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Copyright 2003 Daily News, L.P.  
Daily News (New York)

October 26, 2003, Sunday RACING FINAL EDITION

SECTION: SPORTS; Pg. 69 BLEACHER CREATURE

LENGTH: 596 words

HEADLINE: OUR BAD VIBES AREN'T HELPING

BYLINE: BY FILIP BONDY

BODY:
Tina Lewis, queen of the right-field bleachers, couldn't come to the game last night, couldn't even watch. She's been sick, busy surviving cancer, and these October nights have become too long and too wearing.

"You know something's got to be really wrong with me for me not to be going," Tina said from her place in Manhattan. "I'm not 100%. My white cells are going every way, except the way they're supposed to. I'm all right, don't worry. But this is just too much pressure for me to go through, yet."

Tina didn't watch Game 7 against the Red Sox, either, not even on TV. She couldn't enjoy Aaron Boone's homer, because she was in the hospital at the time for tests and treatment. The only way she knew the Yankees won that night was because she heard the horns honking outside, a wall of happy street noise.

That will be the moment Tina always takes from this autumn, the horns beeping. She sat then smiling, thinking about Section 39 and a mournful Pedro Martinez and all the depressed, obnoxious morons with the Boston caps.

"I'm just glad we got rid of those idiots from Boston," she said. "I couldn't take the idea of them celebrating in our home."

Tina said last night to wish luck to all the other Creatures - except for one, with whom she's carrying on a vicious feud. That's the thing about the Creatures. We're always feuding, even when we get sick. It's part our charm, what makes us so effective and hard-edged. This is how the Creatures and our primordial ancestors, the ones you see pictured in jackets and ties and hats cheering for Ruth and Gehrig, have led the Yankees to 26 championships.

Those fans feuded with each other, no doubt, just like Little Mike and Tony Capone are fighting now. Those two can't stand the sight of each other.

"Rumor has it he hasn't kissed a girl in three years," Little Mike said, and Capone wasn't around to defend himself.

The mood was prickly for Game 6, the mountain high. A lot of the Yankees' problems were probably the fault of Bad Mouth Larry. Larry Palumbo is an upstanding Creature, a dedicated, Hall of Fame heckler in the Bronx. But whenever he ventures outside New York to attend a game, he brings terrible fortune upon the Yankees. His curses become a curse, if that's possible.

Larry went to Philly for an interleague series in '97, and the Yanks were swept. He went up to Fenway in '98 for one game, and the Yankees lost it. He was in Arizona for Games 6 and 7, enough said. And then Larry showed up in Miami for Games 4 and 5 (not for Game 3), which pretty much pushed the Bombers to the precipice.

So last night wasn't going to be easy. The fans had to make do without Tina again, who wasn't in Section 39, Row A, Seat 29. They had to endure negativity from Little Mike and Junior, who kept worrying that the young crop of Yankees wasn't up to the task. And then there was that disturbing New York cop, Officer Gerard Uriciouli, who was heckling the hecklers again, rooting against the Yankees.

"Your lives revolve around grown men playing a game," Uriciouli chastised Little Mike and the Creatures. "Go Marlins."

We worked to ignore Uriciouli, reverse the karma. Mike McGuire claimed he was the Babe's living ghost, that his father had vague connections with Ruth. And we took some solace in this: If the Marlins won the Series, they would have equaled in just 11 seasons the number of championships captured by the Mutts in 42 lackluster campaigns.

It wasn't worth losing just for that, but it would certainly make for a shorter, more vindictive winter.

E-mail: fjbondy@netscape.net



GRAPHIC: EPA SHAKE ON IT You can bet that the Yankees and Marlins are more cordial before Game 6 than Bleacher Creatures are to each other in times of trouble.

LOAD-DATE: October 28, 2003




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