<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8902010462
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
890809
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Wednesday, August 09, 1989
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo WILLIAM ARCHIE/Detroit Free Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1989, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
ONE-ON-ONE
AN AVERAGE GUY CAN BEAT LONG, TALL SALLEY --
THE RULES JUST HAVE TO BE BENT A LITTLE
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
"You ready?"

  "I'm ready."

  "You sure?"
  "Uh-huh."
  "You're gonna be humbled."
  "We'll see."
  Thum-bump, thum-bump . . . 
  Here were the rules to my fantasy basketball  game: First one to 11 wins.
I start with 10. And the ball. Some people call that a can't-miss.
Unfortunately, "can't miss" is not the best phrase to describe my basketball
skills. I'm more like "Can miss . . . from anywhere."
  Yet there I was, dribbling at top of the key, staring into the long --
very long -- torso of John (Spider) Salley, a key player on the Detroit
Pistons NBA World Championship  team, who also happens to be, among other
things, 7 feet tall.
  "I won't dunk," he said.
  "OK," I said.
  "I won't do any lay-ups."
  "No lay-ups."
  "Well? . . . What are you waiting  for? Brent Musburger?" 
  What was I waiting for? I had wondered about this since I was a kid: What
if an NBA player spotted you all but one basket in a one-on-one game? Would
you be able to beat  him? Here was my chance.
  I dribbled in a crazy, zig-zag pattern, cutting toward the hoop. I threw
up a prayer from under his arm and it banked in.
  I won! I won!
  "We startin' yet?" Salley  asked.
  
  I grabbed the ball and returned to the top of the key. We had talked about
trying this during the regular season, a one- on-one challenge, but I could
just see Salley playing me before  an important game, twisting an ankle, and
then Chuck Daly would come and burn down my house. So we waited. The Pistons
won their rings. Now, finally, in the heat of summer, on the spacious courts
of  Oakland Community College, it was man-to-man. 
  "OK, seriously now," Salley said. "It's 10-0, your lead. You get the ball
to start, and if I make a basket, you get the ball back. No lay-ups allowed.
No dunks allowed."
  "So I can't dunk?" I said.
  "AHA HA HA HA. . . . I get it," he said, "That's a joke, right?"
  Can I say a word here about Salley? A lot of people think his commercial
endorsements have gone to his head. I say just try getting Bill Laimbeer or
Mark Aguirre to play you one-on- one, in the middle of summer, for no money.
Besides, how can you not like a guy who once asked  hockey coach Jacques
Demers after a game: "Hey, Jacques, man, how come you wear those dark glasses?
Are you sleepin' out there and don't want people to know?"
  And here we go. 
  I began with  a slow methodic dribble toward the hoop, backing in on
Salley's body. Actually, I think it was his knees. I mean, the man is big.
Once, many years ago, on NBC's Sports Fantasy, a fan attempted to play  the
great Julius Erving in a one-on-one game. Erving destroyed him. Blocked every
shot, dunked every ball. When asked why he was so tough, Erving said, "Hey, he
wanted to see what it was like to play me, right? I was just granting his
fantasy."
  I hoped Salley never saw that episode. 
  Dribble left, right, up and . . . 
  Blocked.
  Salley grabbed the ball, threw in a jumper. Swish.
  "Ten-one."
  Dribble right, 18 feet, up for the shot. . . . 
  Blocked.
  Salley grabbed the ball, threw in a jumper. Swish.
  "Ten-two."
  Now, I am not completely unskilled in basketball.  I started on my high
school team. I could hit a jump shot. I could drive the lane. I did not drive
the lane against Salley. I sort of nudged it, then sped away, like a man who
realized he'd forgotten  his wallet. 
  "A quick jumper," I said to myself. Run to the corner, a quick jump--
  Blocked.
  Salley grabbed the ball, threw in a shot. Swish.
  "Ten-three."
  This went on for a  while. Not really a while. Maybe three minutes,
which is all the time it took Salley to score eight points. And he wasn't
dunking. And I was getting the ball back after every basket. 
  This was my  problem: His arms were everywhere. Also, his stride was much
longer than mine. How much longer? Well. Let's say there was a thick, juicy
steak in the kitchen, and I was standing a few feet away, and  John was
sitting in the living room, and we both dashed toward it at the same moment?
By the time I got there, John would be dipping the thing in ketchup and
saying, "Mmmm, delicious. Want a bite?"
  And he blocked me. And threw in a jump shot.
  "Ten-nine."
  By now, a small group of children had poked through the curtain from the
other side of the gymnasium. Great. An audience. I was breathing  heavily.
Salley hadn't broken a sweat. I wondered if he would subconsciously  let me
have the last shot. After all, this is a man with a sense of humor. This is a
man who knows the value of a joke.  This is a man who once said, "I was a B
student in college. My grade point average was 2.5. That's a B to me."
  I raced to the top of the key, faked left, dashed right and popped a long
jumper on  the run. Salley tried to block it. He really did. At least it
looked like he tried. The ball  rose like destiny, fell lazily towards the
rim. . . . 
  Swish.
  "AHHHHHHH!" I yelled, surprising  myself. "Thank you very much! 11-9!"
  I had won. Salley congratulated me. It could be done. It could be done. I
might never do it again. I might never repeat that shot. But I had made that
one. I  was elated. I was overjoyed. I . . . 
  . . . wanted more?
 
  "One more game," I found myself saying, don't ask me why. "Same 10-point
lead, but this time, no limits. You can dunk. You can lay-up.  We'll play
winners-out, just like the schoolyard. You make it, you get the ball back."
  "You sure about this?" Salley said.
  "Give me your best game."
  "I can dunk?"
  "Yep."
  "Are  you, like, into whips and chains and stuff, too?" 
  We began . . . and forget it. Salley was all over me. Slam. Swipe. Slam.
Swish. It was 10-2, 10-4, 10-7. Off in the corner, the children were giggling.
 I realized, too late, that this was a dumb idea. I also realized I might
never see the ball again. Salley -- who has been working on his shot much of
the summer -- was burning the nets. He left me staring  at the bottom his
sneakers, which, much of the time, come up to my chest.
  And then, I remembered something.
  I remembered that Salley is crazy about Bill Murray films. He thinks
Murray is the  funniest man in the world, (next to Arsenio Hall; but then,
Murray never invited Salley on his talk show.)
  And I began to spit out lines from "Ghostbusters." 
  Then "Stripes."
  Then "Caddyshack."
  And Salley began to laugh. He began to shake. He rose for a jumper  and
got hysterical in mid-shot. The ball clanked off the rim. I grabbed it,
dribbled around, yelled out another punch line, and  watched him collapse in
the middle of the lane, grabbing his stomach in laughter.
  I jumped over him, sank a lay-up. 11-9. 
  Easy as pie.
  As far as I know, he's still there.
  So it can  be done. The average man can beat the NBA star. All it takes is
a 10-point lead, a decent outside shot and a thorough knowledge of the film
industry. And I'm sure by October, Salley will be back to his  old self.
  As for me, well, my fantasy is fulfilled. But I have a new one. If he gave
me a 40-yard lead, could I beat Barry Sanders to the end zone? He's fast,
sure. But I have a plan.
  I hear  he likes Eddie Murphy.
 
  CUTLINE:
Columnist Mitch Albom tries the old dribble-between-the-legs move on Piston
John Salley.
Piston John Salley stretches to block Mitch Albom's shot.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
BASKETBALL; GAME;JOHN SALLEY
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
