<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9401170545
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
940512
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, May 12, 1994
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO EDITION
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color, Photo JULIAN H. GONZALEZ
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


:
(JULIAN H. GONZALEZ/Detroit Free Press)
Isiah Thomas tells a story Wednesday about Bill Laimbeer. Like
Laimbeer,  Thomas plans to pursue business interests for now:
"There were no jobs" in the Pistons' front office, he said.
(JULIAN H. GONZALEZ/Detroit Free Press)
Pistons owner William Davidson, left, Wednesday  greets Isiah
Thomas at the news conference wehre Thomas announced his
retirement.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SEE ALSO FINAL EDITION, Page 1A; SEE RELATED ARTICLES, ; Page 1C; KEEPSAKE POSTER, Page 10C
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1994, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
ISIAH GOES OUT, NICELY
HE DEFINED CITY IN OWN, COMPLEX WAY
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
He made nice. Went out like a diplomat. He smiled, laughed deeply, and
anyone he could possibly thank, he thanked. He thanked family, friends,
children, teammates, his owner, his coaches, the ball  boys, the reporters,
the guys who made the food, the guys who laid out his uniform and his socks,
the guys who made plastic splints for his injured feet and hands. Thirteen
years in the NBA, two years  in college, four years of high school ball -- he
went through all of it. At one point during the  news conference, a cynical
observer leaned over and whispered:  "Let me get this straight. Did he get
the bicycle on his 12th birthday or his 13th?"

  Ah, well. Such is the curious reaction to Isiah Thomas, who was always
more inspiring on the court than off. You can't blame him for taking his time.
 How else do you sum up a life? And that is what this farewell was to the guy
Julius Erving calls "the greatest little man in NBA history" -- not a career,
not a job. A life.

  "If not for the basketball,"  Thomas, 33, said Wednesday, holding up an
imaginary sphere and gazing like a child, "if not for the basketball. . . . I
wouldn't have anything. I wouldn't have even met my wife."
  And he wouldn't  have wound up here, Detroit, a city he once had no desire
to see and now has no desire to leave. Thomas, the Pistons' all-time leader in
points, steals and assists, was a lot of things during his sports  career,
some great, some not so great, some championship-caliber, some straight off
the streets of his youth. He did good things and he did ugly things and he
made some enemies and he probably didn't  get the credit he deserved and he
definitely didn't get the praise, the money, the endorsements or the Olympic
gold medals that peers like Magic Johnson, Michael Jordan and Larry Bird took
into their  sunsets. But through it all, the one thing Thomas always had that
they never could was this city.
  Detroit.
  He owned it. He defined it. He represented it.
  So, funny, isn't it, that on Wednesday,  as he hobbled to the stage with
his Achilles tendon injury, a walking contradiction, a basketball player who,
at the moment, needs crutches, a kid from Chicago's streets now wearing silk
suits and $100  ties, a man who loves the game but will never really play it
again -- funny, isn't it, how this thought occurs:
  Everybody here knows his name.
  And so few know who he is.
  Of all the questions  a sportswriter gets asked in this town,  these are
the most frequent: "What is Isiah Thomas really like?" Or, "Is Isiah really
the guy he pretends to be?" Or, "What's the deal with Isiah?"
  How can  you answer? There is no denying Thomas is a complex man, a
powerful, intelligent, image-conscious entertainer. Maybe because he came here
so young -- he was only 19 when he was drafted -- and grew up  before our
eyes, that's why we have such conflicting pictures. 
  For example:
  We see the childlike Isiah of the early  1980s, who seemed to laugh from
jump ball to buzzer, and we see the spiteful Isiah of 1991, who led his
teammates in a nasty snub of the Chicago Bulls.
  We see the heroic Isiah who scored 25 points in a single championship
quarter against the Lakers -- while playing on a gimpy ankle -- and the bully
Isiah, who sucker-punched a teammate, Bill Laimbeer, during practice.
  We see a crafty businessman who, just a few months ago, called his own
news conference to announce  an arrangement that would secure him in the front
office and make him rich. "I will be a Piston for life," Thomas crowed.  "This
is the happiest day of my career." 
  Yet Wednesday, in the very same  room, he said this: "I won't have any
future role in the Pistons organization."
  Huh?
  "What happened?" Thomas was asked. 
  "It just didn't work out," he said. And later, "All the jobs were  full."
  Meanwhile, Bill Davidson, with whom Isiah supposedly had this arrangement,
did his own little confusion dance.
  Was ownership the issue?
  Davidson: "No comment on that."
  Was  there ever a deal like the one reported in the media?
  "There was never such a deal."
  Would you like Isiah to stay in the organization?
  "Absolutely."
  But he just said he has no role  with the Pistons.
  "That's what he's saying now."
  It could be different in the future.
  "You never know."
  Hmm. These two should take their act on the road.
  But you know what? Stuff  like this follows Isiah Thomas around.
Misinformation. Coy responses. Rumors. Sometimes he's the victim. Sometimes
he's the culprit. And you know what else? 
  It doesn't matter. Not anymore.
  What will be will be.
At his best on center stage
  Better, on this morning after his good-bye, to remember Thomas for the
show he put on, because ultimately, that's what entertainers are remembered
for, isn't it? The show? And Thomas -- at his best on center stage -- was
impossible to ignore.
  You can still see him screaming into the teeth of a defense, gliding,
pumping and somehow laying the  ball in the basket, while taller men swatted
awkwardly at him, like a camel's tail swats at flies.
  You can still see him dancing at center court, arms behind his back,
holding the basketball and  spinning in a delirious circle. 
  You can still see that night he scored 16 points in 94 seconds in a
playoff game against the Knicks, or the night he made 13 shots in a row, or
that heroic twilight  against Los Angeles at the Forum, when he could feel his
ankle going south, and he threw in 25 points in the third quarter in a
desperate attempt to win the championship before his leg was useless.
  "Some guys know how to play," said Vinnie Johnson, his longtime backcourt
mate during all those years, "and some guys know how to win. Isiah knew how to
win."
  And win he did. He won two championships,  was MVP of one, appeared in 11
All-Star games, was MVP of two, he set all kinds of assists records, rewrote
the Pistons stats book, and -- perhaps most remarkably -- never had anyone say
that he's short,  even though, for his game, he is.
  "I recently watched my highlight reel," Thomas, 6-foot-1, said Wednesday,
in his own unique way, "and I looked at a list of all the things I've done.
And if someone  said you've got to do it all again, I wouldn't even attempt
it. . . ."
The final memories
  A few nights ago, Thomas, Johnson, Laimbeer and Joe Dumars jumped in a
private plane and flew to Springfield,  Mass., to see Chuck Daly get inducted
into the Hall of Fame. What an nostalgic little journey, when you think about
it. Here was Daly, snubbed out of Detroit, yet being inducted into the Hall of
Fame  for what he did here. And here was Laimbeer, retired, now a working
stiff like the rest of the world -- albeit a rich one -- and Johnson, also
retired, now doing radio commentary, and Dumars, the only  active one in the
group, left to captain a ship that barely resembles the Bad Boy vessel of the
late 1980s.
  And Thomas, who was on the cusp that night,  going from player to
ex-player. What must  he have been thinking during that flight?
  "The hardest decision an athlete has to make is to know when to say
good-bye," he said Wednesday. "I'll never get on a court again. And the
toughest thing  of my life is to let it go."
  He took questions. He spoke about his memories. He was, typically,
charming, overbearing, sincere and a spin doctor. Toward the end of the  news
conference, Thomas compared leaving the game to a poster he had on his wall at
college, a common poster, a picture of a dove, above the phrase "If you love
something set it free. If it was yours, it will come back to you."
  "I love the game," Thomas said, "but I know it will never come back to me." 
  And yet, Thomas will come back to the game, over and over, in highlight
reels and videos, in reprinted photos, and media guides, in books and
newspapers and stories told from father to son and mother to daughter, about
the Bad Boys days, the hot nights in the Palace, the time in this city when
you couldn't go anywhere  and not talk about the basketball team.
  This is the beauty of memory: all the confusion, the rumors, the off-court
shenanigans that were indeed a big part of Thomas' career will ultimately sink
 like leaves on an autumn lake, leaving only this picture: Isiah streaking
down a basketball floor, scissoring the ball through his legs, then pulling up
and launching a rainbow jumper. And as it kisses through the net, he is
already backpedalling, licking his lips, like a tiger with a taste for the
prey.
  That's the final snapshot you take of Thomas, if you're a fan. In uniform.
In action. It's  the magic of the stage, the beauty of time. And the nicest
way to say good-bye.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
ISIAH THOMAS; RETIREMENT
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
