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<UID>
9101200160
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
910516
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, May 16, 1991
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1F
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1991, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
TYPICAL GAME 5 PATH: TO HELL -- AND BACK
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
BOSTON -- It was hell. As usual.

  It was fans yelling "CHOKE!" and Mark Aguirre screaming at the press
table, "THEY'RE CALLING EVERY F------ CALL AGAINST US, EVERY ONE!" It was
Larry Bird coming  back from an injury -- he always does, doesn't he? -- and
the Celtics rising from the ashes like some ghost in the final reel of a
horror movie, swinging an ax at the big Detroit lead, hypnotizing the  refs
into blowing an out-of-bounds call. It was the Pistons screaming and holding
their heads, it was bodies flying and whistles blowing and heat and  sweat and
noise, oh, God, the noise, freight train  noise, atomic noise, fans banging
their feet until it felt like the Garden would come apart at its concrete
seams. 

  It was two words:
  Game 5.
  The only way to survive is having been through  it before.
  "Were you scared when they came back to tie it?" someone asked Chuck Daly
after the Pistons absorbed a machine-gun attack in the fourth quarter
Wednesday night and hung on to beat Boston,  116-111, to take a 3-2 lead in
this playoff series. "Were you frightened?"
  He sighed. "I spend my life in fright." 
  Especially when you come here. This is no place for the squeamish, not the
 Garden, not in the fifth game of a playoff series between Celtics and
Pistons. Something happens in Game 5's. Some sort of mystical fog settles over
the building. Suddenly, the calendar melts, time disappears.  Suddenly, it is
1988. Or 1987. Or 1991. What's the difference? It's the same humid insanity,
the same deafening pandemonium. Game 5. Venom spitting from the mouths of
Boston fans. Game 5. The pass Bird stole from Isiah.
  Game 5.
  The only way to survive is having been through it before.
  
Pistons could have died -- but didn't 
  And the Pistons have, thank you. Several times. So it  was in that final
quarter, when everything seemed to be tilted on a Boston angle, when other
teams might have wilted, Detroit stood there, like Rocky in the final round
against Apollo Creed, taking punch  after punch and still standing. "We knew,"
James Edwards shrugged, "they would make a run."
  A run? How about a buffalo stampede? The Pistons saw an 18-point
third-quarter lead shrink to 10, then  eight, then four, then two. Then Bird
turned to the basket with less than four minutes to go in the game, he fired
over Dennis Rodman, bang! Tie score, 100-100. The Garden exploded.
  "LAR-RY! LAR-RY!  LAR-RY!"
  What a perfect time for a visitor to die. And yet, what happened instead?
What happened is what makes this Pistons team one amazing group of athletes.
What happened was they found a way.  They found somebody. Mostly, in the final
minutes, they found Bill Laimbeer, firing from the top of the key to re-
establish the Pistons' lead. And Laimbeer again, from the corner, high archer
-- good!  And Laimbeer again, off-balance jumper -- good! Call him slow. Call
him mean. But never forget he was the guy on the other end of that Thomas pass
four years ago, the one Bird stole to break the Pistons'  heart. Rattled?
Laimbeer? In Game 5?
  "Hey, that's my job," he said nonchalantly. "I'm supposed to hit open
shots. It doesn't really matter that they were the last ones."
  Don't believe it. He  loved it. The same way his teammates loved when Joe
Dumars -- "the iron horse," Chuck Daly calls him -- not only scored 32 points,
but planted his feet and took two offensive charges in the final minute  to
get the ball back. The same way they loved it when Mark Aguirre sank two free
throws with 16 seconds left to ice the game. The same way they loved John
Salley blocking shots as if his new contract  was inside the ball, and Vinnie
Johnson hitting leaning jumpers as if someone waved a wand and he was 10 years
younger.
  "Game 5," Johnson said. "Man!"
  Who knows? Maybe someone did.
  
Pistons  do whatever it takes 
  That's the way it is here. You have to expect it. Still, when your heart
stops beating, you may want to circle Wednesday on your calendar. This truly
was a masterpiece win  for the Pistons -- not simply because they did it here,
in the house of horrors, and not simply they went most of the game without
Isiah Thomas (who bravely played, but did not score). No. There were  other
things. Like that first half.  Sixty-five points? The Pistons were happy to
hit the rim a few days ago.
  That's what is so incredible. Every time their old act is about to let
them down, they  reinvent themselves. And there they were Wednesday trading
baskets with Boston, running and gunning like something out of a Paul Westhead
dream. Sixty-five points? When was the last time Detroit did  that in a big
playoff game? 
  Hey. If that's what it takes. The Pistons knew, deep down, that it was win
this series in six games or likely lose it in seven. They have to score to
win? They score  to win.
  And now the series is back in their hands. Like longshoremen, they came
in, did the job, and punched out. No nerves. No screwups. Game 5. The only way
to survive it is having been through  it before.
  "I told them at halftime, I love Boston," Daly said, "but I really don't
want to come back."
  They may not have to. 
  After all, they've played a few Game 6's, too.
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