<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9101160184
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
910417
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Wednesday, April 17, 1991
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SEE ALSO METRO FINAL CHASER EDITION, Page 1D
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1991, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
TIME RUNS OUT OF RED WINGS, 3-2
HULL ENDS SEASON - BUT NOT POTENTIAL
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
ST. LOUIS --  Won three, lost four. Those will be the final numbers hung
on Detroit hockey this year. 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, when Brett Hull found the puck on his stick and nothing but
open ice between him and his destiny, which is to murder opposing teams, 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 lead in this first-round
playoff series, lose it, then come back and win it anyhow.

  All that  ended with Hull taking a pass from (who else?) Adam Oates and
skating alone 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 crowd exploded, the organist blasted
into "The Saints Go Marching In" and the funeral began for Red Wings, who had
fought the good fight. They would  make one last surge, a final thrash against
death, a furious charge in the closing minutes of the game, closing the gap to
3-2. But they were fighting uphill, against the crowd, against fatigue,
against  a team that would not surrender one more goal. And finally, the horn
sounded, the season died.

  Won three, lost four.
  "You know, for a while there . . . " you could hear Wings fans sigh, as
they turned off their TV sets. Yes. For a while there, it was within grasp.
Had the Wings lasted those final 21 seconds in the second, had they taken
their 1-1 tie into the third period, they might have  found enough magic to
beat these Blues in their home arena. Or had they tied it up in the third,
made it 3-3, the pressure might have shifted. The Blues, a heavy favorite,
might have thought, "Hey, wait  a minute, we're supposed to beat these guys
easily." And the Wings might have thought, "Hey, wait a minute. We don't have
to lose, do we?" On such momentum shifts are championships won.
  Didn't happen.  Hull kicked the door open. His teammates kicked it shut.
couldn't wait to get back out on the ice. 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 and all they needed to escape
this surprisingly difficult playoff series.
  "For a while there . . . " Detroit seemed to sigh.
  Won three,  lost four.
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 the boys of winter  head now 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
will expect a little more? "When our fans were booing us at home in Game 6 the
other night," Shawn Burr had said before the game, "that  was kind of bad,
wasn't it? I mean, they didn't figure us to even be there and then, when we
don't score, and they booed 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
kill. Bill Laimbeer of the Pistons once bought a scythe to the locker room
before a deciding playoff game against the Boston Celtics. He held it up to
his teammates and said, "When you've got the snake down, you chop its head
off. Let's  do it." That is the attitude of experienced killers 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,  worried that if they didn't do it this night, they would have
blown a great chance. "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 night, they almost found themselves. Yes, the game began as if
played on a tilt, with Detroit skating uphill, St. Louis down. And yet the
Wings hung in there. They earned  a goal from Racine, who put in a long
rebound of his own shot. And Cheveldae withstood a furious barrage from the
Blues in the second period -- during one power play they fired three shots in
nine seconds,  all of which he stopped beautifully. And then there were 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 series may be that Detroit went the final six games of a seven-game
series without a goal  from Steve Yzerman or Sergei Fedorov. Considering that,
it is remarkable they were even in it.
  
And so the series ends, a whale of a series, really. Didn't it feel like the
Wings were playing these  guys for a month? 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.
  Yes, it ends in defeat. But  if you think it's the the same old summer as
last year,  well, think of 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, Tim Chevelde
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.
  Earlier in the day, the phone had rung in Burr's room. 
  "Person-to-person call," the operator said.
  "Yes?" said Burr.
  "Hello, Shawn?" came the scratchy  voice. "It's the Brow."
  The Brow, as everyone in Detroit knows, is the ultimate fan, the odd,
bespectacled former school teacher who wears the funny tie and hat and screams
himself hoarse at every  game.
  "You fired up?" he croaked.
  "Yeah, Brow. We are." said Burr.
  "You guys flying in after the game?"
  "Yep."
  "I'll be there waiting, you know, win or lose."
  "Thanks."
  The rest of us could take something from that. Won three, lost four is not
the world's biggest disappointment, not for such a young hockey team, not
against the St. Louis Blues. The fact is, for the  first time since in several
summers, there is good reason to look forward to the fall, hockey-wise. Won
three, lost four, showed a lot of potential. That's worth something, don't you
think?
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>

</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
