<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9501230610
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
950622
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, June 22, 1995
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
THE FINALS; SPECIAL WRAP-AROUND SECTION
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1995, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
IF ANYONE CAN SPARK DETROIT, IT'S DINO
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
He looks like that guy who played Baretta on TV -- Robert Blake, his name
was, a squat, muscular punk with a short fuse. And, come to think of it, you
half expect Dino Ciccarelli to haul off and  coldcock somebody, too. When
happy and smiling, Dino is tough-looking. When frustrated, as he is these
days, you do not want to stand too close, lest he explode and land pieces of
himself all over you.

  "The leaders on this team have to do what got them here," he said
Wednesday, his forehead creased as if he were  aiming a rifle. "Sergei has to
skate and shoot. Stevie has to skate and shoot. And  a guy like me . . . "

  He set his jaw. He heaved a sigh. 
  "A guy like me has to hit somebody, be feisty, get something started."
  Get something started. If there is one pirate the Red Wings can rally
around this evening, as their Stanley Cup dreams walk the gangplank in the
Meadowlands, it is No. 22, Ciccarelli, who, of all the Wings so far in these
finals, has one-third of the scoring,  two-thirds of the best positioning, and
nearly all of the opponent's attention when he's on the ice.
  Ciccarelli needs to take over shifts the way a bee takes over a picnic. He
needs people swatting,  making faces, annoyed, but moving away, a little
uncertain, a little scared.
  Let's face it. Dino is a pest. But -- as Pistons fans once said of Bill
Laimbeer -- he's our pest. He does a few things well, like scoring goals and
drawing penalties, but what he does best is get you off your game. 
  And that, in the big fat hole of an 0-2 deficit, is what the Wings need to
do most to these sitting-pretty  Devils. Get them off their game. It's a dirty
job.
  Do it, Dino.
 
Giving the Devils their due
  "I've been so consumed by these playoffs, I haven't enjoyed myself in
weeks," he said. "Last night,  after the game, I couldn't sleep, so I stayed
up until 2:30 watching the tape, then I slept a little, then I got up this
morning and watched it again. That's my day. I keep seeing these plays. I
can't get them out of my mind. . . ."
  His eyes narrowed, looking far away. With his unshaven face, 1968
sideburns, and a plum-colored scar under his right eye, it was like listening
to the confessions  of a serial killer.
  Ciccarelli is possessed these days. He played that way Tuesday night, Game
2, coming out as wild as a banshee, poking, prodding and elbowing the toughest
guy on the Devils, defenseman  Scott Stevens, until Stevens finally got so
annoyed he retaliated and was whistled for a penalty.
  Dino done it.
  Later, in the second period, here was Ciccarelli on the power play, in
front of  the net, getting knocked down, slashed by the goalie, held by the
defenseman, whacked, cursed, sticked -- and he still managed to poke a puck
under Martin Brodeur's armpit, where it went to Slava Kozlov  for the Wings'
first goal.
  Dino done it.
  During one stretch in the final period, he fought for a puck against the
boards, and it looked like he would battle a tank division to get it. His body
 was churning, thumping against the wall as well as other players. His helmet
went flying. Still he fought, one Devil, two Devils, three Devils, he fought
with feet, legs, knees, whatever. It was so electrifying  that even though all
he was doing was pursuing a dormant puck, the crowd rippled, then roared.
  "DI-NO! DI-NO! DI-NO!"
  He needs to have that effect on his team tonight. He needs to show his
fellow Wings that the only way out of being buried alive is to scratch and
claw and roll and rise up. Of all the players on the Detroit roster, it is
hard to imagine any having a more disruptive effect in this  series -- or
scoring more than one goal a game -- than Ciccarelli. After all, the way to
beat Brodeur, they say, is to fire a bad shot and get him with the rebound.
  That's what Dino does.
 
Is this  his final chance?
  He is already a villain in New Jersey. The last time Devils fans saw
Ciccarelli in the playoffs, he was with Washington, and was on fire. Something
like eight goals in six games.  So they hate him. They're ready to boo him.
Ask him if he cares.
  "They have to hate someone," he said. "They can't be any worse than Chicago
fans. In the old building they used to throw beer bottles.  I survived that."
  At 35, he has survived a lot. Three teams. Several suspensions. And, in his
long career, only one previous Stanley Cup final. With Minnesota. His team was
wiped out by the Islanders.
  That was 1981. Ciccarelli was a rookie. He set a record that still stands,
14 goals, 21 points -- most ever for a rookie in a playoff season. He was
young and fresh, and he thought every June would  be another chance.
  "That's why I tell the guys it doesn't mean anything to just make the
finals. Look at me. I may never get back here again."
  He sighed.  Dino is not sleeping well. He is grumpy  and moody.
  This is good. All the Wings should be this way.
  You can have your finesse guys, because New Jersey eats finesse guys. And
you can have your cautious defensemen, because New Jersey  plays defense
better than anyone else, anyhow.
  Here is what I know: When you're on the ledge, in a series where the breaks
are rare, winning is a dirty job. It takes a pest like Ciccarelli to get  the
dirty job done.
  Do it, Dino.
  Somebody has to.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
DINO CICCARELLI; DREDWINGS; COLUMN; HOCKEY; GAME 3;Red Wings
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
