<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8801200376
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
880501
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, May 01, 1988
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
STATE EDITION
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1E
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1988, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
FAST-TALKING SALLEY SLICKER ON THE COURT?
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
When John Salley was a kid in Brooklyn,  he would go door to door on
Saturday mornings with members of his church. 

  "Good morning," he would say, when someone answered the bell.  "My name is
 John Salley. I'm with Jehovah's Witness. We're have these two magazines,
they're going for a small price of 10 cents apiece, and--"

  "Get lost."
  "I gave already."
  "No!"
  Two hours.  Every Saturday. When noon came, he was free. He dashed home
to his family's apartment in the projects near Jamaica Bay. Off with the
shoes. On with the sneakers.
  "Hang up your clothes!" his mother  would yell. But he was already out the
door, through the lobby, into the park and onto the basketball court. Hat
down. Sneakers open. Laces loose.
  Johnny Cool.
  "You're late, Salley," a kid  with braces might say.
  "And you're real good-lookin', metal-mouth," Salley would answer.
  Meet John (Spider) Salley, who has never had trouble talking to anyone,
from strangers to metal-mouths.  Give him a minute, he'll sell you his
T-shirt. Give him five minutes, he'll tell you about Eddie Murphy's house.
Give him an hour, he'll tell you about Malcolm X, religion, or the time his
brother made  him sit like a Buddah at the foul line, all alone, while the
other kids played.
  "He was into that martial arts stuff, and he wanted me to meditate. He
said I could bring the rim down in my mind  to the point where I could dunk
it. I was 15. I had never dunked."
  "What happened?"
  "I sat for a while. Then I got up and dunked it."
  "You weren't embarrassed, sitting there with the other  kids around?"
  He smiles.
  "You can't embarrass me."
  Well, we'll see. This may be the tester, right here, because John Salley,
23, is now center-stage with the Detroit Pistons. Fly or flop.  Embarrass or
be embarrassed. The playoffs have begun; they need his help. Rickey Mahorn has
an iffy back, and without a strong frontcourt, the Pistons will fall off the
rainbow more sooner than later.  The question is -- is Salley, the lean,
6-foot-11 forward, up to it? Consistency has never been his strong point. "He
usually has one good game, then he goes in the tank," his coach, Chuck Daly,
said. 
  And that was just two days ago.
  But you can say that kind of thing to Salley, and he doesn't flinch. Too
slick? Too cool? Too scared? Too insecure? Who can tell? You can't really
believe a  word he says and yet you want to believe all of it, and most of it
-- some, a bit, anyhow -- is true.
  Here is a guy who will tell you, in one breath, how he has incorporated
himself, how he plans  to promote rock concerts, how he can insult anybody,
and how he can't be seen with ugly women ("I don't want to go to the movies
and have people turn around and say, "GOOD GOD! WHAT IS THAT!"). Yet in  the
next breath, he'll relate how his mother made him read out loud for a half
hour every night, and how he plans to run the summer camps for the kids this
year, and how Martin Luther King and Malcolm X disagreed on the militancy of
the black struggle.
  "I am a deal-maker," John Salley says. 
  "I am a loner," John Salley says. 
  "I am an entertainer," John Salley says.
  He says "I  am" about a lot of things, this tall, lanky beanpole with the
spider around his neck, because, I suppose, he is.
  JOHN SALLEY, ON HIS NAME: "Everybody in my family has a name that rhymes.
My father's  Quilley Salley, my mother's Maisey Sallie, my brothers are Jerry
Salley, Ronnie Salley. I said to my parents once: 'What's with this rhyme
stuff? Were you all, like, rappers or something?"
  JOHN  SALLEY, ON CAREER ALTERNATIVES: "If I wasn't a professional athlete,
I'd be a professional entertainer of some sort. A clown in a circus, or a
Lurch in the movies. You know, one of those big guys with  the bad teeth?
Lurch. That'd be me."
  John Salley came to the Pistons as a first-round draft choice from Georgia
Tech, where he was an excellent shot blocker who sometimes faded in and out
the game.  Now, two years later, in the NBA, he is an excellent shot blocker
who sometimes fades in and out of the game. "I know the reputation," he says,
sitting alongside the Silverdome court long after the others have left
practice. "Chuck pulled me aside before the all-star break and said: 'I can't
deal with your inconsistencies.' Since then, I've been trying to concentrate
more."
  Critics suggest that Salley  has too much on his mind besides basketball.
The Spider T-shirts which he hopes to market. The record company, RW records,
which has faltered. The clothes. The parties. The women. The celebrity
friends,  which include, he says, Eddie Murphy, Mike Tyson and L.L. Cool J.
("Did you know that Eddie Murphy, when he wants to meet a girl, he just sits
there and points and his bodyguards get her and bring  her over?")
  OK. It's a bit much. But to understand this, you have to understand The
World According To John, a place where average is for losers, where a basic
job with a basic income and a basic home life will basically put you to
sleep."I don't want to work for a living, I want to work for a fortune," he
freely admits. "It's like they ask Adrian Dantley: 'What are you going to do
when you retire?'  And he says: 'Count my money.'
  "I'm like that, too. Look. My father was a construction worker. Then he
drove a truck. He'd be up at 5:30 in the morning, wouldn't come home till late
at night. That's  the kind of life I wouldn't want to live. No way."
  So he tries everything. Why not? Never met a deal he didn't like. Never
met a person he couldn't talk to. Likes fast cars. Likes nice clothes.  And
all this might be truly worrisome except that John Thomas Salley is so damn .
. . likable.  He really is.
  JOHN SALLEY, ON SARTORIAL SPLENDOR: "My mother always said, 'When you
dress, make sure  you dress well, because you're a big object. No one's gonna
miss you. They'll say, 'Look at those ugly shoes that seven-foot guy is
wearing!' "
  JOHN SALLEY, ON BEING A NEW YORKER:  "We were brought  up with a New York
way of thinking. All of us. Once, my brother came down to visit me in Atlanta.
We were walking along and some guy said hello and my brother goes: 'Is he
gay?' I said, 'No, Jerry, people  just say hello down here' "
  There was a time when John Salley's pals back in Brooklyn were into
stealing little things, like food from stores. Salley balked. "I won't eat
stolen goods," he told  them.
  There was a time when Salley used to come home from school, and was
anxious to hit the streets. "Your homework has to be done first," his mother
would scold. And he usually listened.
  There was a time last year, Salley says, when Daly instructed the Pistons
to foul him during a training camp scrimmage. "Toughen Salley up" was the
edict. Certain players took it too seriously, and Salley  and Sidney Green
wound up tangled on the floor. "Frustration's a bitch, ain't it?" Salley
mumbled at Green, then got up and walked away.
  The point is, for all the wheels and deals and chains and jewelry and
clothes and women and stories about Manhattan nightlife, part of John Salley
still knows what's right and what's wrong, even if it hurts. If the Pistons
are ever going to rely on him the  way they want to, that part is going to
have to surface. 
  "It takes time to mature as an NBA player," he says, staring at his
extra-long legs. "It takes time to get that glint in your eye, like  AD has or
Larry Bird has . . . 
  "I have problems with foul trouble, because I try to block every shot.
That's my role. If somebody gets past Isiah (Thomas), then he has to know I'm
there to block  the guy. Ron Rothstein (the assistant coach) says I should get
two blocks a game minimum. Dick Versace (the other assistant coach) will say,
'You're supposed to get three rebounds this quarter. You only  have two.' They
keep after me."
  "Do you think they have complete confidence in you?" he is asked.
  "No," he says, without hesitation. "They don't. Not yet."
  So what's it gonna be, Spider  Man? This is the time the Pistons need him
-- to rebound, to score, to defend without foul trouble -- and this is the
time he can put some doubt to rest. True, you may be wary of a guy who, at one
point  or another, went door to door with religious pamphlets, talked his
father into buying him a car ("Next June, I'll buy you one, Pops"), wears a
jacket that says "JOHN" on the front, and has a cute if devious way with
numbers ("I was a B student in college. My grade point average was 2.5. That's
a B to me.").
  Just the same, remember that Salley was good enough to rise out of
Brooklyn's projects,  good enough to rise out of the Atlantic Coast
Conference, and good enough to show flashes of brilliance in his stint with
the Pistons  so far. His scoring average jumped from 5.3 to 8.5 and his
rebounds  from 3.6 to 4.9 between his rookie and second seasons. He blocked
137 shots this season. He is witty, cool, and confident enough to travel his
own road on a team full of cliques.
  And, as he says,  he can't be embarrassed.
  Which may be good or bad. No doubt Daly would like to take Salley and
make him sit on the court, as his brother did back in Brooklyn, staring at the
basket until he could  bring the job he must do down to a level where he can
do it. But that won't work. The magic of John Salley, basketball player, will
have to surface through the pile, working its way past John Salley,
businessman, John Salley, ladies' man, John Salley, Mister Everybody Loves You
Now.
  And it will have to surface on its own.
  "If you could have one or the other, either all the business and
celebrity success you desired, or an NBA championship, which would you
choose?" I ask him. 
  He pauses.
  "The NBA championship."
  "Honest?" I say. "You're not just saying that?"
  "No."  He smiles. "Cause if we get a championship, all that other stuff
will follow."
  No one ever said he was dumb.
CUTLINE:
Pistons forward John Salley: "I don't want to work for a living, I want to
work for a fortune."
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
DPISTONS;BASKETBALL;JOHN SALLEY;Pistons
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
