<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8502220508
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
851227
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, December 27, 1985
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1985, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
DO PISTONS WANT DALY? DOES DALY WANT PISTONS?
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
When one side says, "There's really nothing to talk about," and the other
side says, "There's really nothing to talk about," it usually means there's
something to talk about.
Which brings us  to Chuck Daly and the Pistons.

  Daly is in the last year of his contract as Pistons coach. He is popular.
He's pretty successful. And, come the end of this season, he is free.
  Daly and Jack  McCloskey, the Pistons' general manager, have not talked
turkey in four months.
  Now, depending on whom you listen to, this is either 1) Not to Daly's
liking; 2) Exactly what Daly wants; 2) Not to McCloskey's liking; 4) Exactly
what McCloskey wants; 5) Not to anybody's liking; or 6) Exactly what everybody
wants.
  I remember a story about a judge who listens to two sides of an argument.
After  the first side finishes he says, "You're right." After the second side
finishes he says, "You're right." A third party interjects, "Wait a minute.
They can't both be right." And the judge says, "You're  right too."
  So who's right here? Let's check the facts.
A problem of arithmetic 
  McCloskey says Daly is his "first choice" as Pistons' coach. Daly says he
wants to stay here.
  No problem,  right? Wrong. The Pistons kept Daly from joining the
Philadelphia 76ers last summer -- a job he would have relished -- by demanding
a first-round draft choice as compensation. Daly had to watch the 76ers  pull
out, like a shipwrecked islander watching the boat sail away. The Pistons were
within their rights. But it might have been fair if they'd said, "Look, Chuck,
we want you. Here's three more years (reportedly what the 76ers offered). Go
get em."
  Didn't happen. Here's what did:
  Daly and McCloskey were talking in late August. Contract came up.
McCloskey said, "What do you want?" Daly,  who admits he was thrown by the
sudden question, asked for another year and a raise (from $175,000 to $200,000
this year and to $225,000 next year). McCloskey said OK.
  With some time to think, Daly  went back to his financial advisers and
decided he probably deserved better; at least longer than one year. So when
McCloskey wanted to announce their agreement to the press, Daly backed out.
  They  haven't talked contract since.
  Which isn't the worst part. Daly says the offer was for one additional
year, taking him through 1987. McCloskey says the offer was for two additional
years, taking  him through 1988. When asked about the discrepancy, Daly said,
"That wasn't my understanding . . . If it had been two years, I would have
been very interested."
  Let's get this straight. A coach  and a GM can't distinguish between one
and two? Come on.
  You don't get such details mixed up in a professional organization. Just
as you don't go four months without a conversation. Not if both  sides truly
want one another.
  So maybe they don't. There's been plenty of speculation on that. Some
absurd, some possible:
  1) McCloskey Wants To Coach The Pistons Himself: The answer is "Ha."  Even
Daly says he couldn't see that. McCloskey, 59, only laughed at the suggestion.
And gave a long no.
  2) McCloskey Wants Someone Other Than Daly: Maybe. McCloskey will not say
so. But a poor season  by the Pistons could change that.
  3) McCloskey And Pistons' Owner Bill Davidson Are Sore At Daly For Backing
Out. Anyone who thinks sports executives are above holding a grudge hasn't met
many sports  executives. By Daly's own admission, "They (the Pistons
management) like to go to the wire. Look at how they've dealt with free agents
like Long, Tripucka and Tyler." Maybe they just want Daly to sweat?
  4) Daly Wants To Keep His Options Open. Perhaps Daly is fed up. He has
been one of the lower-paid coaches in the NBA with the Pistons, despite two
consecutive playoff seasons. He wants some security  -- three years, maybe.
Spots will open at the end of the season where he might get it. Maybe even the
76ers, although they deny it.
Is the word 'goodby' inevitable?
  Chuck Daly is a good coach. He  should be kept.  The Pistons' woes don't
begin with him; they are simply not a deeply talented team. They're fragile,
especially with Terry Tyler gone -- traded for a draft choice that may help
the future  but chokes the present. Most nights Daly needs great games from
Isiah Thomas and Bill Laimbeer to win.
  Compare that to, say, the Celtics, thigh-deep in excellence. Or the
Lakers, the NBA's answer  to an American Express Gold Card. And forget it.
  Daly is in a lousy spot. He doesn't know where he'll be working next year.
The current slump doesn't help his cause. He admits he can't help thinking
about it in between games.
  Meanwhile McCloskey -- who for the record says "We'll work this thing out"
-- makes no attempt to prove himself a prophet.
  The obvious springs at you like a chest  pass:
  If Daly really wanted to be here and the Pistons really wanted him, he'd
be signed by now. 
  Instead we have silence on one side. Silence on the other side. Be
prepared. Often in such  cases, the next word spoken is the last word spoken.
  Goodby.
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<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN
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