<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8801210740
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
880510
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Tuesday, May 10, 1988
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1988, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
OT HEARTBREAK: WINGS LOSE
CRUEL REALITY HITS AFTER A CLOSE CALL
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
The breath came out of the dream in such a gush, it surely rippled the
waters of the Great Lakes. 

  "They lost?" the crowd seemed to moan, a dying moan, after the Wings fell
to Edmonton, 4-3,  in the biggest, best and most heartbreaking game of hockey
to be played in Detroit in 22 years. "How can it be? They really lost?"

  They lost. That is the reality. It has to be, because only reality  could
be that cruel. So close. The Red Wings had been so close in this hot, draining
 playoff Game 4 -- a game that could have tied this playoff series at 2-2.
They had reached overtime, sweat dripping  from every fan, strength dripping
from every player. What was it they said? Eighty-five degrees at ice level?
The damn stuff was fogging up! And each push into the Edmonton zone brought
the same thought,  each teasing pass, each near-miss shot, each charge down
the ice with glory just a little bitty puck away.
  "One goal," the crowd seemed to chant.
  One goal came. But it was by Edmonton's Jarri  Kurri, a slap shot, with an
assist by Esa Tikkanen.
  Over. 4-3. That is reality. Edmonton leads the series, three games to one.
All the Wings horses and all the Wings men may not put this dream back
together again.
  They lost? They lost.
  How sad. What a letdown. The temptation, of course, is to use the old
cliche, "Nobody loses in a game like this," as stupid as that sounds now. What
a final  hour of hockey! Can there ever be anything more exciting? Here were
the Wings, tied, 3-3, and tasting blood, somebody's, Edmonton's or their own,
skating as if the next goal would determine who lives  and who dies. How close
did they come in regulation alone to winning this thing? Count the heart
attacks.
  Here was a shot that trickled past Grant Fuhr (does that ever happen?) and
only a last-second  swipe by Kevin Lowe saved it from sliding into the net.
  Here was Bob Probert, already the nightmare for Edmonton, having scored the
second and third Detroit goals, charging in on a puck and hitting  the post --
he hit the post! -- and Fuhr fell on it and lay down flat on the ice, as if to
say, "God help me, is this attack ever going to end?"
  Here were the Wings, with the undying voices of 19,873  fans ringing in
their ears -- how many years of bad hockey were in those voices, desperate now
for glory? -- and they kept coming, kept coming, like a dream you can't escape
until finally, the only thing  that can kill a dream came off Kurri's stick, a
quick stab of death that sent everybody home wet and unhappy.
  They lost? They lost.
  Here were the Wings trying to do unto Edmonton what Edmonton had done unto
them -- win two at home -- and establish a foothold on the high ridge of the
Stanley Cup. After all, until this game, it had all been sweet conjecture. The
Oilers had taken Games 1 and  2, as expected, the Wings had taken Game 3 with
a wave of emotion (the first game at home, the return of Steve Yzerman) that
was not likely to come again, at least not for those reasons. 
  So this  was the proving ground, the game that showed whether the Wings had
a real crack at the rainbow or were merely sliding along.
  "This is the most disappointing loss I've had since I've been a coach,"
Jacques Demers said.
  Indeed. And what kills Wings fans this morning is that, despite leading the
series comfortably, three games to one, Edmonton has not appeared to be that
much better than the Wings. But this Oilers team didn't put all those banners
on their ceiling with scotch tape. When they get a break, they score on it,
and it seems to take their opponents twice as much effort and twice  as much
time to accomplish the same things.
  The Wings could take every single thing the Oilers threw at them Monday
night.
  They just couldn't take it all.
  So the two teams go back to Edmonton  now, where the Oilers will feel as
confident as a man who found the noose untied at his execution, and where the
Wings saw their tank finally read empty last May. There is the carcass of the
1987 dream  still up there, somewhere along the highway to the Northlands
Coliseum, an ugly reminder of how cruel reality can be. They say nobody loses
in games like this, but they lied, somebody does. Damn it all,  say the fans.
They lost? They lost.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>

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