<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9501240131
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
950626
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, June 26, 1995
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
THE FINALS; SPECIAL WRAPAROUND SECTION
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1995, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
SEVEN DAYS OF HELL SPOIL MONTHS OF FUN
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. --  Down the hall you could hear the noise, the
screams and cheers of a championship party. Bright lights beamed for TV
reporters as champagne-soaked players hugged wives,  parents, pretty much
anyone who passed by. NHL officials raced back and forth, using walkie-talkies
to monitor the location of the large silver cup, the Stanley Cup, which was
bouncing happily from one  New Jersey Devil to another. Security guards
loosened their ties, wiped away the sweat and high-fived guests.
"Unbelievable!" one of them yelled over the din. "Is this unbelievable, or
what?"

  Up  the hall, Steve Yzerman, dressed in a gray suit, stepped out from
behind a big steel door and stood there, all alone. He crossed his arms and
looked down. Yzerman is not usually alone after a hockey  game, not for long,
so this was one of those accidental moments when he almost didn't know what to
do. He listened to the party noise for a moment. As usual, it was someone
else's party.

  "You know  what I was thinking tonight?" he said. "All during the third
period, when the fans started their cheer and there was all that excitement in
the building? I kept wishing I was in their shoes."
  He  sighed. "Right now, I don't feel much like a Stanley Cup finalist."
  Six months of heaven, seven  days of hell. This will be the last sad
hockey column in a tornado of sad hockey columns lately,  which is strange,
because Detroit didn't start writing sad hockey columns until last week. Until
then, things were happy and fresh, full of miracle and wonder. The best team
in the business. Home ice  advantage. Big bold predictions. The end of Lord
Stanley's 40-year curse.
  Then came the puck drop, 8:20 p.m June 17, and from that Saturday night
until the next Saturday night, the bad news didn't  stop. It was like a broken
pipe in the basement.
  Six months of heaven, seven days of hell.
  "We were on the top of the world," Yzerman said wistfully, as if talking
about high school. Someone  asked whether what Paul Coffey had said was true:
That losing in the finals hurts just as much as losing in the first round.
  Yzerman nodded. "Maybe more."
  Around the corner, standing by the  bus, Coffey was dressed for the trip
home. Someone asked his thoughts right after the sweep.
  "In American sports," he said, tapping his shoe on the concrete floor,
"one day you're on top, the next  day, you're a piece of bleep."
  He coughed. "Pardon my French."
The good ol' days
  Six months of heaven, seven days of hell. It might be therapeutic to give
a moment to the highs: The quick  work made of the Dallas Stars. The splendid
retribution against the San Jose Sharks. The nail-biting overtimes against the
Chicago Blackhawks. The feeling during those first three playoff rounds was
invincibility, a bulletproof chest. The Wings could pile on the goals, but
they could also bruise and bump. When they needed heroes, they just took
turns, Nicklas Lidstrom whacking a 58-foot slap shot  to win it, or Slava
Kozlov poking in a breakaway in double overtime. Injuries didn't stop them.
Enemy crowds didn't stop them. They were good and lucky.
  And next thing you knew, Yzerman was shaking  the Western Conference
trophy over his head at Joe Louis Arena, and we had the wildest hockey moment
ever in that building.
  Remember? This was when Mike Vernon was saying, "Aw, shucks, no big deal,"
 instead of ducking reporters who questioned his big-game nerve in the finals.
This was when Shawn Burr was laughing through his playoff goatee, instead of
looking down, in tears, his face clean-shaven,  having been benched for the
first time in his playoff career.
  Remember? This was when Coffey was the Socrates of the locker room,
instead of the guy who didn't come up big, who was lying on the  ice, in pain
from a puck, when the winning goal was scored in Game 2.
  "What would you change if you could do this series over?" Coffey was
asked.
  "For starters," he said, "I wouldn't go down  to block that shot."
  What would they change? Vernon could have played much better. The defense
could have played much better. The offensive stars, Yzerman, Kozlov, Ray
Sheppard, Sergei Fedorov, could have played much better. The coaches could
have done better.
  You know what? It might not have mattered. Detroit fans forget there was
another team here, and its players also wanted the Cup  desperately. The
Devils had talent. The Devils had motivation. They grabbed this series early,
like a wrestler making a quick takedown. After that, it was just a question of
the pin.
Wait till next  year
  As the bus coughed out exhaust fumes, Keith Primeau made his way down the
tunnel. The party noise grew more distant.
  "I had wanted to watch them get the Cup," Primeau said. "I wanted it  to
hurt as long as it could. That way I never forget it."
  "Why didn't you?" he was asked.
  "Because my team went off the ice. We came on the ice as a team, we go off
the ice as a team."
  Credit them for that, for sticking together through this collapse, for not
pointing fingers, not calling names. Credit them for beating first-round
jinxes, for sacrificing stardom for team play, for  going further than the  28
Wings teams before them.
  Six months of heaven, seven days of hell. This the last sad hockey column.
In a few weeks, the bitterness will be gone, and some of the Wings  will begin
to work out, break a sweat and think, as athletes must do -- as good fans do,
too -- about a new season, when the end will be better than the beginning, and
the final party will not be down  the hall.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN; DREDWINGS; STANLEY CUP;Red Wings
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
