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<UID>
0306020234
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
030602
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, June 02, 2003
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
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<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo File photo by JULIAN H. GONZALEZ/Detroit Free Press.
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

Pistons owner William Davidson watches the first day of team practice
under coach Rick Carlisle on Oct. 2, 2001, in Auburn Hills.


</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM FREE PRESS COLUMNIST
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 2003, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
PISTON OWNER CALLS SHOTS
DISMISSAL OF CARLISLE PUTS HEAT ON DUMARS
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
The man who got rid of Rick Carlisle woke up this morning in his pajamas and
had his breakfast. His hair is white and he stands slightly stooped and he
moves around as well as an 80-year-old man can. Perhaps he read the
newspapers. Perhaps he didn't bother. He is the richest person in this state,
richer than anyone named Ford or Fisher or Ilitch -- at least if you believe
the Forbes 400 list -- and while the whole city is buzzing about the firing of
his basketball coach, he ambles quietly to lord over his multibillion-dollar
empire -- and no one asks him a thing. Bill Davidson can shrug at all the
fuss, because he knows something that everyone else forgets.

It's his ball.

He can take it whenever he wants.

Rick Carlisle will be working for someone new this summer for the same reason
Jerry Stackhouse was working for someone new last summer. The owner didn't
want him. Plain and simple. The buck doesn't stop with the team president. It
stops with the guy who signs the checks. Bill Davidson signs the checks. Bill
Davidson had enough of Rick Carlisle.

Mr. Carlisle is history.

"I'll take the arrows," Joe Dumars said during the weekend, when reporters
grilled him on the firing of last season's NBA coach of the year. How could
this happen? Didn't Carlisle do a great job? Didn't the Pistons make the
conference finals? Dumars was clearly uncomfortable, not because he had to
fire somebody, but because he couldn't be completely honest. "I'll take the
arrows." It means the arrows could have hit someone else.

It's Davidson's ball.

He can do what he wants.



Stories about Carlisle

So what ticked off the boss so much? Apparently, he didn't like Carlisle's
attitude. He didn't like the stories that got back to him about rudeness,
shouting, or humiliating members of the staff. Were all the stories true? Who
knows? In the end, does it matter? It's what the boss thinks, isn't it?

Know this. Rick Carlisle is an intense man. He concentrates and he gets
single-minded and when he does that, he may not realize whom he's ignoring or
how gruff he may sound. When I spoke to him Sunday, he was genuinely shocked
that nasty stories were circulating about his temper. To his credit, he would
not fire back. He would only say, "I enjoyed my two years there and tried to
make everyone share in the success."

But that doesn't stop the stories. Stories that Carlisle, last year, shoved a
senior Pistons executive as he tried to high-five the players. Tales about
Carlisle yelling at secretaries, or snapping at the medical staff, or ripping
on assorted personnel, young and old, in front of other people. Maybe he
didn't do all these things. Maybe he did but didn't realize how he came
across. Doesn't matter. In Bill Davidson's world there is loyalty and there is
proper respect, and you don't keep your job without them.

Remember, Davidson joined his uncle's windshield company in the 1950s and
built it into an enterprise with annual sales of nearly $4 billion. You don't
do that by brooking dissent. Nobody -- nobody -- disrespects Davidson's staff
or loyal employees.

Carlisle, a smart and talented coach, apparently felt that being smart and
talented would be enough. Players disagreed. Some never cared for him, since
he could stand in an elevator with them and not even strike up a conversation.

"That was always a difficult thing," admitted guard Chucky Atkins, "he didn't
speak to a lot of people. When you treat people bad, it comes back to haunt
you. If you can't talk to your coach, who can you talk to?"

Meanwhile, the guy Carlisle most needed to be talking to was no longer talking
to him. Davidson never publicly acknowledged his coach's accomplishments, not
even during the exciting playoff run. When the postseason ended, so,
apparently, did the boss' tolerance. And once Davidson decides something, it
happens.

This is how much he wanted to be rid of Carlisle. He had to hire a bigger-name
coach to make it look like an improving move, but there was only one such
coach available, Larry Brown, who had just quit the 76ers. So Davidson gave
the nod.

And today, after a wham-bam negotiation, he will hand Larry Brown a five-year
contract worth around $25 million. Carlisle was due to make about $2 million
for next year.

In other words, the boss committed $23 million to get rid of somebody he
didn't like.

Now that's rich.



The pressure increases

The sad part is that a lot of destruction has taken place this weekend and
nobody feels very good about it. Dumars is in a tough spot, because on the one
hand, he likes and respects Carlisle, but on the other hand, he has to do what
the owner wants. Carlisle is in a tough spot, because his reputation is being
besmirched, and no one knows if he is truly to blame or is simply a victim of
spin.

As for the team itself? Well. That remains to be seen. Carlisle molded this
group into a low-key, hardworking defensive machine. The players may be happy
to be rid of his intractable attitude, but if they think hey, great, we can be
the Dallas Mavericks, they're not going to win. Brown is a proven coach and a
good teacher, and he'll likely have an 18-year-old prodigy, Darko Milicic,
under his wing. But teams often need a season to adjust to a new coach. And
anything less than the conference finals means the Pistons are going
backwards.

That's a lot of pressure.

It's funny. Less than two weeks ago, Dumars and Carlisle were smiling and
walking arm-in-arm in a tunnel at a New Jersey arena, having just earned the
No. 2 pick in the upcoming draft. They were laughing and talking about the
future. Both of them were sincere.

But neither of them was in control. That belongs to the 80-year-old,
white-haired owner, who may be the polar opposite of a George Steinbrenner,
but in profile only, not in power. When it comes to power, there is only one
man in the Pistons organization who shakes the thunder and claps the
lightning. And he's the guy from whom you've heard the fewest words all
weekend.

It's his ball.

He just handed it to someone else.

Contact MITCH ALBOM at 313-223-4581 or  albom@freepress.com. Catch "The Mitch
Albom Show" 3-6 p.m. weekdays on WJR-AM (760).



(SIDEBAR)
PISTONS TO HIRE NEW COACH TODAY

Former Philadelphia 76ers coach Larry Brown will make Detroit the seventh stop
on his 20-year NBA coaching cavalcade. He also won a national championship,
coaching the University of Kansas in 1988. Brown, 62, will be introduced as
the Pistons' coach today. Complete coverage in Sports, Section D.
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<DISCLAIMER>
THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED ARTICLE.
</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
BASKETBALL;PISTONS COACHING;FIRING;RICK CARLISLE;HIRING;LARRY
BROWN
</KEYWORDS>
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