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<UID>
9805110082
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
980511
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, May 11, 1998
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT; SPORTS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1998, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
WHEN A SHOT FELLS GOLIATH, IT PROVES WE'RE ALL VULNERABLE
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
Chris Pronger is as big as they come. He is 6 feet, 5 inches tall, with a
beefy frame, pounds of muscle and an impish face that says if you want the
rough stuff, that's fine by him. With his front teeth out -- and they are out
when he plays -- he is the picture of the schoolyard bully, a Goliath on
skates.
  
But a little piece of rubber felled Goliath on Sunday. It began as a shot and
ended like a bullet, flying from the stick of Dmitri Mironov and landing
square in Pronger's chest, near his sixth rib, just below his heart. The puck
was traveling at around 85 m.p.h. and Pronger, maybe the toughest guy on the
ice, doubled over in apparent pain and shock. He tried to skate away, took a
few steps, then fell flat, a redwood dropping in a forest. Players waved
frantically for the trainers. Pronger was on his back, his eyes open in
ghostly fashion, vacant from the inside.

Everybody's touchable. Big guys, small guys, everybody. The trainers raced out
and immediately checked Pronger's pulse. It was falling.
  
"DO SOMETHING!" players yelled.
  
The trainers secured Pronger's head and cut open his jersey, slicing from the
bottom up, worried that his heart was in spasm and they would need to revive
him with CPR. When the jersey peeled away, several players recoiled in shock.
  
"He had a red mark the size of a puck on his skin," recalled Detroit trainer
John Wharton.
  
Wharton, with the St. Louis medical staff, was crouching around the
23-year-old defenseman, ready for the worst. Then, suddenly, he snapped back.
His heart resumed its rhythm, his eyes returned from the outer limits. He
mumbled something about "my parents are in the stands ...tell them I'm OK."
  
They put him on a stretcher. They wheeled him to an ambulance. The lights went
on and the ambulance sped to the hospital.
  
Everybody's touchable.
  

  
'Everyone was rattled'
  
This would prove to be a theme on a brutal Sunday afternoon at Joe Louis
Arena, from the life and death lessons that Pronger offered, to the less
significant overtones of the actual game. Everybody's touchable. Even fans who
jeered Pronger were moved enough to cheer when he was wheeled off.
  
"I think everyone was rattled after the things with Chris," said Red Wings
forward Brendan Shanahan. "I mean, when the PA announcer calls for his mother
to come down from the stands, and here it is, Mother's Day, well, it sheds a
lot of perspective on the sport."
  
The sport -- and the puck. People associate toughness in hockey with fists in
the face, sticks in the knees and bodies against the boards. But the little
black object of desire can be the most lethal weapon in the game.
  
"I was thinking about that kid in western Canada who got hit in the chest and
died," said Wings captain Steve Yzerman. "I've seen guys hit in the head, hit
in the throat. When you think about it, it's a surprise we don't get hit more
often."
  
Hockey players wear more padding than most athletes. It still doesn't cover
everything. The area where the puck hit Pronger had little more than cloth as
protection.
  
You think about a guy like this, so tough, so young, so big, and he's whittled
down with a single blow. Later on Sunday, St. Louis forward Terry Yake took a
slap shot in the head, went down hard and grabbed at his helmet as if it were
crushing his skull.
  
"I could feel it swelling underneath," Yake said in the locker room afterward.
There was a bump the size of a golf ball protruding from his forehead, topped
by blood-soaked stitches.
  
Yake, of course, will want to play Tuesday night in Game 3. And so, too, I
imagine, will Pronger, the Blues' captain. Doctors and trainers I spoke with
agreed that, if his heart checks out OK -- and he was being kept over in the
Detroit hospital Sunday night -- there is no medical reason he couldn't play.
  
Still, you'd hate to be the doctor who makes that call. When Pronger went down
Sunday, many of us thought of Reggie Lewis, the Celtics star who collapsed
from heart problems a few years ago. He died, and doctors are still arguing
over that one.
  
Everybody's touchable.
  

  
Blues will be back for more
  
Pronger's momentary horror -- early in the third period -- sucked the life out
of the remainder of this contest. But the outcome had already been determined,
thanks to a second-period explosion of Detroit goals. This St. Louis team,
which had not lost a game all postseason, had now lost one. Its
invulnerability was gone.
  
Everybody's touchable.
  
Proving that was the Wings' first objective. Remember that playoff series are
about mental warfare as much as physical. Until Sunday, the Blues had been
scar-free in the playoffs. Five victories, no losses. A team gets used to
that. A team rolls on that. A team swells with confidence on that.
  
So before the Wings could even think of toppling the Blues, they had to dent
them. That's what Sunday was all about. Until Game 2 of this second-round
series, the Blues had not scored fewer than two goals or surrendered more than
three in any of this year's playoff games.
  
That all changed Sunday.
  
Meanwhile, goalie Chris Osgood delivered the kind of day he must have in his
arsenal, an unbeatable day, a day where he not only makes the stops he's
supposed to make, but the ones he's not supposed to make. Osgood stonewalled a
number of point-blank St. Louis attacks, reminding the Blues that somebody
besides Grant Fuhr is wearing a mask out there.
  
And the series is tied. Remember, folks, these things are novels. Lots of
twists and turns. The theme Sunday was how even the seemingly untouchable can
be wounded. Pronger and the Blues will both be back for more. How fierce is
the question.
  
We'll know soon enough.
  
To leave a message for Mitch Albom, call 1-313-223-4581. He will sign copies
of his best-selling book, "Tuesdays With Morrie," 7:30-8:30 tonight at Borders
in Ann Arbor and 1-2 p.m. Saturday at Little Professor in Plymouth.
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<DISCLAIMER>
THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED ARTICLE.
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<KEYWORDS>
INJURY;HOCKEY;CHRIS PRONGER;COLUMN
</KEYWORDS>
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