12B - The Michigan Daily - SportsMonday - September 27, 1999 Waning days at The Corner _ Tiger legends return to field Former Tiger catcher, and cur- rent coach Lance Parrish catches the ceremonial first pitch thrown by current hitting coach Alan Trammell before yesterday's game. Trammell and Parrish were both members of the 1984 world championship team. SARA SCHENCK/Daily Time Team was announced yesterday in a pregame ceremony at The Corner. Living members from left to right are George Kell, Al Kaline, Bill Freehan, Mickey Lolich, John Hiller, Jack Morris, Alan Trammell and Kirk Gibson. They'll take the field at their old positions during a postgame cere- mony this evening, after the last game-ever at Tiger Stadium. SARA SCHENC/taily IN Melancholy fans rema By Jacob Wheeler Daily Sports Writer DETROIT - Baseball immortal Kirk Gibson stood in the red dirt behind home plate at Tiger Stadium yesterday, toeing the ground where he's walked many times before slug- ging a ball into the seats. Yet the retired outfielder, whose gritty style of play epitomized the city in which he began and finished his career, wore tan, shiny loafers and a sports coat - looking more like he was attending a funeral than a base- ball game. There was talk of death in the fam- ily over the weekend at the corner of Michigan and Trumbull, and the mourners showed up in the thousands to say goodbye to a staple figure in their lives. The Tigers will abandon their beloved park after the season's last home game this afternoon. "Sparky used to tell us, 'The Babe is buried, but baseball lives on," said Gibson, referring to longtime manag- er Sparky Anderson - the last skip- per to guide Detroit to a World Series title. Nostalgia was in the air as some of the greatest Tigers in history were named to the All-Time Team before the game. There was Gibson, Jack Morris and Alan Trammell: house- hold names on the 1984 champi- onship team. There was Al Kaline, Bill Freehan and Mickey Lolich from the 1968 championship team. Relatives of Hank Greenberg, Charlie Gehrtinger, Hal Newhouser and even the infa- mous Ty Cobb - the man who once screamed racial slurs at baby-faced Babe Ruth from an opposing dugout - showed up to honor their names on in quiet Or worse, loyal fans could set off rockets or burn something in a pagan ritual to commemorate the last days at Tiger Stadium. Somebody could be hurt. After all, this is the city that held a mini riot after its ball team won its last World Series in 1984 - and the Tigers haven't smelled the sweetness of late October since then. That's why the Detroit police force has added a plethora of officers to patrol Tiger Stadium during the last series, which ends today. The ritual which has been practiced every day since Friday includes officers running out to the foul lines between innings and scanning the seats for conniving fans. The security efforts turn chivalric immediately after the game however. Ten mounted police ride out on giant horses and stand in the outfield grass only five feet away from the bleacher seats, staring down any rowdy fans with ill-intentions. Over on the infield, grounds crew workers retrieve home plate and the three bases as quickly as possible after the last pitch is thrown. But Detroit police haven't had any- thing to worry about yet. Young fans in the bleachers showed no intentions of charging the field over the weekend. A few merely tried to reach over the rail- ing and pet the horses, and a few sitting by the foul lines reached over the wall with plastic cups to scrape up some pre- cious Tiger Stadium dirt. Nothing more. the all-century lineup card. Tiger players in today's ballpark finale will wear the All-Time Team's jersey numbers, according to their positions in the field. Today's game, scheduled for 4:05 p.m., will hinge upon strikes, balls and outs. Like any other summer day, managers will call for stolen bases and sacrifice bunts to push runners into scoring position. But in the course of roughly three hours, those players, executives and fans who pay homage to this ancient ballpark will reflect on entire lifetimes of compos- ite summer afternoons. It will inevitably bring some to tears. "We have nostalgic feelings," said Hall of Fame announcer Ernie Harwell, who's described nearly every play to many devoted Tigers fans with his soothing, grandfather-like voice. "I've spent more time at this park than I have at home. But you have to go on with your job. "As fans, we're going to miss the feeling of being right down by the players. The number one characteris- tic at Tiger Stadium is the double decks all the way around the park." But Harwell, who has been in the broadcasting business since 1948, is excited about the move to Comerica Park next year. "I like these new stadiums," he said, referring to similar new models in Texas, Baltimore and Cleveland. "They're throwbacks to the old era with limited seating capacity, not 'cookie-cutters' like the stadiums in Cincinnati, Pittsburgh and St. Louis." The current Tigers team also is enthusiastic about moving to the new ballpark, and it has played like it the past two days. With a 6-1 victory yesterday and a 11-3 shelling of Kansas City on Saturday, the Tigers have looked like an inspired team playing in the heart of the pennant race - not the dismal team that lost 91 games and has nar- rowly avoided the American League Central Division's cellar this year. "The atmosphere is (like 1984)," said manager Larry Parrish. "It means a lot to play well here this week with all the fans." The approaching demise of Tige@. Stadium has drawn more than 41,000 fans in each of the last two games - an incredible contrast to earlier in the season when the team played poorly and fans saw little reason to visit the ancient shrine. "The biggest thing for us is having people in the stands and consequently we've been playing some pretty decent baseball," said Tony Clark, the team's power-hitting first baseman* "That's something we don't have a lot because of how the ball's been bounc- ing for us." The Tigers outslugged and out- pitched the Royals the past two days, behind home runs from Brad Ausmus and Juan Encarnacion and a quality start by C.J. Nitkowski on Saturday; and three homers to go with Dave Borkowski's gem on Sunday. But they also hustled on every play even when the games were all but pu0 away. When Dean Palmer climbed onto the Tigers dugout and dived into the stands after a foul ball, in the eighth inning on Saturday, he wasn't trying to catapult the Tigers into the playoffs. He was paying homage to the kind of baseball that blue-collar Detroit has relished for decades. More than 41,000 fans per. game packed Tiger Stadium this weekend as the Tigers beat Kansas City 11-3 on Satuday and 6-1 on Sunday. The Detroit police department has added plenty of extra security for the last series here. Yet the large crowds have been very cooperative, rarely raising their voices above a murmur. SARA S5CHECK/Datly t YEK iU4%B V THE LAST GAME sm oothe T me Fruit and ice and 1 Everything Nice That's 1 What Smoothies are made o 1~ 1 All Smoothies Expires 10/25/99 1 We now serve 1 1 Colombo r 1 Frozen Yogurt 1 522 E. William : (Next to Cotta e Inn) Buies 0or By Jacob Wheeler An occasional Tigers home run - Daily Sports Writer the fan candy of baseball -jump-start- DETROIT -Though their mascot is ed the crowd twice on Saturday and known for its roar, Tiger baseball fans three times on Sunday. But other sup- were rarely audible in more than a port of the hometown team was spo- whimper this weekend at Tiger radic. Many rally-killing double plays Stadium, though these are precious last and strikeouts induced by Tigers pitch- days to root for ing went unnoticed in the blue seats. the team in the BASEBALL Only the awkward waves moving old ballpark. around the stadium seemed to generate It seemed Commentary total fan interest, even though waves are only fitting that"------------------usually reserved for football or basket- 1 the public address system played ball games - not baseball. Motown's "Goodnight sweet heart, well Case in point was the atmosphere in it's time to go" as people filed quietly the bleachers - a hostile place to take out of the stadium after this weekend's small children in some ballparks (see games - the second- and third-to-last Yankee Stadium or Wrigley Field). Yet 1 baseball games ever at the Corner. in Tiger Stadium the bleachers resem- Attendance has soared above 41,000 bled a family picnic, where parents 1 per game for this weekend's series brought their tykes to see the 88-year 1 against the Royals - a number large old ballpark for one last time. 1 enough to make noise in most baseball And for some, the day at the ballpark 1 towns. But it's been so long since was less like witnessing a sporting Detroit has seen a good baseball team event and more like a "chill" concert, as that fans have forgotten how to influ- the scent of marijuana drifted through ence the game with their noise. the right-centerfield bleachers on Saturday afternoon. Yet Detroit police chief Benny Napoleon has good reason to be afraid of Tiger Stadium's last stand turning ugly. There are plenty of fans in the Metro-Detroit area who wouldn't mind stealing the last home plate ever used here, and hanging it on their wall. All it would take would be a few drinks for courage, a hop over the outfield fence, e a 100 yard sprint to the infield and dodging a few security guards. nrth America I Europe and N V 1 s. 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