<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8901240766
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
890612
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, June 12, 1989
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color CRAIG PORTER
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1989, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
ONE FROM THE CROWN
THE LITTLE GUYS CUT THE LAKERS DOWN TO SIZE
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
INGLEWOOD, Calif. --  They needed a hero. They needed someone to combat the
Hollywood ending that was about to unfold. The Pistons were winning, the
Lakers  were dying -- but suddenly the Lakers  were rising again, feeble
bones, pulled hamstrings, the ghosts of champions past, howling and clanging
chains.

  It was the end of every horror movie ever made, and LA was suddenly
within three points  with nine seconds to go. The ball came in to David Rivers
in the corner and Joe Dumars, uncharacteristically, was out of position. No
time to think. No time to plan. He charged, flying like destiny --  never mind
that he had just come off the bench, and had been sitting for nine minutes --
and wrapped himself on that ball in mid-air, smothered it, blocked it, then
saved it to Bill Laimbeer. Remember  that moment, folks. He may just have
secured the first Pistons championship in history.

  Three down.
  Killer Joe.
  "When was the last time you blocked a shot?" someone asked Dumars  in the
joyous Pistons locker room, after Detroit outlasted an injured LA team,
114-110, to take a commanding 3-0 lead in these NBA Finals.
  "God, I don't even remember!" Dumars said. "I couldn't even tell  you.
College maybe?"
  College? A blocked shot? Joe Dumars? Why not? Anything it takes. Anything
they need. In many ways, that final play was typical of all that had come
before it, the Pistons' smallest men  coming from nowhere to snare the
victories, to take this big man's game and put it in the low pockets.  Here
was Vinnie Johnson, defenders in  his face, on his neck, in his shorts,
knocking down  five straight baskets to bring the Pistons back in that fourth
quarter. Here was Isiah Thomas, stealing the ball, poking away passes, driving
the lane, one-handed, for a crucial lay-up in the final minute.  
  And here, finally was Dumars, quiet Joe -- who, right now, is so
clearly the MVP of this series that they needn't bother to vote -- not only
making that final steal, but before that, lighting  up the nets like he used
to in the hot, sweaty Louisiana gymnasiums of his youth. Hitting from long
range, short range, bank shots, lay-ups, kiss glass, kiss nets, kiss 'em
good-bye.
  "It was just  like back in high school," he said of his 21-point third
quarter (17 straight) and 31 points overall. "It felt like every shot was
going to fall."
  He allowed a smile.
  "And most of them did."
  Three down.
  What  a game. What a drain. This was less a basketball court  than some
battlefield in a World War II photograph. There was Magic Johnson on the
Lakers  bench, wounded, wrapped in bandages, able to give just five minutes
before taking a seat, and Dennis Rodman on the other bench, his shirt yanked
up, a trainer  working on his throbbing back muscles. Out on the court, Isiah
had his thigh wrapped, a bandage over his left eye. Rick Mahorn and Michael
Cooper were tangled up, muscle on muscle, pushing each other, cursing,
fighting. A.C. Green hooked up Thomas, pushed Rodman,  James Worthy threw two
elbows in Mahorn's chest. Pretty? Forget pretty.  Even the usual "Let's
Dance"  Forum crowd was down and dirty Sunday, yelling "Detroit Sucks!"  and
booing unmercifully.
  No  wonder. Their team was hurt. Their team was on the brink of disaster.
These Lakers -- trailing and injured -- were laid- back no longer, they were
mean, they  were pushing and shoving, diving for balls  and cramming for lane
space. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar ripped a rebound from Isiah Thomas as if taking
some flesh with it, Worthy juked and bumped and forced his way inside for a
lay-up, contact and all. They  are, after all, the defending world champions,
and they played like a proud whale hopelessly speared by the enemy: They
thrashed, splashed, twisted with frustration. 
  "We knew they would never lay  down and die in this game," said Thomas.
"They had the home court, the incentive, they were going to be on fire. We
just wanted to weather the storm and win the game."
  Eventually they did both, thanks  once again, to the guards, who have put
on a show worthy of any movie award they give out in this high-gloss city.
They scored 74 of their teams 114 points, played stick-'em-up defense, and,
most importantly, kept their cool in the killer moments. "We don't panic
anymore," said Johnson.
  And that, ladies and gentlemen, is the mark of a team that is ready to
take the throne -- not last year's, not the  year's before, it has taken this
long for the Pistons to come into an emotional snake pit like the Forum on
Sunday, take the hardest stones these devils can throw, and still wrestle away
a victory.
  What proof? Here is your proof: Up 113-108 with 28 seconds to go, the
Pistons seemed assured of the victory. The crowd began to file out. And then
the game began to unravel. A jump ball resulted  in a Thomas foul on Rivers,
which sank coach Chuck Daly in his chair, head in his hands.  Rivers sank the
free throws: 113-110 with 13 seconds to go. OK. All the Pistons needed do was
hang onto the  ball, right? But an inbounds pass from John Salley to Dumars
resulted in another jump ball -- the refs suddenly forgot how to call a foul
-- and although Dumars won the tap, the ball rolled away out  of bounds. The
Lakers had it. A three-point basket could tie.
  "I said to myself, 'Whoa,' " said Salley afterward.  "We've seen this
before."
  Indeed. Remember Bird stole the ball? Remember  Game 6 here last year,
the so-called last-second foul on Laimbeer? Remember all that? The Pistons do.
They did not panic. They did not shake. "Every freaky thing that can happen to
a basketball team  has happened to us," said Thomas, shaking his head.
"There's nothing left to fear."
  So it was that Dumars came flying through the air, only missing the cape
and the boots, and blocked that Rivers'  shot, saved it to Laimbeer, who said
to himself: "Don't drop it! Just hang on, Bill. Let them foul you if they
want."  Maybe last year, that shot would have gone. Maybe last year,
Laimbeer would have missed both free throws. But this is not last year. Ask
the players. Ask the coaches.
  "Actually, the way things were going," said a weary Daly, "I thought Joe
would save the ball, throw it back,  and it would go in their basket for two
points."
  OK. Don't ask the coaches.
  They'll be convinced soon enough. Three up? Can the Pistons really be one
win away from the crown? Sure, they have  been in that position before. But
last year, there were only two games left.  This year they have four games to
get one victory, and two of those are at the Palace. If the Pistons can't do
that, they  don't deserve to be in the NBA Finals.
  OK. A moment here  about the injuries to Los Angeles. Yes, it is a shame
that Johnson barely played because of his strained hamstring. You want to face
an opponent  at full strength, and Johnson  is perhaps the best player in the
game. And yes, it is a shame that Byron Scott (torn hamstring) still hasn't
played in this series, and may not. And yes, it is tough for LA to have to use
Rivers and Tony Campbell in the NBA Finals.
  So what? That shouldn't cheapen the accomplishment. You play with what
you got. Rodman could barely walk out there Sunday. Mahorn  couldn't stand up
last year, and Thomas couldn't put any weight on his ankle in Game 7. Was
there any asterisk next to the Lakers' crown for 1988? What we saw Sunday was
enormous character by this Lakers  team, pressure shooting by Worthy (26
points), Campbell  (11 points) and a stellar performance by the retiring
Abdul-Jabbar (24 points, 13 rebounds). Their players showed class, guts,
desire -- and that is just as much a part of the Lakers as Magic Johnson.
  Give them credit for that. And give the Pistons credit for what they are
doing, chopping down the legendary Lakers with their smallest men.  Isiah. VJ.
Killer Joe. Is there any stopping these guys?
  "JOE! HEY, JOE! YO, JOE!" fans  screamed as Dumars made his way through the
basement hallways of the Forum. He waved shyly.
  "You're gonna  lose your anonymity," someone said to Dumars.
  "I don't even know what that means," he said.
  Never mind. They'll all be famous real soon. Three down. One to go.
  Can you wait?
CUTLINE:
The  Detroit Pistons' Dennis Rodman stuffs the ball over the Los Angeles
Lakers' Mychal Thompson.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
DPISTONS;BASKETBALL;Pistons
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
