"When it was announced they were up for sale, we told ourselves we couldn't afford it," Ilitch said in October 2003. "But nobody made any offers for the Wings, they were so bad. So I said, 'You know what? I'm going to go over there and see what they want.' We talked, and I figured, 'You know, I might be able to swing this deal.' It was in such bad shape, the franchise, that we got it at a pretty reasonable price."
Ilitch paid $8 million for the Red Wings in 1982. They had not won the Stanley Cup since 1955, had not made the playoffs but once since 1970, and could not draw more than a few thousand fans a game. So Ilitch hired Jimmy Devellano from the New York Islanders to be his general manager, gave away a car every game and slowly built the Red Wings into the class of the NHL.
While the Little Caesars program developed young players, some of whom made the NHL, the Red Wings won the Stanley Cup in 1997, 1998, 2002 and 2008. They have made the playoffs for 25 consecutive seasons. Joe Louis Arena has been packed consistently. Ilitch won the Lester Patrick Trophy for outstanding service to U.S. hockey in 1991 and was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame as a builder in 2003.
"He had incredible passion and was a fierce competitor," longtime Red Wings general manager Ken Holland said Friday. "Any decisions made for the Red Wings, it was about winning. It was never about the business. It was always, 'How do we get better? How do we improve the team?' I can't imagine there's any better owner in professional sports than Mr. Ilitch."
But hockey was only part of it, which says a lot. At a time when businesses were leaving the city or already long gone, Ilitch moved Little Caesars Pizza headquarters from suburban Farmington Hills to Detroit and renovated the Fox Theatre. He bought the Tigers, built Comerica Park and watched his baseball team make the World Series twice.
His name is on the business school at Wayne State University in Detroit. He began building Little Caesars Arena, the anchor of a mixed-used development called The District Detroit. The Red Wings will play there starting next season, and so will the Detroit Pistons, whom Ilitch lured from The Palace in suburban Auburn Hills.
Stand on Woodward Avenue in Detroit and face north. To your left is the Fox. To your right is Comerica Park. Up ahead is Little Caesars Arena and The District Detroit. Everywhere is the impact of Mike Ilitch.