<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9201170514
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
920506
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Wednesday, May 06, 1992
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO EDITION
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color WILLIAM ARCHIE
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


:
In his West Bloomfield Township restaurant Tuesday, Chuck Daly
announces he's quitting. "You just know when it's time," he
said.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SEE ALSO METRO FINAL EDITION, Page 1A
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1992, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
RIDE ENDS SMOOTHLY FOR DALY
PISTONS COACH LEAVES LAUGHING
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
There were no tears when he stepped to the podium, nothing weak or mushy.
Would Chuck Daly ever go mushy in public? Besides, when he first arrived here
nine years ago, he couldn't have filled a  bus stop if he called a news
conference, and now there were hundreds of important people crammed inside a
suburban joint that bears his name -- Chuck Daly's Great Northern Restaurant
-- to bid him adieu.  So hey. Why cry? Business was booming.

  Which does not mean something hasn't ended, and something special hasn't
passed. They will remember Chuck Daly for many things, his Italian suits, his
blow-dried  hair, his sideline tantrums, his nightclub comic's persona, his
gruff voice, his winks, his shrugs -- but mostly they will remember that he
won. He went to the mountaintop, came back down, and went there again the very
next year, with a group of guys everyone loved to hate, except the folks in
this city. A lot of coaches go their whole careers without taking that big
champagne bath in June. Daly took  it twice -- and Detroit dived right in with
him. Fans called him Chuck. Players called him Daddy Rich.

  Daddy Gone now.
  "Let's make this an Irish wake," he laughed Tuesday afternoon, when he
said good-bye -- with no other firm offers, he says -- to the franchise that
gave him two championship rings, nearly a decade's worth of employment, and
all but nine of his 547 NBA career victories.  "On the other hand, I'm only
half-Irish and half-Scottish. So you can have one drink, but not too much
food. Hahahaha!"
  Slick to the end. That's Chuck. Nobody heard the real story of why he's
leaving  at age 61, one of the top coaches in the game, not at this news
conference; but little ever comes out of news conferences anyhow. Between
Channel 7's Bill Bonds shamelessly pointing a camera at himself,  another at
Daly, then hogging the questions to make viewers think he's the only one worth
listening to, frankly, we'd have been better off ordering from the menu and
waiting until Daly came around to our table, like a bar mitzvah.
  And I bet Chuck would have preferred that. He loves to schmooze, he hates
to open up. That's why, if you ever asked for an autograph, he might slow
down, but his feet  kept stepping, because he didn't want to get caught and
have to answer a whole lot of questions. There was always another place to be.
And he always knew when it was time to go.
  Just as he does  now.
  Daddy Gone.
 He knew people 
 
  "I don't have a plan; I have nothing in mind," Daly said, although no sane
person believes this. "But I'm in love with the game. I'll work somewhere.
Hey,  this is the way I get during the summer: I look up and see an airplane,
and I start wondering how come I'm not on it? I have to work!"
  He laughed again. The crowd chuckled with him. Behind him sat most of the
Pistons' players, crammed into the restaurant booths, Joe Dumars, John Salley,
Bill Laimbeer, Isiah Thomas, Dennis Rodman, Mark Aguirre, even Vinnie Johnson,
who left the team last summer  but spent his best years under Chuck and came
back to let him know it. It was a nice show of respect. Daly may have been
gruff, abrupt, rude, he may have yelled at them, denied them, fought with them
 -- but he has also bled with them, sweated with them, laughed with them, was
honest with them.
  And, of course, won with them.
  This was his magic as a coach: He understood people. He knew that  not
everyone gets treated the same, he knew that sometimes they're going to hate
you, and sometimes, the best action is just to let things pass. As the son of
a Pennsylvania traveling salesman and a  mother who actually went to different
churches just to meet people -- "Church, synagogue, I never knew what religion
she was" -- Daly obviously learned the art of communication.
  This was the lesson  he communicated to the Pistons: Give me all you got,
and we'll win.
  "It's going to be really strange having someone else here next year,"
Salley whispered during the press conference. Sally, 27,  like Rodman, 30, and
Dumars, 28, has never had to take an order from another head coach in the NBA.
Chuck Daly is all they know. "I never even minded when he yelled at me. I
figured, as long as he was  yelling at me, he was noticing me. If he ever
stopped yelling I figured, uh-oh, I'm in trouble. 
  "Isn't that weird?"
  Daddy Gone.
 
 A regular guy 
  Of course, anyone who knew Daly understands  Salley's logic: Chuck made
you feel good when he noticed you and small when he ignored you. He often
behaved as commonly as a pit boss -- in his time, he worked as a dishwasher, a
night watchman, a bar  bouncer, and as a grunt in a leather factory, slapping
the hides. He also ate like a slob. I'm sorry, Chuck, but the first time I
interviewed you, seven years ago, you slurped clam chowder all over yourself,
your sleeves, your hands, and last time I watched you eat, last month, well,
it wasn't much better.
  But having said that, I must add this: that was part of his charm. The
regular guy from Punxatawney,  Pa., lurking beneath those expensive Italian
suits, just longing to bust out for a whiskey with the boys and get really
loose and loud. And Daly could get loud. He still does some of the best
yelling  in the NBA. He croaks. He roars. He waves his arms and bangs on
tables and hollers, "AW, GIMME A BLEEPIN' BREAK!"
  Once, when Aguirre was tossing one bad shot after another, Daly grabbed the
telephone  from press row, lifted the receiver and screamed, "HEY MARK! IT'S
THE CBA!" Another time, he came to practice after a particularly bad loss and
bellowed: "Practice today will last only long enough to  throw up!" There was
a night when he did a particularly strenuous jump at a referee  -- and split
his pants! We sat the rest of the game holding our sides because he didn't
know: Daddy Rich, Mr. GQ, with his underwear sticking out.
  That was one of the few moments something got by Daly out on the court. He
was a master of defense, and an escape artist when it came to substitutions.
Last Sunday,  in Game 5 against New York -- his final game as Detroit coach --
the Knicks were banging the Pistons around and getting no whistles. Daly spun,
tugged on his suit lapels, then spotted a Chicago scout sitting near the
court, checking out which team his Bulls would play next.
  "Hey, Jimmy!" Daly yelled, pointing downcourt at the Knicks. "You see what
you got to look forward to?"
  Even then,  he knew.
  Daddy Gone.
 No regrets 
  Which of course, leaves one begging question: Why? Why now? Daly will
repeat the same words: "It was time" (like any decent Borscht Belt comic, when
Daly  gets a good line, he works it). But what does this mean? Some suggest
that the head-butting with general manager Jack McCloskey finally got to be
too much. Some say he is tired of playing second fiddle  to Isiah Thomas, who
basically runs the team and once even intervened with owner Bill Davidson to
save Daly's job. It was not uncommon to see Isiah turn and hold up fingers for
substitutions, then see Daly send in exactly those players. Hey. Who's the
boss here?
  But these are all theories. What are the facts? Well, the fact is Daly's
contract is up. And the fact is, Pistons management hasn't  done anything to
rectify that. And the fact is, if they really wanted him back, they wouldn't
let him go so easily, right?
  "I've always said Chuck could have been coach here for as long as he
wanted,"  McCloskey said, artfully shifting the blame to Daly. Jack didn't
sound too upset. The fact is, this team is unraveling. Defeat will do that,
and Daly, after Rick Mahorn, Johnson and James Edwards, is  just the fourth
big face from the glory years to depart, not the last.
  And so he goes, his last words booming through a PA system underneath the
wooden beams of his restaurant. He thanked his wife  and daughter. He thanked
the players and management. He said if he didn't find another job (ha!) he
could always come back and cook here. 
  And he said it was a hell of ride, which it was.
  I  still see Daly, that first time the Pistons won the title, bursting
into the pile of players, getting doused with so much champagne, Brendan Suhr
said, "He looks like Pat Riley now." Daly had never before  won anything as
head coach in his life, not in high school, college or the pros. He called
himself "second banana" and the "Prince Of Pessimism" and to see him win was
to see every runner-up in the world  finally get their shot of spotlight.
  Now here he was, all grownup, rich, famous, secure enough to walk away
from a team that will never be the same again. 
  "No regrets," he said, in closing.  "Let the good times roll!"
  And he left.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
DPISTONS;  COLUMN; CHUCK DALY; END; RESIGNATION;Pistons
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
