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<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8601250358
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
860604
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Wednesday, June 04, 1986
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1986, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
HASTE TO MAKE PARK COACH MADE WASTE OF HIS CHANCES
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
Well, news of his firing caught a lot of people off guard, but the plain
truth is this: Brad Park had a sword hanging over his head from Day One.

  Jimmy Devellano was never wild about Park as  coach of the Red Wings, and
he was the one who hired him.  "Charisma," Devellano said Tuesday, when asked
why he first chose Park. "I thought he had a certain charisma, a certain
character he'd displayed  as a player."

  So he gave him the job last December -- fired Harry Neale in the middle of
a dismal season and put Park in his place. It was one of those decisions that
looked good for a fleeting moment, like a midnight marriage in Las Vegas
between a showgirl and an insurance salesman.
  And it never had a chance. You can't put a tie on a hockey player and you
can't put a helmet on an executive. Jimmy  D. and Brad Park are two different
people -- "oil and water" Devellano said -- and neither one would ever forgive
the other for what he was not.
  "He did not care for me and I suspect the feeling  was mutual," Devellano
said Tuesday. "I suspect the thing Brad liked least about me was that I never
played in the NHL."
  "Jimmy D. has been in the front office his whole life and I've been in the
dressing room," Park admitted. "It's two different philosophies."
  They would not mix. So Park, the former all-star defenseman, was fired
Tuesday morning, after walking into Devellano's office for  what he figured
was an impromptu meeting. But the timing was just theatrics. Before this
hockey season had even ended --  the worst season in the history of the Red
Wings -- Park had a red "X" across  his face in the mind of Jimmy D.
  And Jimmy D. makes the decisions.
'Wasn't enough discipline' 
  That's mostly what you can draw from this latest hockey obituary. Jimmy D.
is back in control.  There was suspicion when Park was hired as coach and
player personnel director, that Devellano, the general manager, was
surrendering part of his ship. Being forced to share the wheel.
  
  Not  anymore. Devellano obviously has the authority to get rid of what he
doesn't like, and what he didn't like about Brad Park was that he coached like
a player.
  "There wasn't enough discipline," Devellano  said. "When people broke
curfews I wanted them disciplined. I didn't want rock music on after a loss. I
didn't condone patting guys on the back after a loss. There wasn't enough
butt-kicking.
  "I  don't think it's Brad's nature to do it. Hockey came so easy for him.
He was a superstar. But hockey is a battle, you've got to grind and discipline
and work to be a team."
  All this from a man who  never played the game. You can see why there were
problems.
  True, Park inherited a sinking ship and took it straight to the bottom of
the sea. His Red Wings won only nine of 45 games. And he was  suspended for
six of those for encouraging his players to leave the bench for a brawl at
Toronto.
  He doesn't deny being more a buddy than a beast as coach. "But," he said,
"that was the plan. Taking  over a team midseason is tough. I had to initially
rely on guys playing for me on friendship.
  "It was enough this year to try and change things on the ice. We had the
worst record in the NHL. The  plan was to become a harder disciplinarian this
coming season, when we could start from the beginning."
  Forget it now. He'll never get the chance.
Jimmy D. still in charge 
  This much is undeniable:  The Red Wings were embarrassing this past season.
They were little more than a bus stop for players coming to and from the farm
system. How many new faces? How many changes?
  But if you're going to  shoot at Park, you better pull another arrow out of
your quiver. Devellano cannot escape this thing unscathed. He hired the guy.
"Charisma" isn't the most compelling reason for giving a man a coaching  job.
  Park probably never realized what he was getting into. He was only one year
out of a Red Wings uniform. He wanted to be a nice guy to his former teammates
-- "He kissed them you-know- where,"  is the way Devellano put it -- but
that's not totally unexpected, is it?
  Jimmy D. should have seen this coming. And if he decided to hire him
anyway, then Park probably deserved more time to grow into the job. 
  He didn't get it. And you can bet the next guy won't have more than "coach"
next to his name.
  The parting was not friendly. Park deserves better. But so do Red Wings
fans. The main  problem is a team that can't win and if Devellano vs. Park was
a power play, so be it. But that means the responsibility for a competitive
hockey team falls on one man's desk.
  "Jimmy D. is the king  of hockey in this town," Park said, after his firing
Tuesday.
  And, for now, his kingdom is still a mess.
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<DISCLAIMER>

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