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Babcock knows what it takes

Helene Elliott

May 30, 2008|Helene Elliott

"Experience is overrated unless you have it."

--Mike Babcock before coaching the Ducks in the 2003 Stanley Cup finals


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PITTSBURGH -- Mike Babcock gained a wealth of experience while guiding the Ducks through a tense seven-game loss to New Jersey in the Cup finals five years ago.

"It's a grind. It goes forever. It just never seems to end," he said Thursday.

"What's so interesting about the playoffs is people talk about the playoffs are long. It's not for lots of teams. It's like one week and done. But when you're real fortunate and you've got a good team like Pittsburgh does or we do, it gets to go for a long period of time."

Babcock left the Ducks in 2005 after newly hired General Manager Brian Burke offered him only a one-year extension. Burke really wanted to install his own guy and Babcock wanted security, and each got his wish: Burke brought in Randy Carlyle and Babcock signed with the Red Wings, who had talent but lacked the gumption to go beyond the second round in two seasons under Dave Lewis.

Everything worked out fine for both sides. The Ducks won the Cup last spring and Babcock is two victories from lifting the chalice himself.

When that happens -- and it will, despite the Penguins' spirited effort Wednesday in cutting Detroit's series lead to 2-1 -- it will be because Babcock is using the knowledge he gained in 2003 to make himself a better coach.

That process hasn't been smooth. A first-round loss to Edmonton two years ago and a loss to the Ducks in the Western Conference finals last spring sparked speculation that he might lose his job if the Red Wings fell flat again.

They've soared because Babcock has fine-tuned his sense of when to prod and when to relent. That has made him the right fit for a team that's mature and needs a firm hand more than an iron fist.

"I think he's real good at knowing when to be a little looser on the group, knowing when to push us a little bit more at times," defenseman Nicklas Lidstrom said.

"I think he's got a good feel of the group that he has."

Babcock thought it would do no good to put players through a tough practice on Thursday because that might signify he was unduly worried about their 3-2 loss in Game 3.

And with the next game not until Saturday he gave the team a physical and mental break, all the while emphasizing that although Pittsburgh had played well, the game could have turned in the Red Wings' favor with one funny bounce or odd deflection.

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