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Guyute
04-17-2003, 04:32 PM
edited to say Rio, you may want to skip this for now. ;)

well I must say, I'm surprised that these columns are written without too much snideness, condescension, excuses, etc...

I don't really like the first one.. which is more of Albom's style. but the following 2 are good. :evil:

buh-bye wings.


MITCH ALBOM: So long, Stanley

Anaheim ousts Cup champions from playoffs in 4 straight
April 17, 2003
BY MITCH ALBOM
FREE PRESS COLUMNIST

ANAHEIM, Calif. -- And that's that.

No repeat title. No championship parade. No Colorado or Dallas. No May. No June. No anything, really -- which is what happens when you suffer the biggest no of all: no wins.

Four times the Red Wings took their pride and power onto the ice against the Anaheim Mighty Ducks, a team with a laughable name and a nonexistent tradition, and four times they skated off humbled. Wednesday night was the final indignity, a night when the Wings vowed they would show what they were about.

Here's what they're about: They're about home now, done for the year, the first team eliminated from this year's playoffs. The team got dressed. The plane took off.

And that's that.

"Four straight?" you could hear Wings fans whispering, after Detroit was swept away with a 3-2 overtime defeat in Game 4. "It's a joke, right? It can't really have happened? Four straight?"

It happened. Here was Mathieu Dandenault, asleep at the wheel, allowing Adam Oates to steal the puck like a purse snatcher on the subway. Oates passed to Paul Kariya, Kariya went high on Curtis Joseph, and the Wings' only lead of the game was gone.

Here were Brendan Shanahan, Brett Hull, Sergei Fedorov, the biggest guns in the Detroit arsenal, firing into Anaheim's Jean-Sebastien Giguere as if he were made of Kevlar. Nothing but scratches.

Here was the third period, with a whizzing shot from a fourth-line guy named Jason Krog getting past the now-beleaguered Joseph.

"Jason Krog?" you could hear the fans say. "JASON KROG?!"

And finally, in overtime, here was Steve Rucchin firing the inevitable dagger past Joseph and into the history books.

"SWEEP! SWEEP!" yelled the Anaheim crowd.

Swept. Days from now, months from now -- maybe even years from now -- these moments will come back to the Red Wings, haunting them with the worst kind of echoes. The clanged posts, the missed defensive moves, the goalie straying from the net -- all those false little stitches in the fabric, coming unraveled in one gnawing realization: You only get so many chances at a Stanley Cup.

And in 2003, a beautifully equipped machine never got out of the garage.

The long road back
Even up to game time, the Wings were talking about making history. They knew only two teams had come back from a 3-0 deficit in the NHL playoffs, but to a man they felt they were destined to make it three.

"If any team can do it . . ." coach Dave Lewis said.

"If any team can do it . . ." Shanahan said.

"If any team can do it . . ." Fedorov said.

Maybe no team can do it, then. But remember, the Wings didn't just fail at coming back from a 3-0 deficit. They failed to win a game. You can spin that all you want. It still spells failure. On Wednesday night, they reached the pinnacle of frustration late in the second period, when even their best hockey could not yield a goal. Honestly, it was like watching a one-way scrimmage, so dominant were the Wings on offense. But watching them tying to crack Giguere was like watching thieves try to crack a Swiss bank vault. They threw everything at him. Darren McCarty with two hard shots -- denied! Shanahan on a pretty feed from Steve Yzerman -- denied! Yzerman making his own opening, spinning, firing -- denied! Fedorov with two screaming shots -- nothing! It was like chopping at a redwood tree.

At one point, a deflected shot by Mathieu Schneider flipped up in the air like a tossed coin, landed on Giguere's back, and still bounced off to the side of the net. That was pretty much the story for the Wings. Even gravity was on Anaheim's side.

By the end, as they skated off for the summer, the Wings appeared stunned. A team that, in the last part of the regular season, averaged four goals a game, could only manage six in a series?

"It's unthinkable," you could hear the Detroit fans say. "Isn't it?"

Not anymore. For the last week, the Red Wings were like an ogre taking punches from a leprechaun, saying, "That didn't hurt" and "That didn't hurt" -- and then toppling over dead. To the bitter end, they were in denial about Anaheim's team talents, privately crediting only the goaltender, Giguere, as the reason they were down, 3-0, instead of the opposite.

Yes, it's true, Giguere was unbelievable. Remarkable. Can't say enough. But he didn't score for the Ducks. He didn't fall asleep on defense. He didn't give up the questionable goals that Joseph did. He didn't steal the pucks or make the perfect passes the Ducks did at least once a game.

And if Giguere was the only reason they lost, that may say more about the Wings than we want to know. Remember, Giguere was in his first career playoff. His coach, Mike Babcock, is a first-year guy. Krog is considered a back-of-the-pack player -- and he had two goals in this series -- which is two more than Hull, Fedorov, Yzerman or Nicklas Lidstrom. The Ducks had never beaten the Wings in the playoffs before. How much history could the Wings trash in one series?

A lot. It's been more than half a century since a defending Stanley Cup champion was swept out in the first round. For better or worse, the Wings are back in the books.

A summer without hockey
The repercussions of this are staggering. This Detroit hockey machine is based on heavy income and heavy outcome, with the playoff kitty financing much of the pre- and in-season maneuvers. The Ilitch family's devotion to high-priced talent -- both current and potential -- will be severely tested now. This is an age-heavy team, with older players sucking a huge amount of the payroll. You can't trade them. If you cut them, you lose their leadership. If you lose their leadership, aren't you just like a lot of teams out there?

You see the problem. And the red ink doesn't compare to the black eye on the Red Wings' pride. Losing a tough first-round series is not unprecedented -- the Wings did it two years ago to the Los Angeles Kings. But losing four straight to a No. 7 seed when you have a Hall of Fame roster and a gaggle of young talent is not only historic, it's inexplicable.

That riddle will now consume our spring and summer hours, previously set aside for hockey. Instead of going indoors in early May, you can mow the lawn and say, "I can't believe the Wings lost like that." Instead of finding a sports bar in early June, you can hit the beach and say, "I still can't believe the Wings lost that way."

And while you're doing that, you can most likely say good-bye to familiar faces: Luc Robitaille, Igor Larionov, maybe even Fedorov and McCarty, all free agents who seem less essential after a goose egg in the playoffs.

But mostly what we say good-bye to is anticipation, adulation and exultation. They are replaced by frustration now, ours and theirs. For 18 months, Detroit has been a happy place for hockey, a sort of magic Puckville in which the best players played and the best fans watched.

All gone now. The best laid plans of mice and men just got hammered by Ducks. The team got dressed. The plane took off. There is no joy in Puckville; the mighty Red Wings have struck out.

Guyute
04-17-2003, 04:32 PM
edited to say Rio, you may want to skip this for now. ;)

well I must say, I'm surprised that these columns are written without too much snideness, condescension, excuses, etc...

I don't really like the first one.. which is more of Albom's style. but the following 2 are good. :evil:

buh-bye wings.


MITCH ALBOM: So long, Stanley

Anaheim ousts Cup champions from playoffs in 4 straight
April 17, 2003
BY MITCH ALBOM
FREE PRESS COLUMNIST

ANAHEIM, Calif. -- And that's that.

No repeat title. No championship parade. No Colorado or Dallas. No May. No June. No anything, really -- which is what happens when you suffer the biggest no of all: no wins.

Four times the Red Wings took their pride and power onto the ice against the Anaheim Mighty Ducks, a team with a laughable name and a nonexistent tradition, and four times they skated off humbled. Wednesday night was the final indignity, a night when the Wings vowed they would show what they were about.

Here's what they're about: They're about home now, done for the year, the first team eliminated from this year's playoffs. The team got dressed. The plane took off.

And that's that.

"Four straight?" you could hear Wings fans whispering, after Detroit was swept away with a 3-2 overtime defeat in Game 4. "It's a joke, right? It can't really have happened? Four straight?"

It happened. Here was Mathieu Dandenault, asleep at the wheel, allowing Adam Oates to steal the puck like a purse snatcher on the subway. Oates passed to Paul Kariya, Kariya went high on Curtis Joseph, and the Wings' only lead of the game was gone.

Here were Brendan Shanahan, Brett Hull, Sergei Fedorov, the biggest guns in the Detroit arsenal, firing into Anaheim's Jean-Sebastien Giguere as if he were made of Kevlar. Nothing but scratches.

Here was the third period, with a whizzing shot from a fourth-line guy named Jason Krog getting past the now-beleaguered Joseph.

"Jason Krog?" you could hear the fans say. "JASON KROG?!"

And finally, in overtime, here was Steve Rucchin firing the inevitable dagger past Joseph and into the history books.

"SWEEP! SWEEP!" yelled the Anaheim crowd.

Swept. Days from now, months from now -- maybe even years from now -- these moments will come back to the Red Wings, haunting them with the worst kind of echoes. The clanged posts, the missed defensive moves, the goalie straying from the net -- all those false little stitches in the fabric, coming unraveled in one gnawing realization: You only get so many chances at a Stanley Cup.

And in 2003, a beautifully equipped machine never got out of the garage.

The long road back
Even up to game time, the Wings were talking about making history. They knew only two teams had come back from a 3-0 deficit in the NHL playoffs, but to a man they felt they were destined to make it three.

"If any team can do it . . ." coach Dave Lewis said.

"If any team can do it . . ." Shanahan said.

"If any team can do it . . ." Fedorov said.

Maybe no team can do it, then. But remember, the Wings didn't just fail at coming back from a 3-0 deficit. They failed to win a game. You can spin that all you want. It still spells failure. On Wednesday night, they reached the pinnacle of frustration late in the second period, when even their best hockey could not yield a goal. Honestly, it was like watching a one-way scrimmage, so dominant were the Wings on offense. But watching them tying to crack Giguere was like watching thieves try to crack a Swiss bank vault. They threw everything at him. Darren McCarty with two hard shots -- denied! Shanahan on a pretty feed from Steve Yzerman -- denied! Yzerman making his own opening, spinning, firing -- denied! Fedorov with two screaming shots -- nothing! It was like chopping at a redwood tree.

At one point, a deflected shot by Mathieu Schneider flipped up in the air like a tossed coin, landed on Giguere's back, and still bounced off to the side of the net. That was pretty much the story for the Wings. Even gravity was on Anaheim's side.

By the end, as they skated off for the summer, the Wings appeared stunned. A team that, in the last part of the regular season, averaged four goals a game, could only manage six in a series?

"It's unthinkable," you could hear the Detroit fans say. "Isn't it?"

Not anymore. For the last week, the Red Wings were like an ogre taking punches from a leprechaun, saying, "That didn't hurt" and "That didn't hurt" -- and then toppling over dead. To the bitter end, they were in denial about Anaheim's team talents, privately crediting only the goaltender, Giguere, as the reason they were down, 3-0, instead of the opposite.

Yes, it's true, Giguere was unbelievable. Remarkable. Can't say enough. But he didn't score for the Ducks. He didn't fall asleep on defense. He didn't give up the questionable goals that Joseph did. He didn't steal the pucks or make the perfect passes the Ducks did at least once a game.

And if Giguere was the only reason they lost, that may say more about the Wings than we want to know. Remember, Giguere was in his first career playoff. His coach, Mike Babcock, is a first-year guy. Krog is considered a back-of-the-pack player -- and he had two goals in this series -- which is two more than Hull, Fedorov, Yzerman or Nicklas Lidstrom. The Ducks had never beaten the Wings in the playoffs before. How much history could the Wings trash in one series?

A lot. It's been more than half a century since a defending Stanley Cup champion was swept out in the first round. For better or worse, the Wings are back in the books.

A summer without hockey
The repercussions of this are staggering. This Detroit hockey machine is based on heavy income and heavy outcome, with the playoff kitty financing much of the pre- and in-season maneuvers. The Ilitch family's devotion to high-priced talent -- both current and potential -- will be severely tested now. This is an age-heavy team, with older players sucking a huge amount of the payroll. You can't trade them. If you cut them, you lose their leadership. If you lose their leadership, aren't you just like a lot of teams out there?

You see the problem. And the red ink doesn't compare to the black eye on the Red Wings' pride. Losing a tough first-round series is not unprecedented -- the Wings did it two years ago to the Los Angeles Kings. But losing four straight to a No. 7 seed when you have a Hall of Fame roster and a gaggle of young talent is not only historic, it's inexplicable.

That riddle will now consume our spring and summer hours, previously set aside for hockey. Instead of going indoors in early May, you can mow the lawn and say, "I can't believe the Wings lost like that." Instead of finding a sports bar in early June, you can hit the beach and say, "I still can't believe the Wings lost that way."

And while you're doing that, you can most likely say good-bye to familiar faces: Luc Robitaille, Igor Larionov, maybe even Fedorov and McCarty, all free agents who seem less essential after a goose egg in the playoffs.

But mostly what we say good-bye to is anticipation, adulation and exultation. They are replaced by frustration now, ours and theirs. For 18 months, Detroit has been a happy place for hockey, a sort of magic Puckville in which the best players played and the best fans watched.

All gone now. The best laid plans of mice and men just got hammered by Ducks. The team got dressed. The plane took off. There is no joy in Puckville; the mighty Red Wings have struck out.

Alicia
04-17-2003, 04:39 PM
I LOVE IT!!! :D :D :D

Alicia
04-17-2003, 04:39 PM
I LOVE IT!!! :D :D :D

StormShaman
04-17-2003, 04:52 PM
All I have to say to Mitch Albom is:

River. Cry me one.

StormShaman
04-17-2003, 04:52 PM
All I have to say to Mitch Albom is:

River. Cry me one.

Guyute
04-17-2003, 04:55 PM
and I'll just add:

http://wemissjerry.org/smiles/evilnasty.gif

Guyute
04-17-2003, 04:55 PM
and I'll just add:

http://wemissjerry.org/smiles/evilnasty.gif

SouthernHockeyChick
04-17-2003, 05:52 PM
Ever so nice, and shocking, to see Albom actually give the Ducks a bit of credit. No one else it bothering with that. Sure the Wings could have, and probably should have, beaten the Ducks....but THEY DIDN'T! They didn't come out and play hard and the Ducks did. It wasn't just Giguere....the Ducks out-played the Wings in a lot of ways. Nice to see someone admit it.

SouthernHockeyChick
04-17-2003, 05:52 PM
Ever so nice, and shocking, to see Albom actually give the Ducks a bit of credit. No one else it bothering with that. Sure the Wings could have, and probably should have, beaten the Ducks....but THEY DIDN'T! They didn't come out and play hard and the Ducks did. It wasn't just Giguere....the Ducks out-played the Wings in a lot of ways. Nice to see someone admit it.

ausoleil
04-17-2003, 05:55 PM
Not anymore. For the last week, the Red Wings were like an ogre taking punches from a leprechaun, saying, "That didn't hurt" and "That didn't hurt" -- and then toppling over dead. To the bitter end, they were in denial about Anaheim's team talents, privately crediting only the goaltender, Giguere, as the reason they were down, 3-0, instead of the opposite.

My favorite quote is above. Reminds me of the Black Knight in Monty Python and the Holy Grail.

ausoleil
04-17-2003, 05:55 PM
Not anymore. For the last week, the Red Wings were like an ogre taking punches from a leprechaun, saying, "That didn't hurt" and "That didn't hurt" -- and then toppling over dead. To the bitter end, they were in denial about Anaheim's team talents, privately crediting only the goaltender, Giguere, as the reason they were down, 3-0, instead of the opposite.

My favorite quote is above. Reminds me of the Black Knight in Monty Python and the Holy Grail.

folgersnyourcup
04-17-2003, 06:21 PM
Good articles. I'm also veryy glad someone is finally giving the rest of the Ducks team some credit. They were the ones making those absolutely huge steals at opportunistic times, getting the puck to somebody in front of the net, and putting it behind Joseph. They were able to capitalize on many of their chances while the Wings were not. Sure Giguere was great but he was out of the net quite a few times last night to play the puck and the Wings were never able to get to him. The Ducks got a goal off Joseph that way. The Ducks just put a better team effort out their on the ice each game. The Wings talked big ("If any team can come back from a 3-0 deficit") but came out there pretty flat in game 4 and lacking the necessary punch to try and wrench a win away from the Ducks and do something to salvage their pride.

All the Ducks players combined make for a great team which is showing right now. They might just have a few more upsets left......

And espcially after thinking about the article's Albom wrote last June I have no tears to shed for him.

folgersnyourcup
04-17-2003, 06:21 PM
Good articles. I'm also veryy glad someone is finally giving the rest of the Ducks team some credit. They were the ones making those absolutely huge steals at opportunistic times, getting the puck to somebody in front of the net, and putting it behind Joseph. They were able to capitalize on many of their chances while the Wings were not. Sure Giguere was great but he was out of the net quite a few times last night to play the puck and the Wings were never able to get to him. The Ducks got a goal off Joseph that way. The Ducks just put a better team effort out their on the ice each game. The Wings talked big ("If any team can come back from a 3-0 deficit") but came out there pretty flat in game 4 and lacking the necessary punch to try and wrench a win away from the Ducks and do something to salvage their pride.

All the Ducks players combined make for a great team which is showing right now. They might just have a few more upsets left......

And espcially after thinking about the article's Albom wrote last June I have no tears to shed for him.

hyena
04-17-2003, 06:29 PM
it's weird how all these teams from anaheim just get the job done. i adopted the Angels as my AL team last year in the MLB playoffs, and they suprised everyone, going all the way. who knows, maybe the Ducks can do the same.

hyena
04-17-2003, 06:29 PM
it's weird how all these teams from anaheim just get the job done. i adopted the Angels as my AL team last year in the MLB playoffs, and they suprised everyone, going all the way. who knows, maybe the Ducks can do the same.

talkingcanes
04-17-2003, 07:03 PM
perhaps if the Wings had come into the series with even a smidge of respect for the Ducks, they wouldn't be setting up tee times.

the Ducks wanted it more and played hard to beat Detroit and Detroit didn't think they could lose to some upstart team. by the time they figured it out, it was way too late.

go Ducks!

talkingcanes
04-17-2003, 07:03 PM
perhaps if the Wings had come into the series with even a smidge of respect for the Ducks, they wouldn't be setting up tee times.

the Ducks wanted it more and played hard to beat Detroit and Detroit didn't think they could lose to some upstart team. by the time they figured it out, it was way too late.

go Ducks!

RIO
04-18-2003, 12:32 AM
No, no, it's okay, Guy (though I appreciate your sensitivity). I can't abide Mitch Albom in any way, shape , or manner. He's such a homer it's ridiculous. I marvel to think he gave ANaheim ANY credit. The way he trashed the Hurricanes last year was juvenile, but to attack North Carolina as a whole made me want to wring his neck. THAT is revenge talking. Insult my Southern way of life and you tread into precarious turf. He was offensive and childish, and should be ashamed of himself. Talking a little smack before a major series is one thing, but to trash an entire region and insult the good people of this state was affronting and bigoted beyond all reason.

I can't believe anyone listens to him. :mad: I don't care how many books he's written....... I see his name and skip over it.

RIO
04-18-2003, 12:32 AM
No, no, it's okay, Guy (though I appreciate your sensitivity). I can't abide Mitch Albom in any way, shape , or manner. He's such a homer it's ridiculous. I marvel to think he gave ANaheim ANY credit. The way he trashed the Hurricanes last year was juvenile, but to attack North Carolina as a whole made me want to wring his neck. THAT is revenge talking. Insult my Southern way of life and you tread into precarious turf. He was offensive and childish, and should be ashamed of himself. Talking a little smack before a major series is one thing, but to trash an entire region and insult the good people of this state was affronting and bigoted beyond all reason.

I can't believe anyone listens to him. :mad: I don't care how many books he's written....... I see his name and skip over it.

Alicia
04-18-2003, 12:38 AM
You would think that someone who writes such a touching book about a person w/the same disease as I have, couldn't/wouldn't be able to turn around and write such utter crap. Oh well...

Alicia
04-18-2003, 12:38 AM
You would think that someone who writes such a touching book about a person w/the same disease as I have, couldn't/wouldn't be able to turn around and write such utter crap. Oh well...

RIO
04-18-2003, 01:06 AM
You would think that someone who writes such a touching book about a person w/the same disease as I have, couldn't/wouldn't be able to turn around and write such utter crap. Oh well...


For real. I was thinking the same thing. http://www.smilies.org/basesmilies3/cepopossible.gif

RIO
04-18-2003, 01:06 AM
You would think that someone who writes such a touching book about a person w/the same disease as I have, couldn't/wouldn't be able to turn around and write such utter crap. Oh well...


For real. I was thinking the same thing. http://www.smilies.org/basesmilies3/cepopossible.gif

raleighcanesfan
04-18-2003, 08:32 AM
Oh Mitchie...How tough that was for you...

Detroit, always looking for the scapegoat...He seems to mention CuJo a lot...What they failed to realize is that Cujo is a hothead and not half the goalie Hasek is. Their offense was supposed to win games for them and he'd only have to be average.. Seems their overpaid offense and washed up defense (i'm looking you're way Mr. Chelios) lost it for them. In the words of a wise, wise man from The Simpsons, "Haha!" (Nelson).

Hopefully, with all the reported free agents leading, this will be the beginning of the demise of the Wings.

raleighcanesfan
04-18-2003, 08:32 AM
Oh Mitchie...How tough that was for you...

Detroit, always looking for the scapegoat...He seems to mention CuJo a lot...What they failed to realize is that Cujo is a hothead and not half the goalie Hasek is. Their offense was supposed to win games for them and he'd only have to be average.. Seems their overpaid offense and washed up defense (i'm looking you're way Mr. Chelios) lost it for them. In the words of a wise, wise man from The Simpsons, "Haha!" (Nelson).

Hopefully, with all the reported free agents leading, this will be the beginning of the demise of the Wings.

crazy4canes
04-18-2003, 09:05 AM
I think that last article is interesting. He makes some good points. The Wings are old. Has the time for rebuilding come for the Wings? Sounds like it. Oh well, they'll have plenty of time to think about it. :evil:

crazy4canes
04-18-2003, 09:05 AM
I think that last article is interesting. He makes some good points. The Wings are old. Has the time for rebuilding come for the Wings? Sounds like it. Oh well, they'll have plenty of time to think about it. :evil:

Guyute
04-18-2003, 09:08 AM
I'm with ya Rio- I wrote that jackass several "editorials" of my own last year. Of course he never bothered to respond. Had I seen him in public during that series last year, I WOULD have wrung his neck. Talk about despising someone. :sick:

but I was shocked enough at the above articles, that I felt they should be posted.

Guyute
04-18-2003, 09:08 AM
I'm with ya Rio- I wrote that jackass several "editorials" of my own last year. Of course he never bothered to respond. Had I seen him in public during that series last year, I WOULD have wrung his neck. Talk about despising someone. :sick:

but I was shocked enough at the above articles, that I felt they should be posted.

Cool Hand Luke
04-18-2003, 10:39 AM
After reading Mitch's stuff last year, I was curious what he had to say this year. Thanks Guyute for posting that, it was interesting. I also sent Mitch an email or two last year, with no replys. I bet his inbox was full. :D He probably didn't realize so many people from Mayberry knew what email was!

Cool Hand Luke
04-18-2003, 10:39 AM
After reading Mitch's stuff last year, I was curious what he had to say this year. Thanks Guyute for posting that, it was interesting. I also sent Mitch an email or two last year, with no replys. I bet his inbox was full. :D He probably didn't realize so many people from Mayberry knew what email was!