TERRELLLITTLE DISTURBS COOL HAND WALT

by | Nov 21, 2008 | Detroit Free Press | 0 comments

The first time I ever saw Walt Terrell, he was sitting in front of his locker, holding a beer. He looked very content, and I did not disturb him.

The second time I saw Walt Terrell, he was in the same position. I did not disturb him.

The next 92 times I saw Walt Terrell he was in the same position — except sometimes the beer was a cigaret or a chicken wing — until finally, I came to

believe that if the clubhouse suddenly exploded into a huge ball of fire, Walt Terrell would lean over and go, “Hey. Did you hear something?”

Take a pencil and draw a line and you have just charted Terrell’s emotional swings between starts. Which is why I did not expect many jitters just because he pitches today opposite baseball’s hottest ace — Boston’s Roger Clemens — in the Tigers’ most important series yet this season.

I mean, come on. Give us something big.

“There are only three pitchers I ever got psyched up for,” Terrell said, when asked the question. “Nolan Ryan, Tom Seaver and Jim Palmer. They were my idols.”

“And Clemens?” I said.

He leaned back in a familiar pose. “I don’t remember watching him when I grew up.” Now before Clemens reads this and takes umbrage — What is umbrage anyhow? Where do you take it? — he should know what happens when Terrell faces his heroes.

The first time Terrell went moundo-a-moundo against Ryan, he was too shy to even say hello before the game. He was afraid Ryan would snub him. He was afraid Ryan would consider him too . . . forward.

So he took the mound and outpitched him.

Then, a few days later, he sent a message through a fellow player: “Nolan
— can I have an autographed picture, please?”

And Nolan obliged.

He asked the same thing of Seaver when they were teammates on the Mets — although it took him all season to get up the nerve. Seaver wrote, “From a good old right-hander to a good young right-hander, (signed) Tom Seaver.”

Yet when the two men finally squared off last year (Seaver for the White Sox, Terrell for the Tigers), Terrell won again.

“He wished me luck before the game,” Terrell said. “Then I kicked his a–.”

He was smiling when he said that, Tom. Jim Palmer was in Jockey shorts before Terrell could catch him with his pants down. “But I hope to get him in a softball league somewhere,” he said.

So Clemens might be thankful Terrell doesn’t gasp when he goes by. Not that Terrell is the gasping type. Or even the sighing type. He is pretty much the keep-breathing type.

Put it this way. If you were playing cards with the Tigers, and you decided to suddenly postulate on the long-term effects of the Japanese industrial boom, Terrell would be the one to say, “Hey. Shut up and deal.”

And you would. His fellow Tigers like him for this. His manager, Sparky Anderson, likes him for it (although Sparky keeps calling him “Walter,” which seems more a name for butlers or news anchors.) He is steady and unflappable — the kind you will joke with but never dare cross. And while Jack Morris commands the big spotlight in Detroit, Terrell has been consistently good for two years — 15-10 last season, 10-8 so far this season — and virtually kept the Tigers afloat during their otherwise dismal spring this year.

So neatly does he fit here, as if air-brushed into his Tigers uniform, that many outsiders figure he was part of the 1984 team that won it all. He wasn’t.

He arrived in 1985, and is still waiting for that first big league championship.

“I could get excited over that,” he said. “I mean, I wouldn’t jump up and down or anything. . . . ” Until then, his Thrills Club of opposing pitchers stops at three — regardless of who Boston sends up there today, tomorrow, next week, or next month.

Unless they get ahold of Palmer.

Perhaps the former Orioles ace would read this, I said, and send Terrell a signed photo to complete his collection.

“That would be nice,” he said, smiling. “Just make sure he’s not in his Jockeys.”

I said I’d do my best, and left to visit the Red Sox clubhouse. On my way out, I looked over my shoulder. And there, as usual, was Walt Terrell, cigaret in his lips, sitting in front of his locker like a rock.

So, Roger Clemens, with all due respect, you still have a ways to go before at least one Tiger spills his beer over you.

Unless, maybe, you come out in your underwear.

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Mitch Albom writes about running an orphanage in impoverished Port-au-Prince, Haiti, his kids, their hardships, laughs and challenges, and the life lessons he’s learned there every day.

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