As Hillary Clinton’s top advisers tried to put a brave face on her thumping in Iowa five weeks ago, they buoyed themselves by looking forward to Super Duper Tuesday. “This thing will be over on February 5th,” campaign chairman Terry McAuliffe assured reporters the day after Clinton’s third-place finish in the Iowa caucus. California, New York, New Jersey and other big Feb 5th states were “Clinton Country,” the thinking went. Once the media finished swooning over Barack Obama and voters took a harder look, Hillary would start raking in the delegates. Of the 2025 delegates needed to win the Democratic nomination, some 1700 are at stake on Feb. 5. But now that the fabled day has arrived, with Clinton and Obama all but tied in the polls, the Clinton camp is rolling out a new storyline. “The results are likely to be close and inconclusive,” communications director Howard Wolfson said Monday. “Right now, we are looking at a fight that will go on way beyond tomorrow.”

For Clinton’s flu-ridden and ill-tempered members of her road crew, who have been barreling around the country since early December, it’s a ghastly scenario. Even Clinton’s legendary stamina is wearing thin. Fighting a heavy cold, she grew teary Monday morning at an event at the Yale Child Study Center, where she had once worked as a law student, as her old friend Penn Rhodeen described his first meeting with her, when she was clad in a sheepskin coat and bellbottoms. “You looked wonderful and so 1972,” he said.

“Well I said I would not tear up,” Clinton responded. “Already we are not on that path.”

Hoarse and exhausted, she then hacked her way through events in Worcester and Boston, Mass., followed by evening appearances in New York with David Letterman and a syrupy Hallmark Channel town hall. No matter what the polls say, says her spokesman Jay Carson, “she will campaign as though she is twenty points behind.” After voting early Tuesday morning, Clinton, her voice raspy, is scheduled to conduct more than 30 television and radio interviews with networks and with local stations around the country. Instead of planning a victory party for Tuesday night, the campaign has scheduled a nebulously named “Election night celebration.”

Having learned to dial back expectations after the disaster in Iowa and the thrill of the comeback in New Hampshire, the Clinton campaign is wary of “Frontrunner Stumbles” headlines; they’d rather predict a muddle. In California, where Clinton has seen a 25-point lead evaporate since last fall, the backpedaling is in especially high gear. “We’re going to lose,” one normally upbeat staffer e-mailed from San Francisco. “How’s that for managing expectations?”

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