<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8801200837
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
880504
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Wednesday, May 04, 1988
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color MARY SCHROEDER
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
NEW-LOOK RED WINGS LOSE OPENER TO OILERS
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1988, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
FOR THE RED WINGS IT'S DO AND DYE
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
EDMONTON, Alberta --  Let's check out Shawn Burr's head. It now has three
flavors. Coffee on top, vanilla in the middle, strawberry around the ears.
It's the latest. It's the greatest. The Stanley  Cup semifinals.

  Red Wings hairdos.

  "They came in around four o'clock Monday afternoon and asked, 'Can you
paint our hair red and white?"'  Monique Allard, the hairdresser at the
Edmonton Westin  hotel, said Tuesday. "Shawn Burr was the first, but then they
just kept coming, 11 or 12 of the Detroit players. We normally close at 5:30,
but we stayed open until 11 o'clock. We never even got to eat  dinner."
  A streak here. A streak there. Bleach. Red dye. A little dab'll do ya. And
presto! -- suddenly, the Red Wings were, well, red-winged.  There they stood,
center ice Tuesday night in the Northlands  Coliseum: Bob Probert, with a
two-tone down the side of his long brown hair; Petr Klima, the colored tufts
poking out from under his helmet; Burr, with the three-layer crew cut, looking
like like a half-gallon  of Neapolitan ice cream with eyes, nose and a mouth.
  "Why'd you do it?" someone had asked him before the Wings prepared for
their first game against Edmonton. "Were you trying to psych out the Oilers?"
  "Nah," he said, laughing. "Me and Chabby (John Chabot) were talking on the
bus about doing something to show our spirit. We wanted to grow playoff
beards, but some of us can't grow them. So we said,  'Hey, maybe we'll paint
the sides of our hair.' We asked around, and a lot of guys were up for it."
  They hit the hotel.
  They went downstairs to Monique.
  She put their heads in the sink.
  Color them spirited.
  And why not? After all, the Wings, who have risen from the ashes since
coach Jacques Demers arrived, are here once again, taking on perhaps the best
in hockey, the Edmonton  Oilers. The Final Four. Glory time.
But certain pundits had this best-of-seven series done before it started.
  "Wake me when it's over," wrote one local journalist. 
  "Edmonton in four," wrote  another.
  In their eyes, Detroit is merely champion of the lowly Norris Division, not
deserving of the same ice as Gretzky, Messier, Fuhr and the other Edmonton
royalty. 
  To which the Red Wings  say  . . . 
  A little off the top?
  "Hey, we're here to win this time," said interim captain Gerard Gallant
before Tuesday's game. "We're not looking for respect, we're looking at the
Oilers as  a team we have to beat to get to the Stanley Cup finals. That's our
goal this year."
  Yeah.
  Uh  . . . Gerard?
  What's that above your ear?
  "Had to do it," he said, grinning, the red and  white rat- tail sneaking
down his neck.
  "To heck with what Edmonton thinks."
  Well. That should tell you something. Gallant is known as Mr. Conservative,
a quiet team leader. So is Adam Oates,  mature, well-educated.
  He's technicolor, too.
  Adam Oates? Yes. Ditto for Steve Chiasson, Joey Kocur, Lee Norwood, Joe
Murphy and Chabot. Gilbert Delorme passed on the colors, but wanted something
done with his beard, which he has sworn not to shave until the playoffs are
finished.
  No problem, Gilly. Meet Monique. 
  His number, 29, is now mowed out in his thick black whiskers -- the 2 on
one cheek, the 9 on the other.
  So everybody's doing it. Or almost everybody. Certain stalwarts, like Mel
Bridgman ("I got a family, eh?") Harold Snepsts ("I'm 34, not 14") and Steve
Yzerman ("Someone  has to show a little restraint, right?") have kept things
au naturel. But what is uniform beneath all this goop and bleach is a belief
that there is something special here, there is unity of purpose, there is  . .
. a team.
  Do not overlook that. If the Red Wings thought like losers, they would
never try something like this, because they'd be stuck with it for weeks after
their defeat. You paint  yourself at the beginning of a playoff series, you
plan on strutting it like a peacock one day soon. There was a certain pride
sitting under those hair dryers Monday night. And that's nice. No matter what
happens.
  "Hey, it's OK with me," agreed Demers. "I think the boys just put a little
more pressure on themselves. Now we have to play better. But they're having
fun. That's important too. Although our first priority is to win."
  "And if you did?" he was asked. "If you made it to the Stanley Cup finals?
Would you stripe yourself as well?"
  "No  . . . WAY!" Demers answered, laughing.
  Well,  what do you want? He's the coach, for pete's sake.
  So off they go. The series has begun. Tuesday night, before the game, the
Wings sat by their lockers, intense, ready, colored hair next to uncolored,
bleached next to natural sheen. There is no telling what will happen this time
in Edmonton, no telling how long the series will last. But there is hockey to
be played, and it seems certain the Wings  will be playing just as much of it
as the Oilers.
  Even if they are a little wet, er, red behind the ears.

CUTLINE
NEW-LOOK RED WINGS LOSE OPENER TO OILERS
  Detroit Red Wings Shawn Burr, Joe  Murphy, Bob Probert and Steve Chiasson
sport their new look Tuesday. Thirteen members of the hockey team streaked
their hair to show spirit before their game against Edmonton. The Wings lost,
4-1.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
GAME; DREDWINGS;COLUMN;HOCKEY;HAIR;CHANGE;UNUSUAL;SPT;Red Wings
</KEYWORDS>
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