<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8901070428
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
890216
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, February 16, 1989
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Chart;Photo Color DUANE BURLESON/Associated Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1989, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
PISTONS HALT AN UNEASY MARRIAGE
ADRIAN DANTLEY  SENT PACKING FOR   A YOUNGER MAN
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
Farewell to the Teacher. Farewell to that body, hard and strong, and that
face, which always seemed halfway between amusement and anger. Adrian Dantley
came in with a bad reputation, and, ironically,  he leaves in exchange for
one. Known as selfish, moody and a ball-hog when he  arrived in Detroit, he
proved critics wrong, leading the Pistons to their best season ever, playing a
role, muscling against  giants, spinning and whirling and desiring his way to
the hoop. He even sent himself to the hospital once diving for a basketball.
Diving? Adrian Dantley? And now, suddenly, he has been traded to Dallas  for a
guy named Mark Aguirre, who has a reputation for being . . . selfish, moody
and a ball-hog.

  Go figure.

  There will be those who say this is a smart trade in the long run but
foolish  in the short. There will be those who say it will never work. There
will be those who say the Pistons just secured themselves an NBA championship.
  And nobody -- to borrow some baseball vernacular  -- knows nuthin'. What
really went on behind the scenes during Dantley's 2 1/2 years here was rarely
printed. It was mumbled. It was whispered. Like an uneasy marriage, Dantley
Does Detroit was encouraging  in the good times and stormy in the bad, so no
one would give it the kiss of death until the very end. By Tuesday night, the
end had come: Dantley knew he was gone. He told several teammates, "they're
just waiting until the last minute."
  And he was right.  Why would the Pistons make this trade? Why would they
cut loose last year's playoff star, their mentor to developing players, a guy
who had  proven his talents against everyone in the league? Why? Here's why.
Because Dantley's years were advancing and his skills were not. Because his
attitude was quiet at best, aloof at worst. Because Aguirre,  nearly four
years younger, was available. And because the Pistons seem convinced that
other people's problems -- i.e., William Bedford, Darryl Dawkins, even Dantley
himself -- can be rehabilitated in  the waters of Camp Isiah.
  And yes, let us not forget Isiah Thomas in this picture. If this trade
proves anything, it is that the Pistons are Isiah's team -- a sentence Dantley
himself used to  utter with regularity. That does not mean Thomas orchestrated
this trade (despite what Dantley thinks).  It does mean that Isiah stays and
everybody else learns to work around him. Dantley was never  much of a dance
partner; Aguirre, abhorred by many of his Dallas teammates, was quoted after
first learning of the deal as saying "Great. It'll be great to join Isiah."
  Interesting choice of words.
  There are 10 other guys here, remember?
Analysis later  But let us leave the analysis of the new guy for days to
come. There will be time for that. Aguirre is certainly capable of brilliant
basketball  -- when he wants to play. James Donaldson, his Mavericks teammate,
said, "I'll look forward to having a new guy here who is willing to play hard
every night."
  Hard? You never had to worry about  hard with Dantley. Hard was the only
game he knew to play. At his height (6-foot-5) and his position (small
forward), what choice did he have? Guts. Confidence. He had them. And when
push comes to shove,  that is what other players look for.
  "Bleep!" said John Salley, when informed of the news Wednesday morning.
"How could they trade The Teacher? He was my mentor. A lot of the guys felt
that way. I like Mark. He's OK. But AD did a lot for us."
  Never more than in last year's playoffs. He seemed invaluable then,
everyone was singing his praises -- including coach Chuck Daly and general
manager  Jack McCloskey, the very men who traded him. How could that be? Well.
Nothing binds a team like the whiff of a championship. It's like Christmas
morning. Who fights then? The fact is, the Pistons --  like most NBA teams --
are a bickering bunch, with several distinct and opposing personalities. In
the tedium of the long regular season, that stuff will rise like bile.
  So this year, the Pistons  hit some rough spots, they fell behind
Cleveland -- and personalities clashed. Dantley's game sagged. Coaches blamed
his age; Dantley blamed the coaches. Trade rumors started, guys took sides,
and you  might as well pour hemlock in the water bucket when that happens.
  Here is the way Dantley saw it: "It's Isiah's team. He calls the shots.
That guy (Aguirre) is his friend and he wants to play with  his friend. If
Chuck has to make a call, who do you think he's gonna side with?
  "I didn't have any problem with Isiah. But Chuck wasn't playing me for a
while. He sat me down one game for the whole second quarter, then I sit
through halftime, and then he puts me in the third quarter and when I can't
get going, he starts yelling at me. I said, 'How do you expect me to just heat
up after I've been  sitting so long?' "
  Because of such differences, Dantley (who relayed those comments in a
recent conversation) said he went through a period with Daly where they barely
spoke. He felt as if the coach was trying to get him to change his
personality. "Shoot, I've been quiet my whole life," Dantley said. "That's
just the way I am." 
  Dantley's trust in Daly was already thin, because he saw Isiah and Daly
as a tandem; what the former wanted, the latter delivered. And because Dantley
never completely believed Isiah was willing to share this team, well, you get
the picture . . . 
  That,  of course, is one man's opinion.
  Here is the way management saw it: Dantley had probably peaked. His best
years were behind him. His moves were being anticipated by opposing teams and
referees alike.  He was getting double-teamed every night, and besides, Dennis
Rodman had matured into such a force, that sitting him on the bench had become
a mortal sin.
  And then there were the personality conflicts.  Daly will say of Dantley,
"We got along fine," but they didn't. Daly found AD selfish and greedy and
infatuated with money. And Dantley was almost laughable in his private
criticism of Bill Laimbeer,  a player he does not respect at all.  So when
Aguirre's name came up, and his personality was questioned, no doubt
management said: "Hey, how much worse can it be that what we've got now? The
guy's younger.  His talent is there. He already likes Isiah. Why not?"
  The trade was made.
  Farewell to the Teacher.
A risk  A shame. Not the trade itself, which could work out fine, who knows?
But that  the whole thing has to be shrouded in bad feelings. Dantley, visibly
upset, his last chance at that precious championship ring probably gone, told
reporters Wednesday morning in LA: "This has nothing  to do with basketball."
  "Does it have to do with personalities?" he was asked.
  "No comment," he said.
  Was it a smart trade?  Maybe not. Was it risky?  Of course. Was it
inevitable? More  than likely. And now comes the tough part. Making Aguirre
fit. You're asking a lot of a coach to blend a new soloist into a jazz quintet
-- right in the middle of the show. The Pistons have taken a great  risk with
that fragile package called chemistry.
  We will see. For now, a memory pause, because the average fan does not
know -- nor care -- about locker room feuds. For 2 1/2 seasons, Detroit saw  a
marvelous effort from a marvelous talent, a small guy playing in the redwood
trees. There was a time when Adrian Dantley rolled his shoulders and mumbled,
"I want that ring." Then went out and gave  us the playoffs of his life. There
was a time when he took an elbow in the jaw (from Mark Aguirre, of all people)
and had to have his mouth stitched back together. There was a time when they
stopped the game to give him the basketball for scoring his 20,000th point in
the league. And there was a time when he celebrated a valiant effort in the
NBA Finals with his best friend, Joe Dumars; they treated  their health-crazed
bodies to deep-dish apple cobbler. "With ice cream" he liked to tell you.
  He spun, he twisted, he taught and now he's gone. Very few people really
knew Adrian Dantley. Very few  will. Basketball, he always said, was played
"for the money, anyway. Always has been. Always will be. They can send you
anywhere they want."
  Farewell to the Teacher. 
  They just did.
  
DANTLEY  AND AGUIRRE: MEASURING UP
    MARK AGUIRRE   ADRIAN DANTLEY
Position:  Forward    Forward
Ht./wt:  6-6/235 lbs.   6-5/210 lbs.
Age:  29      32
 College:  DePaul '82    Notre Dame '77
Drafted:  First overall, '81  Sixth overall, '76
Salary:  $738,367    $1.25 million
Contract:  Expires in 1997  Expires in 1991
NBA  Eighth season,  13th season with Buffalo,
experience: all with Dallas  Indiana, L.A. Lakers,
    MARK AGUIRRE
    Season   Career  
Games:  44  566 
Points:  953 (21.7)  13,930 (24.6) 
Rebounds:  235 (5.3)  3,244 (5.7)
Assists:  189 (4.3)  2,163 (3.8)  
    ADRIAN DANTLEY
    Season  Career
Games:  42    869
Points:  772 (18.4)  21,830 (25.1)
Rebounds:  164 (3.9)  5,117 (5.9)
Assists:  93 (2.2)  2,663 (3.1)
CUTLINE
Mark Aguirre, right, guards Adrian Dantley in a December  1987 game at the
Silverdome. Detroit  acquired Aguirre from Dallas on Wednesday.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
ADRIAN DANTLEY;DPISTONS;BASKETBALL;TRADE;MARK AGUIRRE;
STATISTIC;Pistons
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
