<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9101160175
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
910417
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Wednesday, April 17, 1991
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


:
Sergei Federov was nabbed for cross-checking  St. Louis
defenseman Jeff Brown in the first period.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1991, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
RED WINGS RUN OUT OF TIME
LESS THAN NEEDED; MORE THAN EXPECTED
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
ST. LOUIS --  Won three, lost four. Those will be the final numbers hung
on this Detroit hockey team. Won three, lost four -- and didn't lose by a
whole lot, either. In fact, until that awful moment  with 21 seconds left in
the second period Tuesday night, when Brett Hull found the puck on his stick
and nothing but open ice between him and his destiny, until that moment, this
young Red Wing group  looked like it might do what nobody said it could do --
not once, but twice. Take a big lead in this first-round playoff series, blow
it, then come back and win it anyhow.

  All that ended with Hull,  taking a pass from (who else?) Adam Oates and
skating just beyond reach of defenseman Yves Racine, who chased him the way a
dog chases a car as it speeds down the street. Hull loaded, aimed, and fired
past a helpless Tim Cheveldae. The puck flew into the net, the crowd exploded,
the organist blasted into "The Saints Go Marching In." And the Wings, who
fought the good fight, felt a sudden chill. The  end of their season.

  "Hull was the backbreaker," coach Bryan Murray would later admit. The
Wings would make one last surge, a final thrash against death, a furious
charge in the closing minutes  of the game, closing the score to 3-2. But they
were fighting uphill, against the crowd, against fatigue -- maybe even against
fate at that point.
  Won three, lost four.
  "If we only could have  gone into the third period tied," said a weary
Steve Yzerman, who played despite a sore knee that limited his usual startling
ability to cut and accelerate. "If we could have got them thinking, and then
the third comes and maybe we score a funny goal and we win before anyone
realizes what happens. . . . "
  His voice trailed off. There were many "if onlys" on this lonesome night,
many ways in which  the Wings might have found enough magic to beat these
Blues in their home arena. Didn't happen. Hull kicked the door open; his
teammates kicked it shut. Inspired by his goal, they began the third period
as if late for a party, rushing the net, banging the boards, and before the
period was three minutes old, they had another goal, all they would need to
escape this surprisingly difficult playoff series.
  "They were the better team," said Rick Zombo, in the quiet locker room
afterward, "only because they scored one more goal than we did."
  That's all it takes.
  Won three, lost four.
Win or  lose, it's a surprise
  Go ahead. Say it. The Wings never should have lost this series. But then,
they weren't supposed to win it, either. Which explains the sort of confused
feeling this morning  as Detroit's boys of winter head for the golf courses.
Nobody gave them a chance against St. Louis. And yet when they beat the Blues
three out of the first four games, no one gave them any slack. What's  that
expression -- do a little more than everyone expects and pretty soon everyone
expects a little more? "When our fans were booing us at home in Game 6 the
other night," Shawn Burr said,  "that was  kind of bad, wasn't it? I mean,
they didn't figure us to even be there, and then they boo us?"
  Fickle fandom. The fact is, yes, the Red Wings did better than expected.
And no, they didn't do what  they needed to do to advance to the Norris
Division Finals. Critics will point to Game 6 in Detroit as the one that lost
this series, but those people do not really understand sports. Game 5 was
actually the one to win; Game 5, when the Wings had the Blues reeling. You
want to be champions? You take care of business immediately. You go for the
quick kill. Bill Laimbeer of the Pistons once bought a scythe  into the locker
room before a deciding playoff game against the Boston Celtics. He held it up
to his teammates and snarled, "When you've got the snake down, you chop its
head off." That is the attitude  of experienced hit men. And winning playoff
teams.
  A young squad like the Wings --  many of whom were in the playoffs for
the first time --  hasn't learned that lesson yet. They loosened their  grip
for Game 5, and by Game 6 they were actually feeling more pressure than the
Blues, wanting so much to win in front of the home crowd, wanting so much not
to disappoint. "We were so tight in that  locker room," Bryan Murray said of
Sunday night's game. "You could just feel it. We were too juiced up."
  Tuesday they almost found what they had lost. Yes, the game began as if
played on a tilt,  with Detroit skating uphill, St. Louis down. And yet the
Wings hung in. They earned a goal from Racine, and Cheveldae withstood a
furious barrage from the Blues in the second period. Then the third,  when the
ice became level again, and those furious final seven minutes, after Jimmy
Carson scored to close it to 3-2. The Wings charged, they blasted, they
crunched, they used every ounce of heart and  guts. . . . 
  But you can't win without your big guns. And the most telling statistic
from this seven-game series is that Detroit went the final six games without a
goal from Steve Yzerman or Sergei  Fedorov. Not one goal? Considering that,
it's remarkable they were even playing Tuesday night.
  "Does it bother me?" Yzerman said, refusing to blame his injury. "Yeah, it
does. I've got a job to  do. regardless of the conditions or the setting, I've
got to get it done. No excuses."
  He sighed. No doubt watching Hull score the killer goal didn't make his
plight any easier. "I've gotta go home  for the summer, come back next year,
and do it all over again."
  Same as all of them.
  Won three, lost four.
Looks better than last year
  And yet, there are reasons to keep your head up.  First of all, this
series was terrific, if only from a drama standpoint. There were fights and
bruises and nasty words and suspensions, a general manager who got thrown out
of the press box and a two-fisted  forward who got tossed for punching a
goalie in the face. There were  octopuses and Hull and Oates and nights when
Cheveldae looked like a video game goalie and nights when Vince Riendeau
looked like,  well, Cheveldae. There were moments where it really looked like
the Wings could beat anybody. More than a few.
  Yes, it ends in defeat. And yes, for hockey fans, there is nothing worse
than an early  summer. But if you think it's the the same old summer as last
year, remember this: last year at this time, nobody knew about Fedorov. Last
year at this time, you didn't know if you could trust Bob Probert  to cross
the street by himself. Last year at this time, Cheveldae was just another
apple-cheeked goalie with a lot to prove. Last year at this time, there was no
Keith Miller, no Paul Ysebaert, no Keith  Primeau, no Brad McCrimmon.
  "We began this series with 11 guys who hadn't ever been in the playoffs,"
Zombo said. "Then we got a goalie to stand on his head, and we got goals from
our defensemen,  and suddenly, everybody is chipping in. 
  Added Yzerman: "We grew a lot closer over these last two weeks. I know its
not a long time, but playoffs mean a lot for unity. You travel together, stay
together. The last few weeks I've seen these guys more than I've seen my wife.
These things, these playoffs, they  either tear you apart or pull you
together. . . . "
  He looked around the room,  the young faces, the hurt, the passion, the
hunger for another chance. Won three, lost four. 
  "I think it may have pulled us together," he said. "I think we have
something here."
  How long until  October?

THEY CAME BACK

The St. Louis Blues became the eighth team in NHL history to recover from  a
3-1 playoff deficit by beating the Red Wings tonight. And the Wings became the
only team to  be victimized twice.
* 1941-42: Down 3-0, Toronto rallied past Detroit in the Stanley Cup finals.
The Wings led Game 7, 1-0, on Syd Howe's goal, but Toronto scored three
unanswered goals in the third period.
* 1974-75: Down 3-0, the New York Islanders beat Pittsburgh in the
quarterfinals. Glenn (Chico) Resch replaced Billy Smith as the Isles' goalie
starting with Game 4. New York won Game 7, 1-0.
*  1986-87: Down 3-1, the Islanders beat Washington in the Patrick Division
semifinals. Pat LaFontaine ended Game 7 at 8:47 of the fourth overtime.
* 1986-87: Down 3-1, the Wings beat Toronto in the Norris Division finals. The
Wings won the final games, 3-0 (at Detroit), 4-2 (at Toronto) and 3-0 (at
Detroit).
* 1987-88: Down 3-1, the Capitals beat Philadelphia in the Patrick semifinals.
Before winning  Games 5, 6 and 7, the Capitals had never won a game in which
they faced elimination. Game 7 went to overtime.
* 1988-89: Wayne Gretzky capped his first season in Los Angeles with a
first-round comeback  from down 3-1 in the Smythe Division against his old
team, Edmonton. The Kings won Game 7, 6-3, in LA.
* 1989-90: The Oilers, down 3-1, turned the tables the next season with a
first-round comeback  against Winnipeg in the Smythe. Former Wing Mark Lamb
scored the winner in Game 7, a 4-1 decision at Edmonton, and the Oilers went
on to win the Cup.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
HOCKEY; DREDWINGS; ST. LOUIS;Red Wings
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
