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<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8701250526
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
870522
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, May 22, 1987
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SEE ALSO STATE EDITION 1D
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1987, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
BILL LAIMBEER: MR. PERSONALITY
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
"Hey, if I were somebody else, looking at me? I'd think I was an a------,
too."

  -- Bill Laimbeer

  BOSTON -- Wait. Don't tell me. You hate his guts. He's a stiff, a boor, a
spoiled brat, an actor,  a loudmouth; he can't jump, he can't block shots, he
runs like a pregnant deer, his nose is pointy, and, when he high-fives, it
looks like party time at nerd training camp.
  "Who cares?" says Bill  Laimbeer, sitting across the breakfast table. He
reaches over with one of those long arms. "I'm gonna have some of your grapes.
Thanks."
  Yeah. Who cares? Have a grape. Just 12 hours earlier, during a playoff
game in Boston Garden, Laimbeer, the Pistons' center, had been roundly booed,
cursed, despised; the hate rained down -- as it would in the Pistons' Game 2
defeat Thursday night. Who cares?  During the  Atlanta-Detroit  playoff
series, a sold-out Omni crowd chanted in unison, "LAIMBEER S----!" And, after
the Hawks lost, someone threw a glass of beer in his face. Who cares? Knock,
knock.  Hey! It's Mr. Popularity.
  "I do what I have to do. That's my style of play. I bump people. I'm not
fluid. I'm herky-jerky. I try to get other players out of their games any way
I can. That's why  people don't like me."
  He smirks. 
  "These grapes are lousy."
W illiam Laimbeer Jr. To paraphrase Kojak: Who bugs you, baby? Anyone more
than this guy? Unless, of course, you are a Pistons fan,  and you love the way
he snares all those rebounds, and bumps and grinds his opponent and never
gives up. But even then. . . . 
  Did you hear the roar whenever he fouled a Celtic or missed a shot
Thursday? He had a poor game offensively (1-for-6, two points) and they
wouldn't let up.  What is it about him that gets under people's skin?  What
doesn't? 
  Here is an NBA star who never set foot  on a ghetto playground, a rich kid
who had a car by his 16th birthday, who flunked out of Notre Dame as a
freshman ("too much sleeping in"), who quit his only summer job after two
weeks; a guy who is sarcastic, caustic, who moans, who complains, who would
rather be playing golf, and who, by his own admission, takes off his dirty
clothes and lets them drop wherever, figuring his wife will pick them  up.
  Are you ready to smack him yet?
  And look. He's laughing. That's the thing about Bill Laimbeer. You rattle
his faults in front of him and he laughs like a baby in a crib. Is that what
makes  you shake your head, grinning, every time you go to insult him? Is it
that curious Laimbeer ego that, instead of proclaiming greatness, seems to
send him loping downcourt, pounding his chest and screaming:  "I AM . . .
MEDIOCRE!"
  Who bugs you, baby? Laimbeer is vilified by everyone from opposing centers
to radio announcers (like the Celtics' Johnny Most, who says: "He's a phony, a
flopper, he hurts  people, I don't like him"). And yet, he has made the
All-Star team four times, the Detroit fans love him, and even Isiah Thomas,
everybody's favorite NBA cherub, calls Laimbeer a best friend.
  Obviously,  what we have in this 6-foot-11, 260-pound jigsaw of a body is
either an enormously gifted and misunderstood man or the world's largest dork.
O r something in between. It is true, if not caring is a  sin, Bill Laimbeer
-- who turned 30 on Tuesday -- is guilty right down the line. ("Damn, man!"
laughed teammate John Salley Thursday, upon hearing someone call Laimbeer an
atheist. "Do you believe in  anything?") He does seem to lope through life
with a private safety net, as if no matter how awkward, inconsiderate or
annoying he gets, he still wins. Like a child in the house of mirrors, he sees
all  of his unkind reflections. And they only crack him up.
  "Look, I'll never be able to fly through the air like so many guys in this
league,"  says the center who has still managed to win an NBA rebounding
title (1985-86), average 15.4 points and 11.6 rebounds this season and shoot
18-footers like a silky guard -- and who is a crucial  player if the Pistons
hope to win this Eastern Conference final against  Boston. "I realized early I
was not going to be an all-time great player.
  "So I do what I have to do to survive. I jostle people. Like when a guy is
going to his favorite spot, I step in his way;  I bump him; I don't let him
get there; I bump, bump, bump.
  "I laugh at my reputation as a tough guy, though. I never fight. I walk
away from it. I may have some altercations, but they're never real  fights.
People don't like that style? So what? As long as people in Detroit appreciate
me, what do I care about Boston or Atlanta or Milwaukee?"
  OK. Laimbeer has, of course, given those opposing  crowds more than an
occasional bump to remember him by. Last time the Pistons met the Celtics in
the playoffs (1985), Laimbeer was knocked to the floor  by Robert Parish and
came up swinging (he missed).  And after an insinuation by Larry Bird that
Boston would sweep that series, Laimbeer found the star forward during the
Pistons' second win and yelled, "Where's your bleeping broom now, bleep
bleep?"
  In Game 1 of this series, he goaded Parish into a technical foul. Thursday
night, he yanked down 17 rebounds. So he's not getting any free passes to
Boston Garden. Or anywhere else. His license plate  should read: "Born to
Irritate." He pushes. He bad-mouths. When he is introduced, he often runs out
and points at his teammates (no hand-slapping) with this tight-jaw expression
that is supposed to be  his tough look, but actually suggests that he needs to
use the bathroom.
  "If you were somebody else playing against Bill Laimbeer, wouldn't you want
to take a swing at yourself?"
  "Yeah," he says.  "I guess I would."
  Case closed.
A nd yet there is surprise to Bill Laimbeer, an itchy feeling that -- no
matter how often you speak with him -- always leaves you wondering if you
weren't this close  to discovering a whole different guy.
  "You know, I don't really even like to play basketball," he says suddenly,
grabbing a glass of orange juice. "It's not fun to just go out and play
basketball.  The competition in a real game is fun. But just to play pickup?
That's stupid. Isiah likes that stuff. I'm not good at it. All those guys do
is shake and bake, run and shoot. I stink at that. I need  referees."
  Yeah, say his critics. He needs referees like Don Rickles needs the front
tables. There's no act without them. This, after all, is the man Sports
Illustrated once dubbed "a crashing success"  and "master of the theatrical
fall."
  But what Laimbeer is saying is, he needs rules. So that he can bend them.
Like him or not, here is a player of limited ability who has figured out just
how much  he can get away with, an ugly duckling set loose in a makeup
factory. "As long as I don't break the rules," he says.
S o what  is it with this guy? You can list 100 things to hate about him.
He'll list  them for you. Why do some of us still find him, well, kind of
intriguing?
  Maybe it's the notion that the most hateful crime is pretending you are
something you're not. Of that, Bill Laimbeer is completely  innocent.
  Unlike most of us, he wears his faults on the outside. His good qualities,
like long johns, remain underneath. "He makes a terrible first impression,"
says Steve Glassman, 34, a Cleveland restaurateur and a close friend. "I
introduce him to people and they walk away saying, 'Where does that guy get
off being like that?' But they don't know him. And he doesn't care, or at
least he says  he doesn't."
  Laimbeer "doesn't even try" to fit in the slick black subculture of his
NBA peers. He does not downplay his privileged upbringing. He is not
interested in having loads of friends. 
  "Do you have a conscience?" I ask him.
  He pauses. "Uh . . . well . . . with regards to what?"
  "Well, basketball," I say. "Do you have a conscience during basketball?"
  "No."
  "How about  off the court?"
  "Well . . . yeah . . . I suppose."
  Nothing like putting your best foot forward.
A nd yet here is something you probably didn't know about Bill Laimbeer. Four
years ago, he and  his wife, Chris, lost their first child. A baby boy. It was
born prematurely, lived two days, and died. "We buried him and said our
goodbys," Laimbeer says, speaking, ironically, on the anniversary of  the
child's death. He does not use the statement to launch into a speech about
being misunderstood. Few people even know the story, because Laimbeer thought
it was nobody else's concern. He admits he  cried, if that makes a difference.
But he shrugs off any sympathy.
  "He felt that loss more than he lets show," says Glassman, who was with
Laimbeer at the hospital that day. "The whole time he was  worried about
Chris, about us, about everybody else. That we shouldn't be down. 
  "I think about that time and I hear people say he's the biggest agitator in
the league, and, I don't know; I can't  put those two things together."
  And this is the paradox of the man people love to hate. Just as you are
convinced he is a selfish cynic from his sneakers on up, somebody tells you a
story. His charity  golf tournament. A surprise gift he paid for. Some little
thing. And you look at him, smirking, that "I-know-something-you-don't-know"
look, and you say, "Wellll. . . ."
  "I don't let people get too  close to me," he admits. "I always want a
buffer zone."
  "Is that because you're afraid you might not be worthy  of their
attention?"
  And instead of laughing at the pseudo-psychology of the question,  he says
quietly: "Yes. Possibly."
  So there is more than just the lonesome, scowling boy behind uniform No.
40. There is also this: Laimbeer is  crucial  to the Pistons' success. Check
the box scores.  Isiah Thomas can go lava-hot or suddenly cold; with the right
adjustments, the Pistons can still win. But when Laimbeer has a bad night --
as he did from the floor Thursday -- they almost never do. "The record bears
that out," says Pistons coach Chuck Daly.
S o what are you going to do with the big lug? You may hate him and say he is
lazy and cynical and a crybaby and a stat-keeper and annoying, aggravating,
infuriating and a jerk. But you don't know everything. And that  gnawing sense
he may be smarter than all this keeps you from walking away from Bill Laimbeer
convinced you really understand him.
  And that is the way he wants it. Give him your boos, your heckles. Your
grapes. "I'm never gonna be small and cuddly," he says. "So I figure I might
as well play the part that's already here for me.  People aren't going to
change their minds about me. I could come to Boston Garden for six years and
give up 60 points every time and they'd still think I was a bleep. So forget
it."
  And there goes  Mr. Popularity, to another playoff game. Who bugs you,
baby?  Everyone expects him to push, grope, complain, rebound, score, and, in
seasons to come, probably make a few more All-Star teams. Do you know  what I
expect? I expect one day to accidentally bump into Bill Laimbeer somewhere, in
a grocery store, or a nursery school, or just a quiet corner of the
Silverdome, and catch him in an act of niceness.
  And I will do him a favor. I will not tell anybody.
CUTLINE
 Bill Laimbeer: "I laugh at my reputation as a tough guy. . . .  I never
fight. I walk away from it."
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