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<UID>
9201150926
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
920424
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, April 24, 1992
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
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<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1992, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
ONLY DUMARS' SKILLS ARE SPEAKING VOLUMES
</HEADLINE>
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</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

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<BODY>
Shut up and play. You used to hear that in basketball. Today, everything is
noise, from bragging to headlines to recitations from "White Men Can't Jump." 

  Except with Joe Dumars. He still abides  by the old credo: Shut up and
play. On the soap opera that is the Pistons, he might be the only one who
does.

  And it is time someone appreciated that.
  From last summer, when he was overlooked  for the Olympic team -- it was
Dumars, not Isiah Thomas, who was the final cut; it was Dumars who had the
right to complain, yet he said nothing, while Isiah conducted interviews
"forgiving" people -- from that, to this most frustrating regular season, the
sulking of Mark Aguirre, the embarrassment of William Bedford, the momentary
disappearance of Dennis Rodman, and the recent, well- planned "spontaneous"
explosion of Bill Laimbeer -- through all this talk and moodiness right up to
tonight's playoff opener against the Knicks, Dumars has done but one thing:
shut up and play.
  He played every game.  He played through injuries and exhaustion. He has
been following this script for years, improving each season, and is without
question the best player on the roster now. He leads the team in scoring,
leads the guards in minutes, and, remarkably, leads the stars in silence.
  "Why haven't you grown more vocal as you've become bigger?" I asked him
the other day. "Everybody else around here has."
  He clasped his hands. "What I do is what comes natural to me. I was
brought here to play, I take pride in that, and that's all I put my energy
into.
  "It's enough for me, you know? I don't need  all the extra baggage that
comes from being in the spotlight."
  He nodded, and awaited the next question.
  Don't you wish there were 12 of these guys?
  Mask drops, revealing ugly truths 
  Let's be honest. The Pistons that we knew and loved are a thing of the
past. Oh sure, the old Bad Boys also had their problems. I always said the
only thing keeping that locker room from exploding  was winning.
  But they had the winning. The wore it like an amulet around their necks,
one championship, two championships, it warded off the evil spirits of
controversy, of a nosy press, of the poisons that gnaw at the fruits of
teamwork.
  Now they lack the winning, these Pistons. Their shield has been dropped.
And we are seeing sad truths: ego and selfishness. Aguirre's ego is bruised
when Orlando Woolridge gets more money and a better contract; Aguirre sulks.
Chuck Daly's ego is offended when others -- Jack McCloskey and Isiah Thomas --
usurp his authority as coach; Daly plans to  leave. Laimbeer's ego is bruised
when guys like John Salley and Woolridge make more money than him; suddenly,
coincidentally, he explodes at McCloskey, saying Jack ruined the team with his
trades and  management. And McCloskey's ego is bruised that "his guys" no
longer love him.
  And in the middle of this is Dumars, who, when you really think about it,
might be the only ego who deserves to be heard. He plays alongside Thomas, who
gets most of the attention, most of the ink, and, at least nationally, most of
the credit, despite the fact that it is more often Dumars who does the dirty
work,  Dumars who scores more, Dumars who draws tougher defensive assignments.
  Dealing with Isiah's ego and power is a hair-pulling experience for Daly,
his coach. Imagine what it's like to play in his  shadow.
  Yet you never hear a word.
  He walks his own walk 
  I mentioned Laimbeer's outburst to Dumars. He nodded, but avoided comment.
I asked if Dumars felt entitled to a locker room pulpit  also.
  "Nah," he said. "For me, it doesn't work like that. I do my job, you do
your job, people at GM do their jobs. I don't feel like I'm entitled to speak
out more than anyone else.
  "Being  good at my job doesn't give me the right to tell the people of
Detroit what I think about this or that. I don't believe that. I don't portray
it.
  "Other people? That's their business. I can't tell  anyone how to walk his
walk."
  The biggest influence on Joe Dumars was his father, a produce-truck driver
who lost both his legs to diabetes. When he died, during the 1990 playoffs,
Dumars left the  arena and flew home, shed his tears, then came back and
helped lead the Pistons to another title. He never mentioned his loss, never
used the microphones to turn his father into a national hero.
  When Dumars does charity events, he doesn't stick his name on them, the way
many players do. When he is injured, he keeps it private, although once,
during the playoffs, I caught a glimpse at his foot  which was swollen and
infected and as ugly as you could imagine. I shuddered. He shrugged.
  From the moment he arrived here, right up to tonight's game, Dumars has
been a monument of silent dignity.  And that ought to be celebrated --
especially now in a franchise suddenly full of whining and finger-pointing.
Doesn't it seem strange that the best player on this team is also the most
quiet? They say  men like this lead by example.
  The other Pistons should start paying attention.
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