<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8701170667
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
870409
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, April 09, 1987
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
REPRINTED IN STATE EDITION April 10, 1987
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1987, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
DEMERS' RIDE TO VICTORY IS ON THE PASSENGER SIDE
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
He finished shaving as the city locked its desk. He pulled on his pants as
the city shut the lights. He came down for coffee as the city left the office.
It was 5 o'clock. He was going to work.
"How do you feel?" I asked Jacques Demers, jangling my car keys.

  "I feel good," he said.
  Tonight would be his first playoff game as coach of the Detroit Red Wings.
He and the team were staying  at a hotel, the Windsor Hilton, across the river
in Canada, and he had taken his afternoon nap and soon he would be ready to
go.
  I was his ride.
  Well, somebody has to drive the guy, right? Actually,  my original idea was
to tag along in  his  passenger's seat, see what it was like. And I was
hesitant to ask. Many professional coaches want to be alone in the hours
before the big one. Many want to  privately reach that special place, where it
is just them and the challenge.
  "Can we take your car?" Jacques asked.
  Others do not.
  So I was to be his ride, which was fine. And there we sat, having coffee,
like two salesmen before their morning rounds and . . .
  Gas. Did I have gas? Ohmigod.
  Until that moment, I must admit, I figured coaches and players had some
magical way of arriving  for big games. Weren't they dropped in by helicopter?
Didn't they have their own underground tunnels?
  Jacques Demers will kill a lot of those fantasies for you. You almost
expect Jacques Demers to  carpool. In one season he had taken a bad joke and
turned it into a hockey team, and now it was in the playoffs. Yet during his
nap, he had asked the switchboard to hold his calls -- athletes do that  all
the time -- and now he was fretting. 
  "I don't want people to think I'm a big shot," he said. He paid for the
coffee.
  I paid for the gas.
Just another commuter  Demers' mother tongue is  French, and sometimes he
bobbles the English language -- "They don't know me from Adams," he said
Wednesday -- but then sometimes, he creates a real gem. On the way to the car,
I asked if there was any unique feeling the first day of the playoffs.
  "Today, you have the right to dream," he said.
  So how does the big coach get to the big game? On the passenger side. He
had trouble with the seat  belt, if that matters.
  "What kind of music?" I asked him, pointing to the cassette deck.
"Classical? Pop?"
  "Oh, whatever you like," he said.
  And we drove to work. We drove through downtown  Windsor, and through the
tunnel, and we were stopped by the customs agent on the U.S. side, a big guy
with sunglasses. He asked Demers for his papers. Then he asked for an
autograph.
  And when we  got out of the tunnel, I said, "Which way?" and neither of us
was sure. I don't know where Jacques Demers ranks on  X's and O's. I do know
he was the only coach who came to work Wednesday night from  another country.
  We passed people on Jefferson Avenue leaving their offices. Some carried
briefcases and some carried beer cans, and they all seemed to be heading
toward the arena, slowly. At one  point I caught Demers just staring out at
them, quietly, and he looked very young.
  "You know," he suddenly said, "a lot of these people will wake up in a
lousy mood tomorrow if we lose tonight. It's  true. That's what we're doing.
We're playing with people's moods in this city.
  "I don't want to let them down.  Look at these people. I'd be terribly
embarrassed if we lose."
A winning combination  We pulled into the Joe Louis lot. "You can park in
my space," Demers said, but there was already a car in his space.  Demers
shrugged. He got to the door and a woman wished him luck, and she read him  a
poem. Demers said, "How do you like that, a poem!" and then he reached out and
found the door was locked.
  "Um . . . I don't have my key," he said.
  Anyhow, we got in eventually, and Demers  marched down the concrete
corridor, saying hello to the food vendors. And then he was inside the locker
room. Petr Klima, the star left wing, was signing a hockey stick.
  "Hello, Petr," said Demers.
  "Hello, Jacques," said Petr.
  And the coach went into his office.
  In a few hours the game would start. His Wings would win, 3-1,  over
Chicago, and give the city its first playoff victory in  three years. It would
be a great moment.
  And now? Well. I don't believe Jacques Demers is superstitious. Then again,
 these are the playoffs. So I will offer him a deal. I will drive him in every
 game as long as the Wings keep winning. He can buy the  coffee. I will buy
the gas. We will be the lucky car pool. And if they go all the way? The
Stanley Cup? The  dream of dreams . . . ?
  He can  pick the music.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

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<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN
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