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<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8901230572
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
890604
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, June 04, 1989
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1E
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color GARY HARDIMAN
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1989, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
THE JOE NOBODY KNOWS
LOTS TO TELL ABOUT PISTON WITH LITTLE TO SAY
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
He stepped inside the hospital room and took a deep breath. There lay
his father, a strapping truck driver who had always been the image of
strength.  The sheets were pulled up to his waist.

  "Come here, son. I want you to see this."

  Joe Dumars walked slowly to the edge of the bed.
  "It won't do any good to feel sorry for me, you know. I don't need that
now. Just look and get  it over with."
  He pulled back the sheets. The left leg was gone, amputated at the knee.
Diabetes.  Dumars looked down and fought back the tears.
  "Hey, hey," said the father.  "It's done. We  just go on with life. No
feeling sorry for me, OK?"
  "OK, Dad," whispered his son, and nothing more was said.
  This is a story about The Joe Nobody Knows, the good man behind the
basketball star  who has suddenly become nationally famous. On Friday night,
the Pistons beat Chicago, capturing the Eastern Conference championship.
They were heading, once again, to the NBA Finals. The locker room  was a
playground of noise.
  "AWWRIGHT, BABY!"
  "GOIN' TO LA!"
  "OWWWW-EEEE!"
  Dumars emerged from the shower, pulled a towel around his waist and made
his way to a quiet corner. If anyone  had a right to celebrate, it was he.  He
had weathered a hurricane named Michael Jordan -- for six grueling games --
defensed him, shadowed him, lived inside his skin. And at a crucial moment in
the  fourth quarter, with the crowd screaming and the Bulls surging to within
two points,  he stripped Jordan of the ball, raced downcourt and dished  to
John Salley, who drew a foul.
  The play seemed  to break the Chicago spirit. It silenced the crowd. He
stole the ball? From the Great One? Jordan came running up behind him, stared
at his back, as if to say, "How dare you? I am King here." But Dumars  was
already miles away, thinking about the next play, unflappable. That is the way
he is. On the street. On the court. In that hospital room. People stare as he
goes by and wonder, "What makes that guy  so steady?"
  But did you know Joe Dumars is also a "Sanford and Son" nut? Did you know
he is part Creole? Did you know he can sing Zydeco music, and that he can
gorge on crawfish etouffee  and jambalaya  and boudin? Did you know that he
is mobbed wherever he goes in his hometown of Lake Charles, La., that he need
never pay for a meal, that women there, according to his best friend, John
Wesley, "nearly rip his clothes off"? 
  Did you know he loves to go to the library, and that he reads novels right
up to game time? Did you know he is  getting married this September to his
longtime girlfriend?  Did you know that his father suffered three heart
attacks during this NBA season -- each time Joe received a phone call in the
middle of the night -- yet Joe never complained, never made it an excuse  for
poor play?
  Did you know that, back home, they don't even call him Joe, they call him
"Boopie," a name he has had since birth? Boopie? Even his teammates are
unaware of that.
  "Why are you  so quiet?" people ask him over and over in Detroit. "Why are
you so quiet?"
  He shrugs. "I guess I don't have much to say." 
  This is a story of the Pistons' youngest starter and oldest soul,  their
MVP -- most valuable and most vanished player. In the days to come, Dumars
will be center stage, the man who must stop the Lakers' Magic Johnson if the
Pistons hope to win an NBA championship.  He will be interviewed nonstop.  He
will answer questions, softly, politely, patiently. 
  And nobody will learn one important  thing about him. Quiet Joe. Shy old
Joe. Nothing to say, right? Wrong.  The first thing you discover about The Joe
Nobody Knows is that he has plenty to say. It's just that, in many ways, he
has the whole world fooled.
He was born in the heat, in the  hot, sticky Louisiana  air that hangs on your
body like a wet rag. It was hot in the house. It was hot outside. It was hot
in church. "You never stopped sweating," he recalls now, sitting in his
apartment in West Bloomfield.  "My childhood was like the opening scenes of
that movie, 'Body Heat.' People fanning themselves. People dripping
perspiration. I can relate to that so much."
  When he was four years old, he had to  be taken to a Shreveport hospital,
where they operated on him for a hernia. A kid there had lost an arm in a car
accident. Before he left, young Joe asked his mother to give the kid his toy
truck "because  he should have something to play with." It was the beginning
of a childhood that would always be a few years ahead of its time.
  Joseph  and Ophelia Dumars lived on Lee Street in Natchitoches, La.,  a
small working-class town about 100 miles from Lake Charles. Their house was
across from the liquor store, and they had seven children, six boys and a
girl, and all the boys played football. Then,  one day, Joe Sr. built a
basketball  court in the yard -- the backboard was a sawed-off door, the hoop
an old bicycle rim -- and young Joe discovered a whole new world. "I was
better in football, but  all my brothers had done that. Basketball was a
challenge.
  "Besides, you needed other guys to play football. Basketball I could play
alone."
  In the heat of the bayou sun, he would stay for  hours, making up games,
shooting 50 free throws, shooting 100 lay-ups, shooting left-handed, just to
see whether he could do it. By the time he was in the  eighth grade, he was
good enough to play with  the college guys from nearby Northwestern State
University. They would sneak him into  the gym, play for three hours every
day. Boopie and the Big Boys. When the workouts were over, the college kids
would slap each other, talk about girls and booze, and walk out to their cars.
Joe got back on his bicycle and rode home.
  "I learned a lot about college life," says Dumars, now 26. "I couldn't
wait  until I grew up." That was obvious. One day, when he was 11, his mother
came home to find a sign on the door of the bedroom where Joe and his five
older brothers slept. It read: "NO GIRLS ADMITTED WITHOUT  EXPERIENCE."
  "All right now," she said, laughing, "who put that sign up there?"
  "Boopie did, Ma," the brothers said.
  "Boopie?"
  What did he know about girls? Nothing. What did he know about history?
Nothing. But that didn't stop him from sneaking off to the library four or
five times a week, finding a cool corner in the back and lowering himself into
a book. "I never told anybody  where I was. It was like my secret place, the
one place I didn't have to be a tough kid. I read about famous people. John
Kennedy. George Washington Carver."
  Today he reads "Presumed Innocent,"  "Mob Boss," "Paris Trout," he reads
Robert Ludlum and Elmore Leonard; he reads a host of biographies; he reads
nonfiction  and fiction. He sits by his locker, bent over a book, even as his
teammates  are flicking towels and throwing jockstraps  across the room.
  "Yo, Joe," one of them once said, "what the hell you reading, man?"
  "I'm reading about the Iran-contra thing."
  "Oh."
 End of conversation.
Not that he need worry about being accepted. For one thing, he's too nice a
guy. And then, there's his hometown.  "Joe Dumars," says  Salley, "has got the
most unbelievable deal  of all of us. You ever been to Lake Charles,
Louisiana? The man is king down there. I'm telling you, he's king."
  Dumars laughs, but the description is true. Not many small- town Louisiana
kids get  to star in professional basketball, and because  the closest NBA
franchise is probably Houston or Atlanta, it's a big deal when Joey comes
marching home.
  "I can't wait till he gets back here every  summer," admits Wesley, Joe's
best friend since their college days on the McNeese State basketball team,
where the Dumars legend grew. "We get an apartment together and hang out from
July to October.  Wherever we go, people stop him. Everybody wants to talk.
Last year they gave him the key to the city. I tell you, if we stopped the car
every time someone honked at us, we'd wreck the thing. Just going  out to the
store is an adventure."
  It is not, however, expensive. According to Wesley, the hometown hero
never has to pay for anything. A movie? An ice cream cone? Dinner? Gratis.
"There are even  people down here who offer Joe Cadillacs to drive around if
he needs them," Wesley says. "I save so much money when he's back home, it's
unbelievable."
  When the Pistons played an exhibition game  in Lake Charles last season,
the crowd erupted every time Dumars touched the ball. Superstars such as Isiah
Thomas and Adrian Dantley walked away shaking their heads. Wait a minute. Our
Joe Dumars? King of the bayou? Yes. And yet, typical of his personality, he
seems to let it wash over him like tide. He remains friendly to every hometown
soul, never haughty, never too busy. He expects nothing, is gracious  when
something is given, and speaks always in the throaty whisper of a voice that,
from the moment you meet him, suggests a humbleness that is warm and soothing.
Elvis in a sweat suit.  Except that Joe  has never been much for big parties,
booze or drugs; you are more likely to find him at a barbecue than at a
late-night saloon. Back when he turned 18, his brothers brought him before his
mother.
  "Ma, Boopie's old enough to drink now. We want to take him to the club. Is
it OK?"
  "Well, I suppose," she said. "But you all stick together and keep an eye
on him."
  Off they went. It was  around 10 p.m. An hour later, Mrs. Dumars came down
to the kitchen. There was Joe, sitting at the table, eating potato chips and
drinking a Coke.
  "Boopie, why are you back so soon?"
  He shrugged.  "Didn't seem like there was anything to do there except
drink. And if you didn't drink, you just stood around watching other people
drink. Who wants to do that?"
  As  we said, slightly ahead of his  time.
Father to father, son to son, come and tell me what you've done. That was the
rhyme Dumars' dad always sang, and it always worked, the boy came running and
told him everything. Joseph Dumars was  a husky, physical man, a truck driver,
delivered produce, and his youngest boy was crazy about him. For a while the
old man had Mondays off, and his kids would search for any excuse to stay home
with  him, to sit with him on the porch, to talk, to eat his cooking.
  One day, Ophelia Dumars came home from work, and her husband said, "You
know, Boopie didn't go to school today."
  "Why not?"
  He smiled. "I think you better ask him."
  She found him out in the yard, playing. "Why didn't you go to school
today?"
  "The teacher told us it was a holiday," Joe said. "She said we didn't
have to come."
  "What holiday?"
  "Mary Poppins' birthday."
  "Mary Poppins' birthday?"
  OK. So it wasn't a real good excuse. But, you know, father to father, son
to son. "I wanted to  be with my dad," Joe says, impishly. When he got older,
he actually went out on the truck for a delivery route. He was giddy with
excitement, sitting up front, feeling the powerful engines beneath his  seat.
"Then I started lifting all those crates. By the end of the day, I couldn't
even move my arms. I never knew how hard my father worked until then."
  The work ethic is only one thing he inherited.  There is the calm. The
strong principles. Mostly, however, there is the belief that you should never
complain about anything. After all, Dad doesn't. And Lord knows he could.
  The diabetes struck  in the mid-'80s. It robbed him first of his left
leg. When they scraped to fit a prosthesis,  they found the infection had
worsened, and they had to amputate more. The following year, he lost a toe off
 his right foot, and eventually the foot itself.  Suddenly he went from a
vibrant, working father to a handicapped man. "You know the amazing thing,"
Dumars says, a faraway look in his eye. "He was more  upbeat than any of us.
He kept saying, 'There's no point in acting sorrowful. That won't help.'
  "That's why, this past year, when he had the heart attacks (also brought
on by the diabetes) I didn't  say anything to my teammates. What's the point?
I still had to go out and do my job. What would be accomplished by hanging my
head?
  "I don't feel any less about my father because I don't act grief-stricken
on the bench. I play the game, and the minute the game is over, I'm back on
the phone home. I don't like a lot of emotion swings, not in front of people.
He taught me to deal with anything life throws  you, and deal with it
privately."
  Today, Joseph Dumars, 64, is pretty much confined to bed or a wheelchair.
He watches tapes of his son's games with the Pistons, over and over. When
young Joe visits,  he sits on the edge of the bed, like the other brothers,
listening, talking. One time his dad looked at him, in all sincerity, and
said, "You know, that's a pretty good job you got there. Hang onto it."
  "OK, Pop," Dumars said, "I will."
  He has.
  Which brings us to Joe Dumars' basketball -- brilliant defense, steady
shooting, the ability to play either point guard or shooting  guard --  and
one of the great myths going in the NBA, that somehow, because of his stoic,
silent-movie actor face, Joe Dumars does not have a burning competitive flame
inside.
  Ha!
  "They call me and  Mahorn the Bad Boys," Bill Laimbeer says, shaking his
head, "but I'll tell you something. Joe Dumars gets away with more than us. He
bangs like crazy. He's vicious out there. He just doesn't call attention  to
himself."
  It's true. Dumars, at 6-feet-3, 200 pounds,  has more than enough size,
strength and moxie to be nicknamed the Quiet Bad Boy. And competitive? This is
a kid who, whenever he lost  a one-on-one game to his older brother, Mark,
would immediately challenge him to a fight. ("He'd hold me in a hammerlock
while I screamed and wiggled until I tired myself out," Joe says, laughing.)
This  is a kid who was such a big Dallas Cowboys fan, he used to cry when they
lost. This is the man who puts himself through five hours a day of basketball
and tennis -- in the off-season. A man who, according  to his mother, sat in a
dark room all night after last week's loss to Chicago in Game 3 of the Eastern
Conference finals.  "He called to tell me he was just sitting there thinking
about it," she says.  "It bothered him so much."
  Last year, in Game 6 of the NBA Finals, Dumars had the winning shot in his
hands. It was an awkward try, a running banker that he put too hard off the
glass. It ricocheted  away, so did the game, and of course, two days later, so
did the championship. The morning after the miss, Dumars came early to the
Forum for practice. He lined up the shot again, same position, same  basket.
"I made it that time," he says, leaning back in the couch. "Then again, there
was no James Worthy or Michael Cooper there."
  And no Magic Johnson. This week, once again, Dumars will be called  on for
a defensive miracle. Air Jordan and Magic Johnson within five days? Sure. Why
not give the guy a rope and tell him to lasso the moon? "It's like going from
playing point guard to playing center,"  Dumars says of the switch. "Michael
is right in front of you, but Magic tries to wear you down with his size and
strength; he keeps backing in, backing in. I'm giving up six inches and a lot
of pounds  to him. You can wear yourself out pretty quick that way."
  Then again, there's that competitiveness. Before Dumars' first
professional game against the Lakers, he spoke to his father on the phone.  "I
know you're a good player, son," Mr. Dumars said, "but I don't think you can
hang with a Magic Johnson. I don't think you're ready for that."
  "Yes, I am," Dumars said matter-of-factly.
 He played a great game, he held Johnson in check, and 10 minutes after it was
over, a phone rang in Natchitoches.
  "See?"
  "I'm sorry, son."
  "That's OK."
If the Pistons should win this  NBA championship, there will be only one hole
in Joe Dumars' glory: the fact that Adrian Dantley is not there to share it.
Perhaps because they are both serious on the outside and semi-comical on the
inside, perhaps because neither is fond of extra words, perhaps because their
lockers were next to each other -- whatever the reason, Dumars and Dantley
became fast friends during Dantley's two years  in Detroit. That was broken up
with the trade of Dantley to Dallas 3 1/2  months ago.
  "It would definitely be a void winning without A.D.," Dumars says,
nodding. "We used to talk so much about  what it would be like to finally get
that ring, you know, that ring that everybody's talking about.
  "He used to say that if we won it, he would stand up on the table in the
middle of the locker  room and do something crazy. You know, start singing and
dancing, scream and holler, something he'd never do any other time.
  "I said, 'No, you wouldn't.'
  "He said, 'Yes, I will.'
  "I said,  'Bet me, so I'll be sure you'll back it up.'
  "And he did. He bet me part of his playoff share -- like $1,000. And with
A.D., if you know him, well, you know he was serious if he did that."
 There will be no dancing. Not from Dantley. The ex-Piston may come up to
watch the Finals. He may stay at Joe's apartment. But the post-championship
celebration -- if there is one -- would be up to Dumars.
  "Would you ever jump on the table and sing and dance?" he is asked.
  "I don't think so," he says, breaking into a grin, "but then, you never
know."
And that about sums it up. You never know.  With Dumars, you never know
anything. Those who think they have a fix on him are probably not even close.
Quiet Joe, they say. Shy Joe. It is true, Dumars' basketball heroes are
low-key defensive stars such as Maurice Cheeks and Bobby Jones.
  It is also true that he drives a Jaguar.
  Yes, Dumars is all business on the court, a professional's professional;
he also once worked at Church's Fried  Chicken. 
  True, he speaks softly, and will never be accused of taking over a team
meeting. Then again, he absolutely explodes in laughter at Redd  Foxx playing
Fred Sanford. "I don't know why that  guy cracks me up so much, but he does,"
he says. On a radio talk show last winter, Dumars was presented with a
surprise test: audio clips from the TV series. He was asked to identify the
episode.
  "Oh, man," he said, surprised, "well, all right, let's try it."
  Not only did he get the episode, but he recited the lines word for word.
With no preparation. 
  That is serious Sanford.
  And this is serious business. An NBA title. Another chance at the glory
rainbow. Joe Dumars does not dream of making the last shot, but he wouldn't
mind making the final steal. And he sure would like  a ring. "Let's face it, I
don't figure to win a whole lot of individual awards in the NBA," he says. "A
team championship would be the ultimate thing."
  You almost have to hope he gets it. Here,  in a league full of jammers and
slammers, is a soft touch off the glass, a man without jewelry, a guy who
values silence, proud and real. A guy true to his father, loyal to his
friends, sweet on his hometown. Give him the parade. Let him ride in the limo.
And when it's all over, he'll head right back to the Louisiana heat, peel off
the long pants, grab a plate of crawfish and a dish of ice cream.  Boopie,
King of the bayou, can celebrate like Mary Poppins' birthday. "Yeah," he says,
smiling at the thought. The Joe Nobody Knows thinks that's just fine.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
JOE DUMARS;DPISTONS;BASKETBALL;BIOGRAPHY;Pistons
</KEYWORDS>
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