<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9002160154
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
901207
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, December 07, 1990
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1C
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1990, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
MURRAY CAN MAKE BIG SAVE: KEEP HANLON
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
I don't usually go to bat for professional athletes. I figure they are
strong enough, rich enough or lucky enough to take care of themselves. But
once in awhile, an athlete comes along and hits a  tough spot and, well, I
don't know. Something stirs inside you.

  I feel that way about Glen Hanlon. Maybe it's the red hair. Maybe it's the
sense of humor. Maybe it's the fact that, after a long career  in the NHL, he
was sent to the minors -- the ultimate embarrassment to most athletes -- and
this was how he responded: He scribbled a sign that read "GONE FISHING" and
stuck it on his locker before leaving  so, when his teammates came in, they'd
at least have a laugh.

  Hanlon is special that way. And I'm going to bat for him. I'm asking Bryan
Murray to trust me,  to keep the guy around now that he's  back, in the Wings'
locker room, where he belongs. Let him have his old seat, right near the door.
Let him wear the mask and the pads. Let him be the backup goalie and take the
big stick once in awhile  and save a game when you need it most. Hanlon was
always good at that moment: When you need it most.
  "Hey, look who it is!" he yelled at me the other day, as if I were the
strange sight in the Wings'  locker room. Me? I thought we had seen the last
of Hanlon with the "GONE FISHING" sign. He'd been shipped a million miles
away, to a farm team in San Diego, a place that could convince any hockey
player  to give it up. Melt the ice. Hit the beach.
  But now here he was, back again. That same shock of red hair. That same
clunky goalie walk. It was like going back to grade school and finding your
favorite  teacher still there, behind her desk.
A frontline backup job
  I smiled when I saw him. But that is not important. What is important is
that his teammates did, too. Hanlon was supposed to be here  for a two-week
stint only, while regular backup Alain Chevrier went to San Diego to get in
some work. But then, something happened. In Chicago Stadium, against the
Blackhawks, Hanlon was given a chance  to start. And, although playing that
club in that building is like jumping from a foxhole without a helmet, Hanlon,
33, responded. He played great. His teammates rallied. They won, 5-1.
  Not long after,  Hanlon got another start, in Buffalo, and darn near pulled
off another win, settling for a 3-3 tie. And suddenly, coach Murray had a
dilemma. The stiff body had come to life; Glen Hanlon was fighting  for a job.
  And he should get it, it says here, not because Chevrier is deficient. He is
a fine goalie. But if sports teaches us anything, it is that chemistry -- that
delicate balance of heart and  muscle -- is what makes champions. Chemistry.
Forget age. Forget statistics. Rick Mahorn wasn't about statistics. Kirk
Gibson wasn't about statistics.
  Glen Hanlon is not about statistics. He is about  getting to the rink
first, every day, as he always has. He is about taking a rookie after a bad
game and whispering something in his ear. He is about jumping on the training
table and doing a crazy dance  to loosen up his teammates during a slump. He
is about coming in cold, pulling on the mask and taking a puck in the
midsection to save a goal.
  He is about attitude. The other day, soaked with sweat, Hanlon rose to get
himself a pop. And then, instinctively, he turned and asked Chevrier and Tim
Cheveldae -- the two guys who can put him out of a job -- if they wanted one,
too. A little class. So,  he is about that, too. 
  "You know," he told me the other day, "when I was down in San Diego, I did
a lot of soul-searching. It's a whole different league, obviously, but I still
liked it. I just  love playing hockey. For awhile, I thought maybe I can just
play here for a few years. Weather's warm. San Diego's like paradise.
  "But then I realized that once you've been in the NHL and you've  chased
the Stanley Cup, there's nothing like that feeling. So I . . .  He
shrugged, then grinned. "Hey, whatever happens, you know?"
A throwback: Team player
  That's Hanlon. But because he can  so cheerily accept his fate, he
deserves a better one. Bryan Murray might not know this, being new to this
team, but Hanlon is worth far more than his salary. He is a veteran voice on a
young squad.  He is a tireless cheerleader. His teammates rally behind him.
And, let us not forget, the man can still play goalie.
  "It's so rare to find a guy who really thinks of the team first and then
himself,"  said defenseman Rick Zombo, one of several players whose eyes got
misty when Hanlon was sent to the minors. "(Murray) hasn't experienced what
Glen can do for this team."
  He should. Hanlon can fool  you. Last spring, Hanlon was at a charity
roast for then-coach Jacques Demers. He sat next to Keith Gave, the Free Press
hockey writer, and throughout the evening, Gave noticed Hanlon doodling on his
 program. When Hanlon finally rose to speak, Gave peeked and saw the words
"KICK A--" scribbled countless times.
  Hanlon was the best roaster by far.
  He still can bring the house down now and then,  even in the NHL. More
important are the nights he brings the house up -- with spirit, humor,
chemistry. Keep him around, Bryan. The simple truth is, Glen Hanlon is too
valuable a catch to be gone fishing.  Even in paradise.
  Mitch Albom will sign copies of "Live Albom II" at 7 tonight at B Dalton in
Oakland Mall and 1 p.m. Saturday at Little Professor in Union Lake.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN; GLEN HANLON; DREDWINGS;Red Wings
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
