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<UID>
9402150216
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
941219
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, December 19, 1994
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1C
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<ILLUSTRATION>
Photos Color WILLIAM ARCHIE Free Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


:
ABOVE: At 35, former NHLer John Blum is back on the ice -- this
time with the Falcons of the CHL.
LEFT: Blum mixes it up with Utica Blizzard  players -- some of
whom may be little more than half his age.
BELOW: Blum talks with his father, John, at home on Palomino
Street in Warren.
John Blum's NHL career took him to four clubs, including  the
Red Wings in 1988-89.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
DREAM DEFERRED  First in a series examining ; heartbreaks and hopes of unsung Detroit ; athletes in 1994.
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1994, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
FROM THE BRINK TO THE RINK
FALCONS DEFENSEMAN BLUM HOME,
BUT ONLY AFTER HITTING ROCK-BOTTOM
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
The funny thing is, he wasn't even drinking when he hit bottom. He was too
depressed, too twisted. He got on a bicycle, wearing nothing but a pair of
shorts, and he rode to the hockey office and burst  through the door.  "I am
God!" he hollered. "I am God!" Then he went into the street, and ran back and
forth like the lost soul he'd become. "I'm rich . . . ha! Hee! I'm a rich
man!"

  The office  staff stared in disbelief.

  Someone called the police.
  They say this kind of thing happens around the holidays, depression and
alcohol and a sense of loss. John Blum, yelling that he was rich,  was
anything but. It was Christmastime, and in the previous 11 months, he had lost
his wife, his children, his reputation, his home. Now -- as he climbed atop
his boss' van and lay there, spread-eagle,  as sirens whirred in the distance
-- he was about to lose his freedom.
  Welcome to the last drop. This is the deep end of that giant beer bottle
that hockey players suck on from their junior days,  imitating their heroes,
guzzling cold ones and going home sloshed.  John Blum had been a hockey
success story, a kid who made it all the way to the NHL, earned the six-figure
salary, played alongside  Wayne Gretzky, went to the playoffs, married Mark
Messier's sister, lived the life.
  Now he was semi-naked on top of a van.
  Welcome to the last drop.
  "I am God! I am God!"
  They threw  the cuffs on God and took him to a hospital.
 
Bad start to a new year 
  "Next thing I knew, it was New Year's Eve," Blum says now, softly, dumping
a packet of sugar into his black coffee. He wears his workout clothes and no
shoes, sitting in the simple office of a small hockey arena. He has the body
of an aging athlete, a face between handsome and howling, and he speaks
quickly, remembering  last year as if retelling a bad movie.
  "I was in that psychiatric hospital with people who were really crazy. At
midnight, there were guys sticking light bulbs in their ears, or putting
ribbons on their heads. One guy just kept mumbling, 'I wanna go home, I wanna
go home,' for like 12 hours straight. 'I wanna go home. I wanna go home.' . .
.
  "I kept telling the doctors, "Let me out. What  am I doing in here?' . . .
  "That's how I rung in the New Year."
  He shakes his head, pushes a hand through his thinning brown hair, and
smiles the smile that has always gotten him in trouble,  the Good-Time-Johnny
smile, the "Aw, hell, let's do it" smile. You put this smile in pro hockey and
toss in a bottle of booze and, forget it, the party never stops.
  Until it explodes.
  Which  is sort of how John Blum landed back here, Fraser Ice Arenas, a
local rink just down the road from where he grew up in Warren. He plays for
the Detroit Falcons, Colonial League, riding the buses to Flint  and Thunder
Bay, dressing with kids who can only dream of going where John Blum has been.
  Of course, they dream of what they see in his scrapbook, the photos from
the Oilers, the Bruins, the Capitals,  the Red Wings -- "Look, Ray Bourque,
Kevin Hatcher, Yzerman,  Gretzky, you played with those guys?" The hard lines
around Blum's eyes -- the kids don't want to know about those. The lessons he
has learned?  Well, in sports,  you don't preach. He is 35, nearly twice their
age, yet they still shout out "Blummer! Yo, Blummer!"
  Hockey does that. Gives you kiddie nicknames -- Stevie, Jonesy, Blummer --
 and that is part of the problem.
  One day you wake up and you're not a kid anymore.
  But you're still acting like one.
 
Top of the world 
  "Who's that girl?" Blum had asked once, looking  at a photo in his coach's
office. This was in Moncton, New Brunswick, 1982, the minor leagues, and Blum,
cocky and lovable, was on his way up. Anything seemed possible. Even the girl
in the photo.
  "That's Coach Messier's daughter," he was told. "She's coming to visit
here next week. You better stay away."
  Blum grinned. "Betcha 20 bucks I'm dating her before she leaves."
  And he would  win the bet -- but never collect the money. For Blum, it was
always more about fun than money anyhow. He charmed Jennifer Messier the way
he charmed everyone, made her laugh, got her to stay. Soon Blum,  the life of
every party, was in the NHL, playing with the Edmonton Oilers, then the Boston
Bruins. Less than a year later he was walking down the aisle with the girl
from the picture, and the biggest  stars in hockey were wearing tuxedos and
shaking his hand. Gretzky. Coffey. Mark Messier, his new brother-in-law.
  "I was an NHL player," Blum recalls. "I felt invincible."
  Why not? He had risen  from the Detroit suburbs, gone to Michigan without
a scholarship, walked on the hockey team, become a star defenseman. Now he was
trading hits with the NHL elite. True, he was hardly an All-Star, more  like a
journeyman, back and forth from majors to minors. But he would last eight
years in the NHL, four teams, reach the playoffs several times, including
1985, when the Bruins played the Canadiens in  the hallowed Montreal Forum.
  "The best game we ever played. I can still see it, Game 4, we were losing,
 4-1, in our building, and we came back to win, 7-6. Nobody gave us a chance.
But we fought  back. Then we went to the Forum and had it 0-0 until the final
minute . . ."
  He pauses, his eyes so far-away you can hear the blades scraping ice.
  "And then they scored with 51 seconds left.  Naslund to Tremblay back to
Naslund . . . goal. We lost, 1-0."
  He sips his coffee. 
  "Yeah," he sighs.
  So much for the thrills.
 
It all crashed around him 
  Now for the agony. When  the NHL no longer needed him, Blum still wanted
what most players want, to hang around the game, somewhere, somehow, to coach,
even at the lowest level. He would go to Moose Jaw, Medicine Hat, the ends  of
the Earth. But his wife, used to the comforts of the NHL -- and, according to
some acquaintances, used to measuring success by brother Mark's high standards
-- wanted no part of the nomadic, carry- your-own-bags  minor league life.
  "She wanted me to take a 9-to-5 job, be a salesman, stay in one place,"
Blum says. They had a daughter, Rachel, who was 3 years old. So Blum tried.
Telemarketing. Real estate.  He didn't last long. And his drinking didn't
help. He had been fairly disciplined about alcohol in the NHL -- meaning he
didn't drink before games. Never mind that he saw teammates throwing up during
 practice, still hung over from the night before. Never mind that he'd been
stopped many times on the roads, swerving, under the influence, but cops would
recognize him and wave him on.
  Back then  he was in The Show. You can play? You're excused. The great lie
hid inside the dark glass bottles.
  Until one night, in January 1993, less than a year after he'd retired from
hockey. He went to a  Boston party with a woman he'd met in a bar. By this
point, he and his wife were separated -- even though she was three months
pregnant. And the woman in the bar treated Blum like a star. He missed that.
She wore a mini-skirt. He liked that. They went to the party, they drank. They
went to a bar, drank some more.
  He was driving home in his Chevy van, it was dark and cold and he was
woozy and he  sped around a curve on Storrow Drive, which snakes along the
Charles River, and . . . bang!
  He plowed into the back of a police car. 
  Glass smashed. Metal crunched. "It happened so fast . . ." Blum says, like
they always say when life goes to hell.
  Good-time Johnny's Got the Blues.
 
A family outcast 
  A police officer, sitting in the car, was injured. TV crews arrived. Blum
and the woman in the mini-skirt were all over the news. He was arrested,
humiliated. Two days later, his wife left with their baby girl -- "She said
she couldn't take it any more" -- and returned to the  sanctuary of the
Messier family in Hilton Head, S.C.
  And Blum began his fast slide down the rainbow.
  He found work in a bar, a stupid move. He'd drink an entire bottle of
vodka in one evening.  On some nights he'd down as many as 15 beers. When
hockey players were around, he drank to remember. And when he wasn't welcome
for the birth of his second child, he drank to forget.
  "That really  hurt me. I wanted to be there so badly. But the (Messier)
parents were pretty ticked off at me. And I didn't want to do anything to hurt
the health of the child, you know?"
  It wasn't until three  weeks later that he got to see his newborn
daughter.  He flew to South Carolina, and his wife drove to his hotel.
  "I told her I was sorry. She said thank God you're all right and the
baby's all  right. She was such a beautiful kid. We named her Kathleen. We had
a couple hours together."
  He sighs now, takes another sip of coffee.
  "That was a pretty good day."
  And then came the  rest.
 
'Then came the . . . incident' 
  Blum bounced around. Worked some hockey camps. Kept pouring alcohol -- for
others, for himself. Separated from his children, and denied visitation, he
was  desperate to stay with hockey, the only thing that gave him a sense of
self-worth. He went to Florida and took a job as player-coach with the Daytona
Beach Sun Devils, in something called the Sunshine  League.
  "He was a good coach," admits Doris Delannoy, the executive secretary and
wife of one of the owners. "Everybody liked him. But then came the . . .
incident."
  It was December. The holidays.  Blum had actually stopped drinking,
briefly,  trying to clean himself up, bury  himself in his coaching. But the
same way he capped the bottle, he also capped his depression. Hockey players,
NHL players,  aren't supposed to cry. "I never allowed myself that. I never
allowed myself to talk about it with anyone."
  "You gotta understand," says Mike Rataj, a Detroit lawyer and Blum's best
friend since  childhood, "not seeing his kids was killing him. We all come
from neighborhood families where you go over to each other's houses at
Christmas. And here's Blummer, all alone, in Florida."
  This is  the other side of the pro sports high life. You're 34, your glory
is behind you, your marriage is dust, your children are out of reach. Seeking
comfort, you go to church, midnight mass, and you see all  these normal
families, holding hands. 
  John Blum snapped.
  "I am God! I am God! I am God! . . ."
 
He's come home 
  When he got out of the hospital -- after two weeks --  he tried once
again to see his children. But his wife asked the NHL to get involved. Before
he knew it, Blum was whisked to Hazelton, a rehab facility in Minnesota which
has housed many a famous athlete -- including  Bob Probert, the hero to so
many boozy Red Wings fans. There, roomed with a former banker, in a small
space that looked out on snow and trees, Blum began to face life after the
cheering stops.
  "The  first meeting, where you stand up and say 'I am an alcoholic'? I
stood up and said I'm a hockey player, and I'm here because I got to do
whatever the bleep I wanted to. It was carte blanche. You go to  bars, people
buy you drinks. You get pulled over, they let you off. You're invincible."
  He said this word, "invincible" in a room full of addicts. When the irony
echoed off the walls, he had taken  the first step toward recovery.
  Which brings us to where he is today. Back home in Warren. Living humbly
in the basement of his old house on Palomino Street. Once he made $140,000 a
year in the  NHL. Now he gets $350 a week, and bus trips that take up to 17
hours.
  And yet, a new start is a new start. Blum -- who never figured to play
again -- loves being a Falcons defenseman, teaching the  kids the NHL tricks,
being the inspirational leader of the team, even if they do call him
"Grandpa."
  He leaves tickets each night for his father and his sister, which lessens
the sting of not leaving  them for his wife and children. Although the Blums
officially divorced in July, he writes to his oldest daughter, Rachel, and she
sends him drawings of giraffes. He saw his kids four months ago, and plans to
see them again soon. "I've come full circle," he says. "I've come home."
  Understand this: John Blum is not alone. There are countless former
athletes out there, left spinning when the sport  is yanked from under them
like some magician's tablecloth. And every wink at their drinking, every
excuse made for their behavior when they were big time, is like a weight on
their ankles now. Many end  up broke. Many end up divorced. Some end up dead.
  "It's funny, I really did used to feel like I was a God," Blum says.
  And now? 
  "Just a man. A humble one."
  What's that old expression?  Good to the last drop? Blum, who has been
sober since February, lifts his cup, then, perhaps practicing a new habit,
lowers it and throws it away. Good-time Johnny Pays His Dues. Sometimes, the
good  can't start until the last drop is really gone.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
NHL; HOCKEY; FALCONS; CAREER; PSYCHIATRIC; HOSPITAL; RETIREMENT;JOHN BLUM; BIOGRAPHY; MAJOR; STORY; COLUMN; DETROIT RED WINGS; DREDWINGS;ILLNESS; ATHLETE;Red Wings
</KEYWORDS>
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