Red Wings Want 42-Year Drought Over
By Harry Atkins
AP Sports Writer
Tuesday, May 27, 1997 5:20 pm EDT
DETROIT (AP) -- It was no accident that Steve Yzerman hardly
touched the Campbell Bowl, awarded to the winners of the Western
Conference finals. It brought back too many painful memories.
The Red Wings won the bowl in 1995, too. Yzerman, when handed
the bowl on that occasion, hoisted it over his head. He turned,
beaming joyously as the crowd in Joe Louis Arena showered the team
with cheers.
``The last time we won it, it was the first time for everybody
and we were pretty excited,'' said forward Darren McCarty.
The 1995 euphoria didn't last, however. Detroit was swept in the
finals by the New Jersey Devils.
But the story gets worse. The Red Wings bring a lot of heavy
baggage to this year's finals with the Philadelphia Flyers.
Last year, the Red Wings scored goals by the truckload as they
won an NHL-record 62 games. Yet they didn't even reach the Cup
finals, eliminated instead in six games by the Avalanche in the
conference finals.
``You realize that finishing second means absolutely nothing,''
Yzerman said.
And it's not just the players on this team who are suffering.
It's the entire franchise. The Red Wings, after all, have not won a
Cup championship since 1955. Their 42-year drought is the longest
in the NHL.
``We haven't won anything yet,'' said Brendan Shanahan, one of
many players brought in to change that. ``We knocked off the
defending champions, but that doesn't make us champions, yet.''
Fans in this title-hungry town seem to feel this, too. They
roared after Monday night's 3-1 triumph sent the defending champion
Avalanche packing. Yet there wasn't so much as a single octopus
tossed on the ice. True, the slimy sea creatures -- an old playoff
tradition in Detroit -- were banned by the NHL this year. But almost
everybody expected at least one or two would be pirated past
security.
``The way the city and the state has supported this team, it
will be chaos for the entire summer if we win it,'' said goalie
Mike Vernon, who has a hard-earned 1.17 goals against average
during these playoffs.
It is a minor miracle that Vernon is even on this team. Two
years ago, he was labeled as the fall guy after Detroit was swept
by the Devils. This year, the Red Wings made sweeping changes. The
emphasis was on getting bigger, stronger and younger.
Detroit was no longer interested in scoring a ton of goals and
winning regular season titles. Playoff hockey is different. So the
Red Wings threw all their energies into becoming a better playoff
team.
Popular players like Paul Coffey, Dino Ciccarelli and Keith
Primeau were sent packing. They were replaced by players like
Shanahan, Martin Lapointe and Larry Murphy.
Those who were not traded, who have stayed and slugged it out
for the past two years, want to feel like their time has come.
There was relief etched on many faces after finally paying back
Colorado.
In all their past failures, the Red Wings seemed always to face
a hot goalie. This time, it appears to be Detroit riding a hot
netminder. Yet there is a story there, too.
For most of the season, Chris Osgood was Detroit's regular
goalie. It looked for all the world as though Vernon might also be
traded. But Scotty Bowman, trying to become the first coach to win
Cup championships with three different teams, went with Vernon in
the playoffs.
``It's been a long year for us,'' Vernon said. ``But we keep
getting better as a team. We keep gaining more and more confidence.
There's a lot of character here on this team.''
Still, they are only halfway home. There still is the memory of
that 1995 finals sweep in the New Jersey swamp.
``Our young guys, like McCarty, Lapointe, (Viacheslav) Kozlov,
(Sergei) Fedorov, (Nicklas) Lidstrom, have all played a lot of
hockey since then,'' Yzerman said. ``They've been through a lot and
are more comfortable with every situation we'll face.''
© Copyright 1997 The Associated Press
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