In the spring of 1997 â a quarter-century ago â the Detroit Red Wings embarked on their quest to end a 42-year Stanley Cup drought.
The Free Press has commemorated that historic quest with a new book: âStanleytown: The Inside Story of How the Stanley Cup Returned to the Motor City After 41 Frustrating Seasons.â
Day 32: May 17, 1997
The backstory: After nine exhibition games, 82 regular-season games and 11 playoff games, the Red Wingsâ season, for all intents and purposes, came down to Game 2 of the Western Conference finals. If the Wings lost at Colorado again and fell into a two-games-to-none hole, they would need to win four of five games against the defending Stanley Cup champions; a team that had beaten them in eight of their 11 regular-season and playoff meetings in the last calendar year. If the Wings won, though, especially after outplaying (but not outscoring) the Avalanche in Game 1, well, confidence would be sky high and Stanley Cup fever would be off the chart among fans in the Mitten. When the buzzer ended a wild Saturday night in Denver, two future Hall of Famers and 6½-foot wooden bench cemented their places in Red Wings lore.
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Déjà vu all over again: In the opener, played in slushy conditions because of a power failure, the Wings dominated all facets of the game and outshot the Avalanche, 35-19, but they still lost, 2-1, because of a five-minute lapse early in the third period and because of Patrick Royâs superhuman goaltending. In Game 2, the same script appeared to be unfolding, except the ice actually was frozen inside McNichols Arena. The Wings owned a 30-11 advantage in shots after two periods, but they still trailed, 2-1.
Scott Young scored late in the first period for the Avs, and Claude Lemieux made it a two-goal lead late in the second period with his league-leading 11th playoff goal, his eighth in nine games. In less than a minute, the Wingsâ luck finally turned and so did the series. Eighteen seconds after Lemieuxâs goal, Sandis Ozolinsh committed his second high-sticking penalty. Twenty-four seconds after that, Igor Larionov tried to hit Steve Yzerman with a pass in the goalmouth, where Adam Foote was trying to tie him up. The puck struck Footeâs right skate in the crease, sending it high over Royâs glove into the top of the net at 16:51. Game on!
Mother of all periods: The Wings scored three unanswered goals in the third period for a 4-2 victory. That was amazing enough. But how they did it couldnât have been more dramatic. Yzerman scored one of the signature goals of his Hall of Fame career. Nicklas Lidstrom made the signature defensive play of his Hall of Fame career. Plus, grinder Darren McCarty threw in a late insurance goal on a breakaway.
When the fireworks were over, the Wings held a 40-17 advantage in shots, Colorado captain Joe Sakic was held without a shot and the series was knotted at a game apiece with the team planes pointed eastward. At 1:54, Sakic went off for holding. Sixteen seconds later, after Lidstrom passed from one point to Yzerman on the other, Yzerman hit Sergei Fedorov down low for the game-tying goal. Fedorov played a spectacular two-way game with a goal, an assist and seven shots. Soon after that goal, Roy preserved the tie with a diving save on Slava Kozlov. The go-ahead goal didnât come until four minutes were left.
As Sakic and Slava Fetisov battled for the puck deep in the Wingsâ zone, Yzerman swooped in, grabbed the puck on the end line in a corner and skated away as if he were 22 instead of 32. He went the length of the ice, dodged three Avs and Vladimir Konstantinov along the way, drove the net for a shot that hit Royâs chest, collected the rebound behind the goal and banked it in off the back of Royâs right pad and then left pad. âI just tried to throw it out in front of him,â Yzerman said. âEven if it doesnât go in, thereâs a chance that we might get a rebound.â Still, the victory might not have happened if not for one instinct, one reflex, one split second that epitomized Lidstromâs six-year career.
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And, as was always the case in those days with Lidstrom, his feat almost went overlooked. With 2:42 to play, Sakic beat Yzerman on a face-off in the Wingsâ zone. He tapped the puck to Young for a wide-open shot from the top of the circle. Mike Vernon came out 10 feet from the goal to cut down the angle, dropped to his knees and made the save. But the puck trickled to his right and behind him. Coloradoâs Eric Lacroix outmuscled Larry Murphy for the puck and launched a point-blank backhander toward the empty net. But it didnât go in. From the left side, Lidstrom glided behind Vernon, through the crease and with his outstretched stick somehow knocked away Lacroixâs shot.
âWhat an unbelievable play!â associate coach Dave Lewis said. âThe biggest play of the series, right there. ⦠I didnât even realize what had happened because the play kept going. Then, after the replay, we realized what happened. We almost fell down. I was watching the video and I almost fell down.â McCarty saw Lidstromâs play from behind the goal, where he was trapped. âYouâre just watching it,â he said. âThen Nick just dives across, and it hits his stick. That was definitely the break we needed.â The only Wing not awed by the play was Lidstrom, who at the time had never been a finalist for the Norris Trophy despite being one of the gameâs hardest workers, logging more minutes than any teammate, playing against every opponentâs top line and contributing scores of points. âIt was my guy from the face-off,â Lidstrom said, âso I had to make up for letting him go along the boards. Just instinct. Just try to get in the way. Just try to get the puck out of there. I just reacted. I didnât really have time to think. ⦠I just tried to get in front of the net. I just tried to get my stick in the way.â A minute later, Brendan Shanahan shoveled a backhand pass from the Wingsâ blue line to a streaking McCarty at center ice. With Foote in hot pursuit and hooking his hip, McCarty snapped a shot that beat Roy top shelf.
DAY 31: What Wings were thinking entering crucial Game 2 vs. Avalanche
DAY 30: Wings dominate Avalanche â and lose in wacky Game 1
The Wings said it: McCarty on Lidstrom: âHeâs always overlooked. Thatâs the story of his career. Heâs one of the most underrated players in the league. He does it all. ⦠He doesnât get the respect, but we know how good he is, and thatâs what counts.â ⦠From Shanahan: âThis is probably the deepest weâve had to dig.â ⦠From Fedorov: âTo say we would score sooner or later sounds good now. It wasnât sounding so good in the second period.â ⦠From coach Scotty Bowman: âLuck started to go our way. The first half of the game, we couldnât get anything past Roy. There was no room.â ⦠From Joe Kocur: âAt this point of the Stanley Cup playoffs, itâs all-out war all the time. You do what you can get away with to win.â
The Avs said it: From Peter Forsberg: âWe canât play like this. We rely on Patty, and we canât do that every game.â From Sakic: âIf not for Patrick, theyâd be up, 2-0. We all have to look in the mirror now. But we can come back. Always before, weâve played our best hockey when our backs were against the wall. We have to make sure we go to Detroit hungry.â ⦠From Roy: âIâm a little surprised at how flat we played the last two games. I thought we were going to come back a lot stronger tonight, especially after winning the last game.â ⦠From Foote: âMaybe we got a little overconfident. But weâre not playing together and weâre trying to do cute things and trying to make the game harder than it should be. They havenât changed their game. Weâre the ones who changed ours.â
Off the ice: Jason La Canfora told the saga of an unsung hero in the Free Press: âA key member of the Red Wings sat alone in an airport hangar in Detroit after Game 2, awaiting a return trip to Denver. This member supported three players at once during the game and drew much praise for the performance â but got stuck with a middle seat on the ride back to Detroit. Heck, this member didnât even have a name.
The mystery contributor was a small wooden bench built for the Wings by a friend of associate coach Barry Smith. The cramped visitors bench at McNichols Arena caused the Wings problems changing on the fly. Before, players had to sit on three chairs at the end of the bench, often losing their skate edges on the mental and having problems getting to the gate. But with the extra 6½-foot bench, the three overflow players could sit in comfort. Why bring it back to Detroit? âIf we had left it in Denver, they would have burned it,â trainer John Wharton said. âThe arena people were not too happy about it, but the other bench wasnât working. You have to find any edge you can, and it worked great.ââ
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Famous last words: From Ralph Routon of the Colorado Springs Gazette: âIt started with a stupid penalty by Colorado defenseman Sandis Ozolinsh, who was whistled for high-sticking just 18 seconds after Claude Lemieuxâs goal. At a time when the Avalanche needed to be smart, avoid such screwups and protect that lead, Ozolinshâs penalty was beyond dumb. From that moment, the Wings were a different team. And their luck changed from one extreme to the other.â
Relive the glory: The Free Press has crafted a 208-page, full-color, hardcover collectorâs book with fresh insights and dynamic storytelling about the 1996-97 Wings. Itâs called âStanleytown 25 Years Later: The Inside Story on How the Stanley Cup Returned to the Motor City after 41 Frustrating Seasons.â Itâs only $29.95 and itâs available at RedWings.PictorialBook.com. (Itâll make a great Fatherâs Day gift for the Wings fanatic in your life!) Personalized copies available via myersgene@comcast.net.
More to read: Another new Wings book arrived in April from Keith Gave, a longtime hockey writer for the Free Press in the 1980s and 1990s: âVlad The Impaler: More Epic Tales from Detroitâs â97 Stanley Cup Conquest.â It is available through Amazon and other booksellers and a portion of the proceeds is earmarked for the Vladimir Konstantinov Special Needs Trust. (Plenty of Gaveâs prose also appears in âStanleytown 25 Years Later.â)
Even more to read: Red Wings beat reporter Helene St. James, who helped cover the 1997 Stanley Cup run, recently wrote âThe Big 50: The Men and Moments That Made the Detroit Red Wings.â Featuring numerous tales about the key figures from 1997, âThe Big 50â is available from Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Triumph Books. (Plenty of St. Jamesâ prose also appears in âStanleytown 25 Years Later.â)
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This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: 1997 Detroit Red Wings’ luck turns in Game 2 vs. Avs