<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9002170075
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
901214
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, December 14, 1990
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1G
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color JULIAN H. GONZALEZ
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


:
Former Detroit coach Jacques Demers (right) hugs Joe Louis
Arena building manager Al Sobotka before Thursday night's game.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SEE ALSO METRO FINAL EDITION, Page 1G
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1990, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
DEMERS BACK; WINGS ON ATTACK
FORMER COACH FULL OF HEART AND MEMORIES
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
The bus pulled into the Joe Louis parking lot and the man in the blue suit
stood up. He tugged on his canvas bag, which contained a pair of headphones
and two media guides. Funny, he thought, coming  in this entrance. Last time
he was here, he had his own parking space near the door. All he had to do was
wave at the guard and pull right in. A VIP. Now he rode the bus, with the
visiting team, and  he did not even sit up front. That's where the head coach
sat. Jacques Demers, radio man, sat a few rows behind.

  Will they remember me? he wondered.

  The door opened. He stepped out. "Jacques!  Jacques!" screamed a group of
schoolkids, rushing at him like buffalo. "Jacques! Sign this, Jacques!"
  They remembered him.
  "Welcome back, Jacques!" yelled a fan in a Red Wings sweater. Another,
filming him with a video camera, yelled, "You're always at home here,
Jacques!" The kids mobbed him for autographs, pushing sweaters, pennants,
programs. He smiled. He signed everything.
  "Good to  see you again, Jacques!"
  "Thank you."
  "Hey, Jacques, you got a bum deal!"
  "Thank you."
  He had been unable to sleep all afternoon, missing his customary nap --
"I was tossing and  turning, like I was coaching the game or something."
  He was not coaching, of course, and that was what worried him. For four
years Demers had been synonymous with Detroit hockey, the mustached wizard
who had found the team in the gutter and lifted it to its feet. He won a
divisional title. Then he won another. Twice, he was NHL coach of the year.
  But things soured. Players drifted from his grasp.  Last season, the Wings
missed the playoffs, and the wizard was fired. This was his first trip back.
Would they accept him for who he was now, a commentator for the Nordiques
broadcasts? Jacques Demers,  radio man?
  "Hello, fellows," he said, shaking hands as the arena staff ushered him
inside. "Hello . . . Hello, there . . . Nice to see you again."
  A small crowd floated around him. Cameras  flashed. Reporters scribbled.
A security guard stepped up and handed Demers a small blue credential for
visiting media.
  "Sorry," said the guard, embarrassed, "you . . . uh, have to wear one of
these."
  Can you go home again? Once this building was the house of his dreams. "I
thought I would live here forever," Jacques Demers said. But five months ago
he got that  phone call. Mike Ilitch,  the Red Wings' owner, wanted to see
him. Demers jumped in his Ford truck, thinking only good things. Maybe a
promotion. Maybe the general manager's position. When Ilitch answered the
door, Demers saw  his face. He knew.
  It wasn't a promotion.
  He had been fired. For the first time in his life. The team he had
rescued, breathed life into their nostrils, this team had somehow gotten away
from  him.  Fired? On the way home he pulled his truck off the road. His eyes
began to water. This was always the Demers way; heart, emotion. It was his
strength. Some say his weakness.
  But that was then.  This was now. And now he was Jacques Demers, radio
man, two hours before game time and TV guys wanted interviews. He stepped
gingerly on the ice and waddled toward the cameras.
  "Over here?" he asked,  sliding.
  Once in 1987 he had done this same shuffle as the crowd roared with
delight. His team, the laughingstock of the NHL, had come from impossible odds
that night to upset Toronto in seven  games and advance to within one round of
Stanley Cup Finals.
  Now as he crossed the surface he glanced up at the banner hanging from the
rafters, the one marked "1987," as if checking that it was  still there.
  "Will you go into the Wings' locker room?" he was asked.
  "I'd love to see the players," he said, "but I don't feel right. Bryan
Murray has a team to prepare. I don't want to  be a disturbance."
  "Is it hard coming back?"
  "It's difficult. Even now when I see that red sweater, I have special
feelings."
  "Do you miss coaching?"
  "I miss it, but I enjoy what  I'm doing now. I . . . "
  He gazed across the ice. Without realizing it, he had stepped behind the
Wings' bench, his old spot where he chomped on gum and threw his glasses and
worked minor miracles.  For a moment, a long-lost feeling rose from the boards
and pierced his flesh.
  "I brought my heart here," he said, suddenly. "I brought my heart here."
  Down the hall, inside the Red Wings'  locker room, Demers' old players
dressed for the game. They had a new boss. A new attitude. Players don't get
too sentimental over coaches. It's not smart.
  Still each of them was shaped a bit by  this man, as we are all shaped by
the people we touch. Someone mentioned to Rick Zombo that Demers was out on
the ice. Zombo smiled. He had been a marginal player when Demers arrived. But
the coach saw something, a hunger, a desire. He gave Zombo a chance -- and the
marginal player developed into a pretty fine defenseman.
  "I still remember the time Jacques and I flew to Toronto for a
disciplinary  hearing after I slashed a guy. He was so nervous for me. He was
popping peanuts in his mouth real fast and chewing on ice.
  "When we stood before Brian O'Neill (NHL executive vice president),
Jacques  was so worked up, he was waving his fists and pleading with the guy.
I knew we wouldn't get anywhere, but Jacques didn't give up."
  "He really went to bat for you, huh?" someone said.
  Zombo  nodded. "Jacques went to bat for everybody."
  The game drew closer. Demers did more interviews, more greetings, more
interviews. Then, almost apologetically, the radio man said, "Excuse me, I
have  to do my work."
  He recorded a TV segment, in French. And a pregame radio show, in French.
He wore the headphones and he spoke professionally about the Red Wings,
tonight's opponent. Word is he's  pretty good at this radio business. They
love him in Quebec. The other night, after the Nordiques upset Vancouver in
overtime, he sang, "Turn out the lights, the party's over."
  "He has a great  future in broadcasting," said his partner, Alain Crete.
"He is a natural."
  They went upstairs. They took their places. And when the game began, there
was Demers in the booth, broadcasting. Funny, isn't it?  Life goes on. This is
both cruel and kind.
  Still, now and then, you get what you deserve. So during the final period
Thursday, a fan reached into the radio booth and handed Jacques a
construction paper sign that read "Welcome Back, Luv and Thanx 2 U, Jacques."
And then this fan began to clap. And the row behind him began to clap, and the
next row, then the whole section. And pretty  soon people were on their feet,
facing the booth, cheering, one more time, for the mustached wizard. For
Jacques Demers, radio man.
  "I brought my heart here," he said later, wiping his eyes. Truth  is, he
left a piece of it as well.
  Mitch Albom will sign copies of "Live Albom II" tonight, 7 p.m. at B.
Dalton, Macomb Place, and Saturday, 1 p.m. B. Dalton, Fairlane, and 3:30,
Books Abound,  Farmington.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN; GAME; DREDWINGS; HOCKEY; JAQUES DEMERS;Red Wings
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
