<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8701260896
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
870531
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, May 31, 1987
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Associated Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1987, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
CELTICS PUT THEIR GREMLINS TO WORK
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
BOSTON -- Danny Ainge threw up a shot, the Pistons scrambled madly for the
rebound, and it flew over their heads, back into the Celtics' hands. And
another shot went up, this time by Larry Bird,  and the Pistons scrambled, and
again it caromed over their heads and back to the Celtics. Surely some devil
was at work now. And it happened again, Kevin McHale missed, rebound Boston,
and again, Robert  Parish missed, rebound Boston, and again, another shot,
another rebound, and by now the sold-out Boston Garden was laughing, taunting,
and the basketball was becoming the very spirit of the Celtics,
unexplainable, unreasonable, undeniable. And finally it was swung into the
hands of Ainge again, standing out in never-never land, three- point soil, and
with just over three minutes left in somebody's  season, up it went and down
it came, straight through the hoop. They should have checked that ball
afterward. There was blood all over it.

  Life goes on. The Pistons do not.  There is no way they deserved to lose
this thing, this 117-114 decision in the seventh game of the Eastern
Conference final. No way except from a scoreboard point of view. And that is
all that counts. So when the final buzzer  sounded it was the Celtics leaping
and laughing and celebrating in each other's arms. And the Pistons were
staring at the parquet floor that had been their burial ground.

  "That's it?" they seemed  to say.
  That's it.
  What was going through your mind every time they got the ball back?"
someone later asked Dennis Rodman of that painful sequence, which turned a
99-99 deadlock into 102-99,  Celtics, a lead for good, and which seemed to
suck the destiny out of the most courageous game these Pistons have ever
played.
  "It was like, we got it --  no, we don't," he answered, looking at his
feet. "We got it --  no, they got it. Finally it felt like, 'God, what do we
have to do to win here?' "
  Isn't that the way every Pistons fan feels this morning? What do they have
to do? Please, God,  answer? This will be recorded as the 18th straight defeat
for Detroit in this rickety building, the end of the year, the killer in a
remarkable season. Yet the Pistons, the losers, were more courageous,  more
determined, more inspired, it seemed, than the team that will now advance to
the NBA final.
  Here was guts in every human form. Here was Isiah Thomas, with four fouls
early in the second half,  begging coach Chuck Daly, "Lemme stay, Chuck! . . .
I won't get another! . . . Please! . . . " Here was John Salley, half-blinded
by an elbow in the eye, going to the hoop for a slam and drawing a foul.  Here
were Vinnie Johnson and Adrian Dantley diving for a loose ball and banging
heads, and Dantley, the team's most reliable solo threat, being wheeled out on
a stretcher, semiconscious, his eyes closed,  spending the rest of this game
in an ambulance and a hospital bed.
  Could anything have been tougher? Dantley gone? Players in foul trouble? A
crowd that wanted everyone from Detroit dead? As if playing  in this broiling
execution box against a team that never seems to lose the big ones wasn't
enough?
Did you ever want a game more than this?" the Pistons were asked, one by one,
in their cramped locker  room afterward.
  "Never," said Thomas softly.
  "Never," said Bill Laimbeer.
  "I've never played in anything like this," sighed Joe Dumars, the quietest
Piston, who seemed the most dejected of  all. He had played brilliantly,
scored 35 points, kept his team in this war with Isiah on the bench. He was
symbolic of a group that had found strength from unusual places all series.
Now he sat, hands on his knees, his lips pursed tightly.
  "Tired . . . dejected . . . hurt," he said when asked what he was feeling.
"It just hurts so much to lose like this. I really felt we played well enough
to win."
  And they did. Which may be what hurts the most. It was difficult for anyone
with compassion to watch the final three minutes -- the Pistons staying close,
playing foul-and-pray, rebound-and-pray  -- and not feel something. How sad
for Daly, who turns 57 this summer, and must wonder  whether he'll ever get
this close again. How sad for Thomas, who has been in Detroit for so long, and
for Laimbeer,  who endured more Boston hatred than one man should ever have
to, and for Johnson, who had his game knocked out of him because he dived  for
a ball, and for Dantley, who never even knew what happened  in the biggest
afternoon of his career. When he awoke in his hospital bed, when they told him
the score, what could his reaction have been?
  That's it? That's it.
  No fair, it seems, that now  and forever the picture of Bird stealing that
pass in Game 5 will haunt the memory of this series, it will always be there,
like a dull ache, like a scar. And however bad the fan feels, the players
involved  --  Thomas, Laimbeer, Dumars --  feel worse. They may say nothing.
They may shrug it off. You never shrug it off.
  And this hurts more: If you flipped this series around, if the Pistons had
won Saturday,  the Celtics would have little to complain about. They had
already been soundly beaten three times, virtually beaten in Game 5, and held
close in Games 1 and 2. The Pistons' victories, conversely, were  sure,
unarguable. Yet they will be the ones cursed to wonder of how such talent and
desire did not translate into four wins.
  "Did the best team win this series?" Thomas was asked.
  "No, because  I felt we were the best team."
  "Did the best team win this series?" Laimbeer was asked.
  "I'd say the team with the home-court advantage won," he grumbled.
  From other teams, one might consider  this sour grapes. And yet, well,
don't you feel that way, too? With their backs to the wall, the Pistons had
the intensity of a surgeon holding a human heart. They could take every punch
the Celtics  threw. They just couldn't take all of them.
  This place. This place. Playing the Celtics here is a choke- lock. You can
wiggle, but you rarely get free. Bird was brilliant (37 points) and McHale was
 gutsy and Ainge did so much damage at the worst moments. With 25 seconds
left, there was still a Detroit prayer, still a razor of hope, and Ainge once
again uncorked and --  up, down. Over.  The Garden  crowd went wild, thumping,
jeering, going hoarse with exultation.
  Seconds later, they had done it again, this green team that never dies. And
the Pistons dragged themselves to their tiny visitors'  quarters, and took
their uniforms off for good.
  That's it? That's it.
The summer goes on. The Pistons do not. This hurts terribly in Detroit,
because the city desperately fell in love with basketball  during these last
two weeks, or rather, fell in love again, a rekindled affair. Isiah's pops,
Dantley's spins, Laimbeer's flicked-wrist jumpers -- they had all become part
of the household recently,  like knick-knacks collected and put on the shelf.
And suddenly you wake up this morning, and they are behind glass.
  That's it.
  Hadn't the Pistons become the sentimental favorites of basketball  fans
across the country? With each passing game, each slice of clamped-jaw
determination, the Detroit bandwagon was more and more full. In Portland and
Milwaukee and Boise and Squaw Valley and Charlotte  and New Orleans and
Brooklyn? Weren't they rooting for blue? 
  But such desire reaches only the out-of-bounds line. On the floor, it's the
players, and, on this day, the Celtics were just too much  the Celtics.
Complain not about Dantley, for Boston had more than  its share of injuries
and absent players, too. What can you do? Salute the Celtics' pride, their
obstinacy, even their arrogance,  for if you admire victory, then you will
understand these are all qualities that ensure it. They just belong, in the
Pistons' fans case, to the wrong people.  
  It seems too cruel to say the Pistons  "lost" this series. It sounds better
to say they finished second, in a photo at the tape, and depending on the
angle, you could maybe, possibly, say that. . . . 
  Never mind. In ends here, in a steamy  Boston Garden  on a muggy Saturday
afternoon. You look at the court, where everything came crashing down, now
empty and  quiet, and the finality of it comes to you like the end of summer,
like the last  guest leaving a party, like a rebound flying helplessly over
your head and into the hands of your laughing opponent.
  That's it? That's it.
CUTLINE
Celtics reserve center Bill Walton and assistant  coach Chris Ford, a former
Piston, celebrate Boston's 117-114 victory.
Celtics forward Larry Bird finds a way around Joe Dumars and Adrian Dantley.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
BASKETBALL;DPISTONS;COLUMN;Pistons
</KEYWORDS>
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