<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8801230471
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
880522
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, May 22, 1988
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1E
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color CRAIG PORTER
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1988, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
QUIET GUYS
ADRIAN, DUMARS GOOD PALS
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
They sit next to each other in the Pistons' locker room. One reads the
newspaper. The other unties his laces. Neither says a word. Practice is over.
Reporters swarm, teammates holler, music blares.

  One flips the newspaper. The other removes his shoes. Neither says a
word.

  "YO, MAN, I--," Bill Laimbeer yells.
  "HEY, MAN, GIMME-," John Salley yells. 
  "LOOK, CLOWN, I-," Rick Mahorn  yells.
  One puts down the newspaper. The other takes off his socks.
  Neither says a word.
  Try  to guess what Adrian Dantley and Joe Dumars do for fun. Let's see.
They sit in the hotel room  and stare at the wallpaper? They fill out tax
forms? They count the dots on a basketball?  Wait, don't tell me -- they
meditate. Dantley crosses his legs and goes "hummmmmm" and Dumars crosses his
legs and goes "hummmmmm" and for the next four hours they can't be reached on
this planet?
  "Not quite," says Dantley, in a voice so deep it surely comes from
underground. "Just because people are quiet  doesn't mean they don't have
fun."
  And you know. He's right. This is a story about A.D. and Joe D, a
no-frills basketball friendship based on respect, silence, good Italian
restaurants and Sanford  and Son -- Joe Dumars' favorite TV show. He has every
episode. On tape. Laughs like crazy. 
  Surprised? The whole thing is surprising. People do a double take when
they find out these two are not  only buddies, but, at times, almost
inseparable.  Isn't Dantley, 32, the old man on the team? Married with
children? And isn't Dumars just 25 and single? Isn't Dantley the  consummate
one-on-one offensive star? And isn't Dumars the off-guard specializing in
defense?
  And then there are the reputations: Dantley came to Detroit with a
brooding, complaining, mercenary image; Dumars was so quiet and  unassuming,
I'm surprised the team plane hasn't accidentally left without him once or
twice.
What is it you like so much about Dumars?" Dantley was asked the other day, as
the Pistons awaited the outcome  of the Atlanta- Boston series to determine
their opponent in the Eastern Conference final.
  "He's straightforward, he's not stupid, he has his priorities right,"
Dantley answered.
  "What is it  you like about Adrian?" Dumars was asked, separately.
  "He's straightforward, not a lot of hoopla.  He's about as straightforward
as you can get."
  The key word then is straightforward. Which  fits. Talk to Dantley or
Dumars and you'll see the concentration of 10 men in their eyes. Organized?
Intense?  These are guys who lay out tomorrow's clothes the night before, guys
who never leave the toothpaste oozing out of the tube. If they were electronic
gadgets, they'd be word processors, while some of their teammates were pinball
machines.
  "I always say, how do you want to be known in  this league? As a guy who's
loud and talking trash all the time, or as a guy who thinks before he speaks?"
says Dantley.
  It hasn't hurt their work. Dantley is arguably the best player on the
Pistons  right now, and Dumars, always steady, is coming off a remarkable
defensive effort on Chicago's Michael Jordan. Let the other guys scream, "In
your face!" You want A.D. and Joe D? Check with the concierge.  Find the best
Italian food in the city. Make a reservation. They'll be there.
  The quiet guys in the corner.
Which is not to say they don't have fun. On the contrary. Dantley swears he
has seen  Dumars yakking, dancing, singing ("He gets into the car and goes
'AHH BEE DOOO WOOP!' "). Dumars swears he has seen Adrian laughing in movie
theaters, on the court, even at the scene of an accident.
  "One time this year we were in a cab in Seattle, going to a movie, and we
got in a wreck. Another car hit us. I got thrown across the cab. A.D. says,
'You all right?' and I say, 'Yeah,' and then he  starts laughing. Five seconds
later I'm laughing. The cab driver says, 'You guys OK?' and A.D. says, 'Yeah,
just call us another cab.' He called us another cab and we were out of there
before anyone  even knew what happened."
  There was the time Dumars introduced Dantley to crawfish ("They were OK, I
ate 'em," says Dantley), and the time Dumars said he was going to learn
Dantley's patented spin  move ("You'll never do it, you play too unselfish a
game"). There were plane rides and car rides and meals -- there are always
meals -- in Boston, Milwaukee, Dallas, Los Angeles, Portland, New York,  San
Antonio.
  "Who picks up the check?" Dumars is asked.
  "We split it right  . . . down  . . . the  . . . middle," he says,
grinning. Dantley is known by his teammates for being a tad tight  with the
buck. Fortunately, Dumars is not exactly Leona Helmsley. 
  "If I owe A.D. 10 cents, I pay him as soon as I see him. If he owes me 15
cents, he pays me as soon as he sees me."
  "Is it  true he still has the first dollar he ever earned?"
  "I don't know if he has his first dollar. . . ." Dumars says. He smiles.
"But he has his first paycheck."
Friends, yes. But they are not the  same people. Dumars grew up in the moist
heat of Lake Charles, a sleepy Louisiana town heavy on the Creole influence --
zydeco music, crawfish, neighbors speaking French.  When he became a star at
nearby  McNeese State, he was a hero in his tightly knit neighborhood. 
  Dantley, meanwhile, grew up on the streets of Washington, D.C. --
playgrounds, street corners, one of hundreds of kids trying to jump-shoot
their way to a better life. He found it at Notre Dame, and now, with a long
all-star career. "I've been to that town where Joe lives," he says, grinning.
"We played an exhibition there. I stayed one  day and left. I said, 'Joe, I
love you to death, but I'm not going down there again. That place is dead.' "
  "Is it true that he's treated like a god down there?" he is asked.
  "Yeah. But hey.  I told him, 'You're an All-American in a little town like
this? You ought to be treated like a god.' "
  When Dumars first joined the Pistons, you'd find him sitting alone, never
saying a word. Dantley  arrived in 1986 and, in his meticulous fashion, began
to quietly scope out his new associates. He is really the first "pal" Dumars
has had in Detroit.
  "When people see someone who's private or quiet  they think he's boring,
or he doesn't have anything to say," says Dantley. "But if someone asked me
what Joe Dumars is like I'd say, he's just like you. He likes to do the same
things. Have fun. Talk  about things. . . . 
  "One thing we don't do is run around on the road and go to clubs. I'm in
my 13th year in the league. I've seen all that. They're nothing new there. . .
. 
  "Joe's not really  into that, either. He's organized, like me. He writes
notes to himself. One time I saw one of his notes. It had stuff like 'call
home' or 'buy shoes' and then he wrote 'say thanks to God.' It was on  the
list. I'm not religious like that. But that showed me something about what
kind of guy he is."
It's not easy maintaining a friendship in the NBA. For one thing, you're
together all the time, which  isn't always a positive. Then there's the peer
pressure from teammates. And what if one player does well and one goes down
the tubes?
  "I think that's one of the reasons we're good friends," Dumars  says. "If
I play badly, A.D.'s not going to tell me I played good. He'll say, 'Joe, you
struggled.' And if he has a bad game, I'll tell him. You have to be honest,
you know?"
  All right. A tough  question. Dantley had a reputation for being a
malcontent in Utah, a troublemaker for team harmony. Dumars seemed like the
classic team guy. Who's influencing whom?
  "Adrian's not as hard as people  think he is," says Dumars. "He's tough
but fair. I don't know what he was like in Utah, but he hasn't done any of
that here." Indeed, if there are any problems, the coach isn't complaining.
Chuck Daly  says Dantley "can't be a bad influence on anybody as far as his
professionalism is concerned.  If everyone played the way he does, the level
of the league would be much higher."
  A.D. Joe D. It  may just be by comparison that they seem so silent. After
all, the Pistons have Isiah Thomas, who is a star with his very presence;
Laimbeer, basketball's answer to acid indigestion;  Mahorn, loud and  strong;
Salley, his own cottage industry (T-shirts on left, pins on right), and Dennis
Rodman, who goes through life with his fist  in the air. 
  Hey. Somebody's got to be quiet on this team.
  So there they go. The Shhhh! Brothers. So what if they don't holler? So
what if they don't boast, don't brag, don't grab a hairbrush and lip-sync a
rap record in the middle of the locker room? Life  has room for many different
kinds of friendships. Here is one based on respect, values, honesty and
spaghetti.
  "What if Joe were to be traded?" Dantley was asked. "How would you react?"
  "I'd  miss him. I know it's part of the job, but I'd miss him."
  At least they wouldn't owe each other any money.
CUTLINE
Joe Dumars (left) and Adrian Dantley have become good friends off the
basketball court. In Dantley's arms is his son, Cameron.
Adrian Dantley: " . . . If someone asked me what Joe Dumars is like I'd say,
he's just like you. . . . "
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
BASKETBALL;JOE DUMARS;ADRIAN DANTLEY;DPISTONS;Pistons
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
