<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9806010238
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
980530
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Saturday, May 30, 1998
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo JULIAN H. GONZALEZ/Detroit Free Press
Photo WILLIAM ARCHIE/Detroit Free Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

About time: Martin LaPointe's late goal stops the Stars' comeback.
They had cut a 4-0 lead to 4-3. (CUTLINE RAN IN METRO FINAL CHASER EDITION
ONLY.)

The Wings' Darren McCarty gets physical Friday night, sending the Stars'
Patrick Cote to the ice.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1998, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
LAST ONE STANDING
FROM HITSVILLE TO SNOOZEVILLE TO CLIFF-HANGER
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
So which part do you want to hear about? The Dream, The Sleep, The Nightmare
or The Wake-Up? You can say a lot about the Red Wings Friday night. You can't
say they didn't give you a taste of everything.
  
The first chunk of evening was too good to be true, shots deflecting off
opponents' skates into the net, the scoreboard flipping like a pinball
machine. One goal. Two goals. Three. Four. A dream, right?

Sure. And the next chunk was a deep sleep, the Wings snoring through a couple
of Dallas goals, sagging, rolling over, enjoying the pillow of their lead.
  
The third chunk was a nightmare, when, less than halfway through the final
period, Mike Modano shoved a puck under Chris Osgood's legs, and the crowd
yelled "IN THE CREASE!" but the officials said, "The goal counts," and,
suddenly, it was a one-goal lead and the Wings were wiping their eyes like
firemen caught in their pajamas.
  
The final chunk was putting that fire out. Wake up. The house is burning. The
Wings shook off their lethargy while sliding down the pole. For the next eight
minutes, I actually heard women screaming every time the Stars came into the
Wings' zone. That's how frantic it was.
  
But finally, when Martin Lapointe swooped around the back of the Stars' net,
left goalie Eddie Belfour sprawling on the ice, and curled back in front for a
quick shot through the legs of the desperately returning Belfour -- well, the
night had its ending, the fans had their money's worth.
  
And coach Scotty Bowman had a few of his remaining hairs turn gray.
  
"We got caught watching the scoreboard," Bowman admitted, after the Wings blew
three-quarters of a 4-0 lead before bouncing back for a 5-3 victory and a 2-1
advantage in this Western Conference championship series. "We were just
dumping the puck in the neutral zone. Things were almost going too well for us
early."
  
Can that happen? Sure it can. Remember that old song "Life could be a dream .
. ."? What's the next word?
  
Sh-boom. As in crash.
  
Somebody pass the Maalox.
  

  
Nick at night
  

  
"How hard did you hit Belfour?" Lapointe was asked in the hallway after the
victory.
  
"Shheeesh," he said, rolling his eyes.
  
"Well, did you hit him at all?"
  
"I hit his stick," he said. "He went for a dive. That's when I knew to go
right in front of the net and shoot."
  
The feeling on the Wings was more relief than exultation.
  
Of course, they never would have been in that situation had they not amassed a
hefty lead -- something you're not supposed to be able to do on Belfour and
the Stars. For this, Detroit should thank its quiet men. Speak softly, swing a
mean stick. Among the first three players to score goals for the Wings, I
don't think you could account for one colorful quote.
  
Big deal. Mum's the word. This, after all, was not a press conference, it was
a hockey game, and the winner would be in excellent position to scale the wall
of this conference championship. It was already a noisy crowd on a noisy
night, a time where words would be lost and deeds would stand out.
  
So perhaps it was fitting that one Detroit goal came from Jamie Macoun, maybe
the most under-interviewed player on the Red Wings, and another came from
Brent Gilchrist, the second-most under-interviewed player, and two came from
Nick Lidstrom, who often speaks to open notebooks but very rarely fills a
page.
  
A few more words on Lidstrom. Here he was Friday, on a power play (Wings fans
yell, "hallelujah!") and he sent a screamer to the net that dinged off Derian
Hatcher's skate, smacked into Belfour's inner leg, and ricocheted into the net
for a 2-0 lead. Minnesota Fats couldn't have made that shot.
  
And then, in the second period, here was Lidstrom again, out top, like Reggie
Miller from three-point land, like John Elway 50 yards from the end zone, and
he whizzed another shot that smoked past Belfour's left shoulder for a 3-0
lead.
  
"I got lucky tonight," he said of his two slap-shot goals. "We talked about
putting shots on net and hoping for rebounds and bounces. Both of my goals hit
other guys on the way in."
  
Not that Detroiters care. It's just more of the St. Nick legend. He is there
when the Wings need him most, whether poking pucks away from superstars, or
slapping pucks past goalies from long distance. What's amazing about Lidstrom
is how he does both things, defense and offense, with so little contact. He is
almost -- and I mean this as a compliment -- polite out there, never needing
to resort to physical abuse, angry stick work or fisticuffs to get his job
done.
  
After his second goal, he smiled only briefly as his teammates slapped him on
the helmet. This is Lidstrom. He comes, he plays, he smiles, and nods as he
leaves. He is as dedicated as he is polite, as polite as he is serious, as
serious as he is effective. I'll tell you this much: The Wings could do worse
than to rip up the last year of this 28-year-old's contract and give him a fat
new one, before he gets serious about going home to Sweden.
  

  
The happy ending
  

  
Of course, Lidstrom's night would have been washed away if the Wings hadn't
been able to hold the lead. And they almost didn't. "When you have a 4-0 lead,
you don't have a lot of adrenaline," Lapointe admitted. "We had to find it
fast."
  
And even though they did, if you ask me, Dallas made as much of a point in
this game as Detroit. The Stars could have folded like pita bread, given up
the chase and saved it for another night. There are few things as uphill as a
four-goal deficit in another team's building -- especially when the other team
is the defending Stanley Cup champion -- but Dallas played as if programmed by
a computer. The Stars kept coming, even as some Wings fans were leaving. They
seemed unaffected by their deficit, kept chasing loose pucks, stealing passes,
breaking up chances.
  
"They probably feel they should have won this game," Macoun said later. "And
who knows? Maybe they should have."
  
Let Detroit take that as a warning.
  
For now, there is the victory, The Sunrise after The Dream, The Sleep, The
Nightmare and The Wake-Up. There is also this: Home was sweet. That was a
change. At least half the time in this playoff march, Joe Louis Arena has been
less a friend than a foe. Familiarity bred contentment. Contentment meant a
loss.
  
On Friday night, there was only enough contentment for a scare, not a defeat.
And the series has tipped, for the moment, in favor of the defending champs.
Still, when the final horn sounded, the Wings exhaled, and the PA system
played "Oh, What a Night." You could say that again. Wake us up on Sunday.
  
To leave a message for Mitch Albom, call 1-313-223-4581.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>
THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED ARTICLE.
</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN;RED WINGS;HOCKEY
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
