<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8901250322
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
890616
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, June 16, 1989
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo JOHN COLLIER;WILLIAM ARCHIE
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
NBA CHAMPS BAD BOYS
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1989, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
JOY AND A TEAR
AMID THE CELEBRATION, TEAM LOSES RICK MAHORN
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
Just a moment ago, he was dancing. Just a moment ago, he was spritzing
champagne on his teammates, laughing with those gap-teeth, shaking his big
nasty body and singing "BAAAD BOYS! BAAAD BOYS!"  Just a moment ago, Rick
Mahorn was the muscle around the heart of the Pistons' brand-new NBA
championship team.

  And now he is gone.

  So much for fantasy. Welcome back to real life. On the day of their
championship parade, their love dance with the city of Detroit, Pistons
management rolled the dice and lost: Mahorn was left unprotected in the
expansion draft -- which for some ridiculous reason  is held before the
hangovers wear off from the NBA Finals -- and the Minnesota Timberwolves, a
team that doesn't even have uniforms yet, plucked the baddest of our Bad Boys
right off the shelf.
 "It's  . . . a business deal,' said a crushed Mahorn as he tried to drive
away from the Palace celebration Thursday afternoon, amid throngs of people
who were cheering and waving banners, not even aware  that their hero had just
been stolen.
  Mahorn looked away. He had his hands on the wheel and a bag of souvenirs
on the seat and he was trying not to cry in front of a TV camera and this was
wrong,  all wrong. It doesn't matter how mean and nasty his reputation, it
doesn't matter if his back injury makes him questionable. He had just touched
the end of the rainbow, the dream of every kid who ever  laced up a basketball
sneaker. All this -- the cheers, the parade, the glory -- was paradise.
  And he was being thrown out.
  Shouldn't there be a moratorium on this kind of news? Shouldn't we  be
able to celebrate for one solid day, for 24 hours, without some poke in the
ribs from the real world? 
  Instead this. Farewell, Rickey. He goes from the best team in basketball
to surely one of  the worst. Just a moment ago, he was on the podium in front
of a delirious crowd, leading them in a Bad Boys cheer. He walked over to
coach Chuck Daly, shook his hand, and said, "Thank you for having  faith in
me." He walked over to general manager Jack McCloskey, grabbed his hand and
said, "Thanks for sticking with me through my weight problem." He was the Bad
Boy turned good, the thug in the movies  who, in the final scene, reveals his
tender side.
  And gets shot in the heart.
  It's a sad, sad day," said McCloskey, backed against a wall in the Palace
hallway. "We feel like we're being penalized  for having depth."
  He shook his head. He tried to explain. He said he had been on the phone
all morning and afternoon -- even on the parade float -- trying to work out a
deal with Minnesota to keep  the Timberwolves from taking Mahorn. But it was
his decision to leave Mahorn unprotected in the first place, and there is no
way to minimize the  impact.  It was like throwing teargas at a wedding.
  Why Rickey? The starting forward? McCloskey says his bad back was part of
the reason.  But there is more to a player than his anatomy. What about his
heart? On the court, Mahorn was the symbol of  Pistons toughness. You did not
mess with him and you did not mess with this team. Intimidation plays a big
part in victory; the Pistons, this morning, are a lot less vicious.
  Not to mention Mahorn's  basketball skills. "What he does won't show up in
the stat sheet," said a saddened Joe Dumars. Things like setting picks. And
defense, the essence of Pistons basketball. It was Mahorn who drew assignments
  like Patrick Ewing of the Knicks and James Worthy of the Lakers. Who will do
that now?
  The Pistons knew they'd have to leave some good player unprotected (each
team could protect eight; this year's expansion teams, Miami and Charlotte,
did not have to give up any players), in order to preserve the likes of Dennis
Rodman, John Salley and the starters. Vinnie Johnson's playoff performance
almost  guaranteed his protection. So many thought the man to go would be
James Edwards, the backup center.  
  No knock on Edwards, who is a wonderful player and a class guy, but he is
33 years old (Mahorn  is 30), he does earn $800,000 a year (as opposed to
Mahorn's $600,000) and he is mostly effective off the bench. An expansion team
looking for starters, leaders and affordable salaries might be more  likely to
pass on Edwards.  Hey.  The whole thing is a gamble.  You try to offer guys
the expansion teams won't take.
  But Mahorn? A veteran? A starter? An outspoken leader in the locker room? 
  He was gone like ice cream on a hot afternoon.
  Just a moment ago he was throwing elbows, then laughing when the opponent
tried to retaliate. Just a moment ago he was backing in on Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
 and canning a jumper. Just a moment ago he was screaming in the time-out
huddle: "ONE MORE MINUTE! NO LETUP!"
  He was a symbol of what the right team can do for the wrong guy. He
arrived four years  ago, fat, unhappy, traded from Washington. He did not want
to be here. That first season he kept to himself, and fans wondered if the
Pistons had picked up a flabby, mean-looking mistake.
  But teammates.  They'll get you. And the fellow Pistons got to Mahorn,
implored him to play harder, convinced him he was needed, but that he had to
pull his share. He lost weight, he improved his defense, he signed  on for the
long haul. And he became a player.
  Now, before they even put the ring on his finger, he is gone. The news
jolted the Pistons in mid-celebration Thursday. They entered their locker room
 drunk with glee, the whole city loved them, this was the best. And they
emerged, minutes later, as if there had been a death in the family.
  Which, in a way, there was.
  Perhaps, in time, this  will be seen as an unavoidable business move.
Today it just stinks. Why Rickey? Why now? Why must a harmless, wonderful day
of celebration take a shot to the stomach?
  It doesn't seem fair. It isn't.  Just a moment ago, he was on the Palace
podium, microphone in hand, leading the crowd in a chorus of "BAAAD BOYS!"
Suddenly, to everyone's delight, he leaned over and kissed each of his
teammates, one  at a time, cheek to cheek. The toughest, roughest Piston?
Cheek to cheek? 
  How sad.
  He had no idea he was kissing them all good-bye.
CUTLINE
The Bad Boys in happier days: Bill Laimbeer and  Rick Mahorn depicted on their
famous poster. 
The Pistons hold the National Basketball Association championship trophy over
their heads Thursday during a rally in their honor at the Palace in Auburn
Hills.
Pistons fans rise to the occasion to view the parade at Woodward and Congress
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
SPT;DPISTONS;BASKETBALL;CHAMPIONSHIP;PARADE;DETROIT;RICK
MAHORN;Pistons
</KEYWORDS>
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