<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8701220106
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
870503
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, May 03, 1987
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
STATE EDITION
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1C
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SEE ALSO METRO FINAL EDITION 1C
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1987, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
A TOOT OF THE HORN FOR JACQUES DEMERS
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
Sometime this afternoon, I will drive over to Jacques Demers' place and
honk the horn. That should make at least two punk rockers happy. I am talking
about the two guys who stopped me outside Joe  Louis Arena before the first
game of this crazy Toronto-Detroit playoff series -- they had leather pants
and leather jackets and spiked hair and Red Wings shirts; I can only assume
they liked punk rock  -- and who only wanted to ask me this: "Did you drive
Jacques to the game tonight?"

  And I said no, not this time.

  And they groaned. "Damn! You gotta drive him, man! You gotta! You're the
good luck charm. Damn! Oh, no! Now what? Now we're gonna lose!"
  And I shrugged.
  And I went inside.
  And the Red Wings lost.
  So, relax guys. I will honk. He will get in. I am not  sure when my car
and the fortunes of the Red Wings actually became intertwined. I do know
Jacques Demers and I have now driven to five playoff games together and
Detroit has won all five, and now even  Demers, who is not superstitious, is
asking me what time we're leaving. And it has been great fun, and a little
spooky. And because enough is enough, it will end today. No matter what.
  I will be  honest; not without some regret. What began as a simple
interview on the way to Demers' first Detroit playoff game has turned into a
sort of regular appointment with this quixotic hockey coach, the way  two
old-timers meet for breakfast every Saturday morning, or two co-workers
car-pool in from the suburbs. Bowling night. Bridge night. The ride to the
game.
  "You ready to go?" I say. 
  "I'm  ready," he says.
  And six hours later they win.
  Not bad, huh?
  But there is more. The reason I am writing this. In the last two weeks, I
have done "the drive" with Demers in Detroit, Chicago and Toronto. I have
heard him talk hockey, weather, his wife, the Kentucky Derby, airplanes,
music, French, Greg Stefan and truck driving. I have seen him joke with
customs officials, toll collectors,  fans. I have even parked in his parking
spot. Once. Just to see what it was like. (The answer is: It is near the
entrance.)
  And I will tell you this much: The guy is a great car-pool partner. He
doesn't smoke, he doesn't roll down the windows, he doesn't tune to country
western stations. He is also very tough to figure out. You get the feeling you
are carting around two men; one a general who  is in complete control, the
other a baby leprechaun, just observing the whole thing with wide-eyed wonder.
  There was, for example, the first ride, the playoff opener against
Chicago,  where we drove  in from the Windsor Hilton and he said: "You know, I
love water. It has a calming affect on me. I like to stand by the hotel window
and just look out on it and see the Detroit skyline, and say, 'Tonight,  over
there, in that building, there's gonna be a big hockey game.' "
  Or the time in Chicago, when we drove through a rundown section of the west
side, dirt-poor, and Demers couldn't take his eyes  off of it: "Look at that.
To live like that. . . . We have no right to complain. Jeez. Look at that."
  Before Friday night's Game Six in Toronto, certainly the biggest game of
the year so far, Demers  told me to take a sudden right turn en route to Maple
Leaf Gardens: "Let's drive up Yonge Street. You'll see how beautiful it is. .
. . Look at all these shops. Wow."
  And, yet, there was also the  ride after he benched Greg Stefan, the
team's No. 1 goalie. He had told the media that Stefan "would not see the
Leafs again this series," and he asked what I thought. And I shrugged, trying
to be nice,  and said he probably wished he hadn't made that statement. And he
said: "No. I meant it. I still do. We're all big boys here. I'm the coach."
  So who's who here? Who's the real Jacques Demers?  The genteel
French-Canadien who was unloading trucks before his first coaching job? Or the
hard-line coach who said "We'll be back for a Game 7" even when the Wings
trailed Toronto, three- games-to-one?
  The answer is both. That is his magic. Demers can work with characters
without losing his own. He is never haughty, never far from humble, yet he
will not permit his players the comfort of feeling  second-best. "No excuses,"
he told them before Friday night's 4-2 victory. "We have played 90 games this
season. If you want to play 91, you better win this."
  He is at once charming and determined,  blue-collar and sacre-bleu. I
cannot recall the last time a coach turned on a city this much. Yet there is
no denying Demers is as much the Detroit star as anyone wearing skates and a
helmet. (This,  by the way, has been another car subject. "I'm afraid people
are getting sick of me," he says. "All these interviews. How much can I say?
Won't the people get sick of me? What do you think?")
  But  remember this. Demers has taken a hockey team that left its fans
ashamed last season and has instilled pride and guts. And now it is on the
verge of advancing to the semifinals of the NHL playoffs, a  round Demers
reached last year with the St. Louis Blues, a team considered far superior to
the Wings in terms of pure talent.
  How is it that Demers gets his men to play so well for him? Some say  it
is because if you don't, you are gone. A peek at the opening and closing
season rosters will bear that out. So will Stefan's benching, and that of Petr
Klima Friday night. "These are the times you  gotta produce," Demers said.
"The playoffs, there can be no excuses."
  On Friday, before what could have been the season's final game, I asked
Demers if he could even remember the season opener anymore.
  "Loss to Quebec, 6-1," he said, quickly. "I told the guys right then,
'This won't do. We can't have this.' "
  "Did you have any idea then you'd go as far as you have?"
  "Oh, yes," he said.  "Even then I believed we would make the playoffs."
  Why not?  Here is a man who was about to take a job as a computer operator
when a hockey coaching spot opened up. A guy who only wanted to make  enough
to eat and who now lives quite comfortably in the suburbs as a Motown
celebrity. Why shouldn't he be optimistic? "So many good things have happened
to me," he will say, on the average, at least  once a day.
  "What of it ended tonight?" I have asked him on the ride to the last two
games.
  "I won't feel bad," he said Friday.  "You never want a season to end,
especially on a loss. But we  accomplished some of our goals. We didn't do any
miracles, though. But we accomplished some of our goals."
  He paused. He looked out the window. Then, as is his habit, he changed the
subject. He  asked me about my travel schedule. I rattled off a string of
meaningless flight reservations to places like Atlanta and Louisville.
  "Boy, you got a great job, eh?" he said. 
  I have a theory  for Demers' occasional language lapse: French works
differently than English. In French, you put the the object between the
subject and the verb. This means "I see you" would be "je vous vois," or, in
English, "I you see." I think. Unless there's an "a" in there. I could be
wrong. I was never that good at French.
  Anyhow, maybe this is why Demers has the occasional spot of trouble with
his English,  which has led to dozens of impersonations, and a few good
laughs. He can create phrases heretofore unheard. (My personal favorite is "He
doesn't know me from Adams." But you may have your own.) 
  Again, the mishaps are merely part of his charisma. And tonight, in a
fever pitch, the charismatic coach takes his spot behind the bench for a game
no one figured to see when this season started. "We  want to win for the fans,
we want to win for ourselves; I personally, you know, would like to win, too,"
he said.
  And we'll see. There is a sense that no year will be as sugar-coated for
Demers  as this one has been. History shows us people get used to anything,
even manna from heaven, and so surely the fans here will begin to expect the
results next season, and find fault when they do not arise.
  But for now, an appreciation. For the coach. For the team he has put
together. It is not easy to restore lost pride. It is not easy to spin
defeatist straw into "we can do anything" gold. The natural  enemy of progress
is speed, and yet this whole turn-around has taken place is less than a year.
When they drop the puck tonight for Game 7, we should stop and remember how
remarkable that really is.
  So this is the last lucky car pool. A chance to retire the lucky engine
undefeated. I will throw some gas in, and pick out a decent radio station. And
we'll see, we'll see.  Playoffs mean different  things to different people.
Victory. Heroism. Glory. But in a funny way, these, at least for me, have
meant something I didn't count on: a mirror to a good man's thoughts.
  Can I butcher some French  here? Je vous salute, Mr. Demers. Whatever
happens, happens. The car will miss the attention. The driver will miss the
company.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN;DREDWINGS;JACQUES DEMERS;ANECDOTE;TRANSPORTATION;MITCH
ALBOM;Red Wings
</KEYWORDS>
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