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<UID>
8801280026
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
880621
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Tuesday, June 21, 1988
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SEE ALSO METRO EDITION, Page 1D
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1988, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
PISTONS JUST DESERVE THIS NBA TITLE MORE
</HEADLINE>
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</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
INGLEWOOD, Calif. --  So this is what it comes down to for the Detroit
Pistons: 48 minutes to live or die. They are skin and bone now, a cornered
animal, a team without its captain that is relying  on prayers, guts and the
power within.

  One game. The world championship.

  "Are you hoping for a miracle?" someone asked Isiah Thomas, their star, as
he sat beside his crutches during a press conference  Monday.
  "Yes," he said slowly. "Yes, I am."
  Isn't everybody? Every basketball fan who doesn't wear purple, anyhow. What
kind of justice is it when Thomas, the guy who has waited longest  as a Piston
to reach this glorious moment -- Game 7, all or nothing -- likely can't play
because of a sprained ankle?
  What kind of fairness is it when Joe Dumars, who has done everything right
for  so long, misses the final shot in Game 6 and has to walk around wondering
if he blew a championship?
  What kind of balance is it when Lakers coach Pat Riley, he of the greasy
hair and hollow, if pretty,  philosophy, is favored for yet another
championship ring, while Chuck Daly, a second- banana his whole life, seems,
once again, at age 57, crippled by fate?
  Where is the payoff? Tell me. I have been  with these guys for nearly a
month straight now, and in the last 24 hours I've watched them sigh, watched
Thomas hobble around on crutches, watched Dumars and Adrian Dantley and John
Salley and Vinnie Johnson walk around the hotel lobby, trying to smile and act
as if  they're not going crazy with anticipation. 
  And, I still feel -- heaven help me -- that the Pistons are going to win
this thing.  And I think this is why: 
  I think it's because they deserve it.
Dreams just can't fizzle
  Now, that doesn't count for much. Certainly not in basketball. It didn't
stop the Boston Celtics from  stealing Detroit's glory last year, on a
devilish interception and a freak head-butt. It didn't keep Thomas from
landing funny Sunday afternoon, and spending all day Monday hooked to machines
trying to reverse the swelling of his ankle.
  It hasn't kept this series, which should be over already, from reaching its
final game tonight, with the Lakers healthy and the Pistons scrambling.
  And yet  there are certain scenes I can't get out of my mind. Like before
the game Sunday, when Daly took a seat outside the Detroit locker room, the
one where the security guard normally sits.
  "Got a pass,  fella?"  he said to me.
  I smiled. I asked him how he felt about his chances. For the first time
since I've known him, he actually looked optimistic.
  "You know," he said, "I've developed this  theory about coaching. If you
stick around long enough, you get your slice of cake. No matter who you are."
  I see that scene. And I see this one: Dantley, before Game 5, in the
Pistons' locker room,  saying, "Man, oh man, what do we gotta do to win this
championship?" And then going out and showing everybody what they had to do,
taking control, scoring and screaming and dragging his team to the lip  of the
glory.
  I see Bill Laimbeer saying, "It's my fault, I played badly," after Game 6,
and Dumars saying, "I thought it was a good shot," after that ill-fated drive,
and Thomas, lying there, across  the room, in so much pain he couldn't keep
his eyes open, yet saying, "We still have a chance, we have one more game."
  I see all that, and I just can't believe it all goes down the drain.
They've  all waited a career 
  Who knows? Tonight will be the hardest thing the Pistons have ever tried.
Johnson, who will start if Thomas can't go, is calling it "the biggest game of
my life." Can it be any  less for Dantley, who has waited a career for this,
or Daly, who has waited a career for this, or James Edwards, who has waited a
career for this?
  No. It can't. Every player who steps out for Detroit  tonight knows that
one false breath, one let-up, one Laker who isn't defended, one rebound that
isn't chased, could be the one that sends him  home to an unforgiving summer.
  Know that they are up  against world champions. Know that these Lakers are
not strangers to Game 7s. Know that Magic and Kareem and Worthy all possess
the executioner's touch.
  Know also that Detroit, a city that  has never  seen an NBA champion, sent
Joe Diroff, the superfan nicknamed "The Brow," all the way to LA. And he was
here Monday, with his construction paper signs and funny hats and ties, trying
to organize a pep rally. For the Pistons. In the lobby. No doubt the
Californians watching must have wondered what hurricane from the Midwest blew
this guy in.
  Call it a hurricane that is long overdue.  The Pistons -- and I say this
with no anger toward the Lakers -- simply deserve this championship more. And
I guess somewhere deep down, I still figure right makes might, and not the
other away around. It's  probably a stupid philosophy. And, because  I'm a
journalist, I'm not supposed to care anyhow. But late tonight, when this war
is finally over, if the Pistons are the ones left standing, I'll tell you
this: I'm gonna feel pretty damn good. And I bet I'm not alone.
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