<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8901250032
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
890614
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Wednesday, June 14, 1989
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo CRAIG PORTER
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
NBA CHAMPS
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1989, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
NOT BAD, BOYS!
PISTONS SWEEP LAKERS FOR FIRST TITLE
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
INGLEWOOD, Calif. --  In the end, there would be no denying them; they
wanted this more than life itself. No more waiting. No more excuses. The
Pistons were storming the throne room, grabbing the  basketball, stealing it,
owning it, banking it off glass, slamming it through the rim, counting the
seconds until destiny lifted her veil and gave them that long-awaited kiss,
smack on the lips.

 One-two-three-four.

  Champions.
  "BAAAAD BOYS, BAAAAD BOYS," they sang, arm in arm on the bench, as the
Pistons swept the Los Angeles Lakers in four games with a 105-97 victory
Tuesday night to  capture the NBA championship. "WE'RE THE BAAAD BOYS!"
  Who in Detroit will ever forget? Our first NBA champions? This was the
moment we had awaited forever, since the team was a laugh, since the roof
collapsed on the arena, since the aura of champions used to leave them
paralyzed. Not anymore.
  Instead, on this magic night, against the defending world champions, it was
captain Isiah Thomas down  the middle like a bullet, driving and flipping and
passing every Laker en route to a lay-up. And it was James Edwards, the symbol
of bench strength, towering over the opponents, blocking shots, slamming in
baskets so hard it brought tears to your eyes. And it was Joe Dumars, sudden
hero, proving that Bad Boys can be good, shooting and driving and finally,
when that buzzer sounded, finding a camera to  say, "I'm going to Disney
World!" although, to tell the truth, after this, Disney World will be a
letdown.
  One-two-three-four.
  Champions.
  "What did that final minute feel like?" someone asked  John Salley in the
champagne-soaked Piston dressing room after the game.
  "TOO  . . . LONG!" he laughed.
  Doesn't that sum it all up? How long had they waited? At the buzzer, Thomas
was in tears.  Rick Mahorn was grabbing everybody in sight. While Forum fans
watched in desperation, Pistons fans watched in unbridled glee back home,
21,000-plus filling the Palace to watch the game on television.  How long had
we waited? That's how long, America. Television.
  Champions.
  "I can't describe it, I can't," said Thomas, his face dripping champagne.
"We did everything we had to do."
  And  how fitting an ending! Here in Game 4 was a finale that symbolized
Detroit's rise to the top -- a climb from the very bottom. The Pistons were
swamped early by a tenacious Lakers team, they were scratched,  clawed,
bloodied. Michael Cooper threw punches at Mahorn, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar threw
elbows at Mahorn -- and suddenly the Lakers were miles ahead, a 16-point lead
in the second quarter.
  But live and  learn. These are no longer green kids, no longer awe-struck
by Lakers or Celtics. They are playoff veterans, every sweaty inch of them.
And so they came back: Thomas, little big man, rising over Abdul-Jabbar  to
strip a rebound; Bill Laimbeer driving in for a breakaway lay-up; Dumars,
rising like destiny, banking a shot off the glass from a ridiculous angle, in
it went, and the foul, thank you. Slowly the  Lakers lead was peeled away like
unneeded skin, the Pistons were being hatched as world beaters, one basket,
one game, one delicious moment at a time.
  One-two-three-four.
  Champions.
  A sweep?  Who would have predicted a sweep? Even the pundits who cite the
Lakers injuries can't find fault with perfection. Play four, win four. The
Pistons survived everything the NBA could throw at them -- the  Central
Division, Michael Jordan, the referees, James Worthy -- and finally,
wonderfully, they were hugging and crying and singing like Christmas.
  "SMELLS LIKE WORLD CHAMPIONS IN HERE!" yelled Mark  Aguirre, dousing
himself with the bubbly.
  "BAAAAD BOYS! BAAAAAD BOYS!" came the response.
  One-two-three-four.
  Champions.
How wonderful, finally, for these Pistons players who, in the three-year
climb to this mountain, have endured everything from Celtic leprechauns to
Jack Nicholson. How great for the centers: Laimbeer, everybody's villain, a
guy who proved that slow and earthbound can still  get a ring, and Edwards,
the oldest guy on the team, who began his career under the tutelage of
Abdul-Jabbar and won a ring in Abdul-Jabbar's farewell performance. He played
the game of his life Tuesday,  scoring 13 points, all in the fourth quarter,
to seal the win. "I have never played more intense basketball," he said,
blinking champagne from his eyes. "This is so great!"
  For the forwards: Mahorn,  who had to watch much of last year's final
series on his stomach, now standing upright, waving and slamming his big body;
and Aguirre, a supposed head- case who found that less can indeed be more,
because  now, as a role player, he has what he never achieved as a point-
scorer in Dallas: a championship. Did you see him at the end, looking like a
man who had just woke up in heaven?
  For the X-factors,  Salley and Dennis Rodman.  Their very arrival three
years ago signaled the final touches of this championship blueprint. There
they were Tuesday night, Rodman playing through painful back spasms, Salley
called upon early, responding with a slam, a jumper. How fitting that they
have both matured just in time to grab the brass ring. Dennis, of course, will
probably hang from it. Salley will turn it into  a commercial.
  And then, of course, there are the guards. Where would the Pistons be
without them in this series? Thomas' gamesmanship, his direction, his
confidence, coupled with Dumars' deadeye shooting, his gluey defense -- and of
course Vinnie Johnson's lava-flow offense. Be honest. When these three are
cooking, is there a better backcourt anywhere in basketball? Anywhere in this
decade?
  And how fitting that, for all the years that Thomas had to carry this
team, he finally reached the end of the rainbow by holding the door for
Dumars, his quiet, less-noticed backcourt mate, who upped  his game and
collected the MVP honors.  Isiah always said the team will win this title, not
him. The Pistons proved it.
  "What was the sweetest moment out there for you?" Thomas was asked.
  "When  I lost it and started crying," he smiled, almost crying again. "It
was just that everything inside of me burst out. It was everything I had ever
wanted."
  And how about Dumars?  What a series! Shooting  on the run, on the jump,
off the dribble, the high delicious arching shots that drop through like
daggers. His steady hand brought Detroit back from the pits Tuesday night --
as it had led them, really, all series. MVP? You betcha. He had promised if
the Pistons won he would finally do something crazy. "Did you do it?" he was
asked.
  "Nah, I just came in and lied down for a second," he answered,  smiling.
  Champions.
  And how about the coach, Daddy Rich, Chuck Daly? How long has he waited for
this? His whole life? He had never won a championship of any kind as a head
coach -- not in high school, college, the pros. He knew he had a first-class
roster, but he remained self-effacing all season, convinced, it seemed, that
if he allowed even the slightest show of optimism, God would strike  him down
for being cocky. When the buzzer finally sounded Tuesday night, the veneer
finally cracked, he grinned, he smiled, he hugged.
  He got soaked.
  "We poured so much champagne on Chuck," gushed  assistant coach Brendan
Suhr, "he looks like Pat Riley now!"
  Champions.
Nationally they will be writing about the Pistons as the New Kings in Town,
but in Detroit people know this has been stewing for nearly a year. The
Pistons probably deserved to win the crown last season, but life and referees
and injuries are not always fair: The Pistons lost in seven games.
  "Winning four," said a wizened  Thomas this time, "is so much sweeter after
you've lost four. Believe me."
  Injuries? Forget about injuries. Asterisks? There will be none on this
series.  Sure, it would have been better if Magic Johnson had been healthy and
played in all the games. Sure, it would have been better if Byron Scott had
played.  Sure, sure, and so what? Wouldas and couldas are worthless now, just
as they were worthless  last year, when a gimpy-ankled Thomas had to struggle
through Game 7 and watch his dreams dashed on the rocks.
  A word here, however, for the Lakers. They played valiantly, with pride.
Missing their  starting backcourt, they played Tuesday like the champions they
were, bursting out like wounded tigers, clawing and swiping, grabbing a
16-point lead, surrendering every ounce of desire before finally  surrendering
the keys to the kingdom. History will only weep that Abdul- Jabbar could not
have exited in a more noble fashion than a four-game sweep. But he is a
sportsman, and all sportsmen know that  time will catch you eventually.  At
42, he bowed out to a younger team, and that is probably the way it should be.
  On his way back from the 1,000th interview, Dumars cut through a training
room,  carrying his MVP trophy. There, alone, sat A.C. Green, his head in his
hands.
  "Hey, A.C.," said Dumars.
  "Nice going, Joe. You earned it."
  "Thanks, man," he said, and they shook hands.
  Remember that scene. And remember these: Salley, center court, arms as high
as skyscrapers. Isiah driving like a whippet. Dumars letting go a rainbow.
Mahorn bumping for position, Laimbeer firing a  three-pointer, Rodman up in
the clouds for a rebound, Vinnie shooting in the face of countless defenders.
And finally, all of them, veterans and rookies alike, in that soaking, sweet,
sing-song that  tells the world who now sits on the throne.
  Here's to a team of aggressive, sweaty, funny, spirited, driving, leaping,
and finally dancing basketball heroes, who learned this night that you can't
always get what you want, but if you try sometimes, you get what you deserve.
Bad Boys, Best Boys, you know the rest, Boys:
  One-two-three-four.
  Champions.
CUTLINE
Captain Isiah Thomas grasps  the NBA championship trophy, with teammate Mark
Aguirre at right. Thomas declared: "We did everything we had to do."
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
DPISTONS;BASKETBALL;RECORD;FIRST;CHAMPION;Pistons
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
