of high points and a few low ones. When I returned from the service I beat Newhouser right here in Cleveland before a full house - or not a full house, but 49,000. And I went ahead and next, first start in Yankee Stadium I pitched a no-hitter against the Yankees. First one pitched at Yankee Stadium. Now, I've talked to you long enough, I have to go. NFL rulers ruin Rozelle's retirement When most people retire, they get a gold watch, a fa'ewell party, a pat on the back. Who knows? Maybe a McDonald's Gift Certificate, if the company's in a giving mood. But all National Football League commissioner Pete Rozelle gets for his retirement is the shaft. Rozelle, who brought the league from small time success to a multi-billion dollar industry, announced his retirement last March. The owners still haven't chosen a successor. And Rozelle must sit and wait. Just 10 days after A. Bartlett Giammati passed away, Major League Baseball owners chose Fay Vincent as his successor. Football's owners, however, keep futzing around, leaving Rozelle hanging in the breeze. While Rozelle waits to break out his fishing tackle and rod, the owners bicker over the procedure of finding a replacement. The least the owners could do is give him a quick and painless retirement. But, oh no. To think that football's owners could do something decent happens to be out of the question. NFL football owners, a group of millionaires that, like Peter Pan, never want to grow up, use their teams to establish their own self- importance. Without the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, who the hell would have ever heard of Hugh Culverhouse? The same goes for the Giants' Wellington Mara. What type of name is Wellington anyway? So the egotistical owners walk around with an arrogant strut and use the chance of naming Rozelle's successor as a vile grasp for attention. And they seem to enjoy it. IN JUNE, New Orleans general manager Jim Finks seemed the simple choice as Rozelle's replacement. But the owners shocked the football world by rejecting his nomination because of the way the selection was done. If they had rejected Finks because of his qualifications, that's fine. But the self-inflated owners nixed Finks, balking on procedure. Angered that the "old-guard" owners who headed the search committee offered only Finks as an alternative, 11 "insurgent" new owners blocked Finks' nomination. How rude. While the owners bicker over who brought up Finks' name, Rozelle pines for retirement. Who do these owners think they are? It's just football, not SALT II treaty negotiations. Let's name somebody and get on with the season. Let Rozelle get on with his life. Instead, these rich fat cats sit on their mighty thrones negotiating on terms of what's best for them, not for the league or Rozelle. Backstabbing and bickering marred the June meeting in Chicago. The "insurgent" group included a former "old-guard" minuteman, Detroit Lions owner/cheapskate William Clay Ford. Why the NFL would listen to a guy who can't manage his own team, we'll never know. "I just thought this was crazy. Here you had a committee that supposedly interviewed - I can'te r ah u r remember what the number was - it was a staggering amount of candidates," said Ford, who obviously had his facts straight. "And then they make a selection. Fine. Why not tell us beforehand so we can digest it and have some questions. "BA'' "But no, they're going to spring it on us inta meeting. I just didn't ' like it. I thought it was a lousy ° process. I thought the dissidents, or whatever you call them, had a point." R And so all the dissidents, or whatever you call them, took their toys and ran home, never to play Fo rd with the old-guard again..Shape up! Ford shows just how grossly arrogant and egotistical he really is when he actually stated that he supports Finks now and planned to vote yes on him back at that fateful, childish reeting in June. "Jim Finks happened to be pry candidate. I didn't like how (the search committee) got there," Ford said. "I'm not going to sit there blindly and vote yes." What an idiot. Ford should worry about the cricket noises echoing the Silverdome during Lions' home games rather than this ego. He should be more considerate towards Rozelle and swallow his pride. But every owner has compassion, even Ford, who realizes the importance of finding a new commissioner quickly. "You've got a lame duck sitting there who's been trying to get out since March," Ford said, making Rozelle sound like a rat trapped in a maze. How perceptive. Maybe Ford also woke up one day and smelled the coffee that his team has stunk for the past three decades. THE OWNERS have a chance to redeem themselves, if that's at all possible, with a meeting set for next week. "They say it's to select (a candidate) but I can't believe the actual vote will be taken," Ford said, obviously preparing himself for another ego trip. "I do think the selection meeting will follow up pretty closely. I think it will be 10 -days to two weeks." Well, Pete, you're just going to have to wait. There's still a lot more limelight for the owners to steal. It's obvious Ford and the other owners haven't learned from June's mistakes. These "insurgent" owners, dissidents, whatever you call them, have some nerve. They just don't seem to care that Rozelle represents football's past. He built the league from which they are profiting and they don't seem to appreciate that. Taking this into account, it's not surprising that redneck/Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones happens to be a dissident. After buying "America's Team", he coldly booted coach Tom Landry and general manager Tex Schramm out of office. Thanks for the memories and tradition. Don't forget to write. Like some Duke of Hazzard that had a little too much moonshine, Jones boorishly suggested that the Dallas Cheerleaders wear skimpier outfits and consort more with the players. After the cheerleaders balked, Jones recanted his request. "I understand a little bit where (Boss Hogg Jones and hair spray drenched coach Jimmy Johnson) comes from," Landry said. "The new ownership, the new coach, they came into an-exciting situation for them. They just didn't think about people, they just thought about the opportunity." Steelers demolish hapless, winless Lions PONTIAC, MI (AP) - Rodney was rusty, Bubby was better and the result was predictable. Bubby Brister and the Pittsburgh 1 defense spoiled Rodney Peete's NFL it together." Rodney Carter scored on a 1-yard run and Ray Wallace on a 2-yard run for Pittsburgh. The Steelers' defense, which a exhibition or a regular-season game with their new run-and-shoot offense, are 0-4. "We played just lousy," Detroit coach Wayne Fontes said. "We didn't possession 38 minutes, 50 seconds. Peete, a sixth-round draft pick out of Southern Cal, where he was runner-up in the Heisman Trophy balloting to Barry Sanders,