<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9101210112
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
910523
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, May 23, 1991
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1C
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color JULIAN H. GONZALEZ
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


:
Mark  Aguirre sits with his nephew Mark, 3, wearing his uncle's
cap and sunglasses, and cousin Eddie Davis, 3. They met at
Aguirre's Aunt Daisy's. 
Mark Aguirre's uncle Frank Dinwiddie acts star struck as
Aguirre arrives with cousins Eddie Davis (left) and Brandon
Aguirre wrapped around him. 
Mark Aguirre meets his former English teacher Bea Nelson
outside the school from which Aguirre graduated in 1978.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1991, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
WEST SIDE STORY
HARDSCRABBLE CHICAGO HOME IS WHERE AGUIRRE'S HEART IS
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
CHICAGO --  Pressure is a funny word. There is the pressure a sports team
feels when it needs to win a playoff game, like the pressure the Pistons are
feeling,  celebrated, famous pressure that  inspires big stories  on the 11
o'clock news. 

  And then there is another kind of pressure. More subtle. More powerful. It
affects athletes every day, but it never makes the news, never makes
headlines.  You might not know about it at all  unless you go to  see it,
unless you drive down the streets where Mark Aguirre is driving now, past the
boarded-up houses and the old churches and the weeds that  poke up wild amid
the asphalt.

  Home.
  "Right there is the first place I became aware of Isiah as a basketball
player," Aguirre says, pointing out the car window at a cream-colored
recreation building. "We played in the 'Bitty' league together. We were maybe
9 years old. You see that brown door right there? That's where we would sneak
out to get away from the gangs. They wanted our money.  They knew we had to
have 25 cents for the bus, so they came after us."
  "Did you get away?" he is asked.
  "Sometimes."
  "And when they caught you?"
  "We gave them the money."
  "Then  what did you do?"
  He laughs softly.
  "Then, you walked home."
  He turns the car and continues on. Past corner groceries where the windows
are taped shut. Past row houses with seven or eight  children sitting on each
stoop. Past deserted playgrounds where the fences are torn and the basketball
rims are bent and the nets  are not even a memory.
  "See that playground there?" Aguirre says,  pointing to a small area
behind a building. "That's where I learned to play. Bryant Park. Me and my
cousin got this spotlight -- actually, he stole it from the back of a store --
and we rigged it with wire on the side of that building. We pointed it up so
it would shine on the court. We played all night, man.  That spotlight was
great. We'd unhook it when we went home, then hook it up when we wanted  to
play."
  He nods silently, as if seeing himself there right now, shooting baskets
on a hot summer night. He steps on the accelerator. He drives on.
  "Yeah, that spotlight was fun," he sighs,  "but we should have taken it
down when we were finished."
  "Why?"
  "One night, someone stole it back."
  Home.
A different pressure here 
  Most fans don't really know Aguirre, the Pistons'  star forward. But then,
most fans don't really know any pro athlete. They see the gravy -- the money,
the fame, the endorsement contracts, the pretty women. They don't see what
each man had to rise above  to reach all that. 
  Here, on the West Side of Chicago -- or in 1,000 places just like it
across the country, places where poverty is a blanket, where liquor is
medicine, where jobs come and jobs  go and fathers and mothers interchange
with aunts, uncles, grandmothers, friends, so you may have three different
homes and you may sleep  four or five to a room, you may have gangs chasing
you for a  quarter and friends who are alive one day and dead the next. In
places like this, there is a pressure that has nothing to do with NBA trophies
and playoff wins, a pressure that comes before all that.  This is the
pressure: to hold on tight to a basketball, tight enough to pull you high
above your life, high enough to escape.
  Many try. Few succeed.
  Home.
  "This," Aguirre says, pointing  to the streets, "is who I am. This is
where I come from. I've seen everything here. A friend of mine was shot
point-blank in the face. Another friend was pushed from a third-story window.
I had an uncle  who was stabbed 27 times.
  "But in a way, I'm glad I had this. You can survive this, you can survive
anything. Sometimes I think about where I am now  . . . like, we're staying
downtown at the Ritz  Carlton Hotel, right? When I was a kid, I never saw that
part of town. I didn't know what a Ritz Carlton was!"
  He laughs, and waves his hands for emphasis. "Ritz? Shoot, I thought Ritz
was a cracker!"
  Aguirre, 31, comes back to the West Side each spring during the Pistons'
seemingly inevitable playoff series against the Bulls. He rents a car after
practice and drives out to visit the people who  raised him. Aunts. Uncles.
Neighbors.
  Even teachers. As he turns past Westinghouse Area Vocational High School,
his alma mater, he notices hundreds of students lounging on the sidewalks and
the  front grass.
  "What the hell is going on here?" Aguirre says.
  He spins the car around and pulls up near the front door. A group of
teachers, wearing security identification badges, peers inside  the vehicle,
shielding their eyes from the sun. When they make out the driver, their faces
go from annoyance to delight.
  "Mark!"
  "What are you doing in that car? Come on out here, man!"
  "Look who's back!"
  "It's Mark Aguirre!"
  He steps outside slowly, and he is all smiles. He remembers every name.
Mrs. Nelson. Mr. Lamont. The shop teacher. The history teacher. The English
teacher. They hug him. They slap him. They tease him about the playoff series.
  "Why is everybody outside?" Aguirre asks.
  "Fire drill."
  "Oh."
  "Hey, Mark, we saw you and Michael Jordan  doing some talking. You two
gonna fight or what?"
  "Nah, we were having a little conversation."
  "Don't hurt Jordan, Mark. He wants a ring."
  "He can have a ring. Not this one, though."
  "Oh, Mark. Listen to you, man!"
  "Yeah, listen to you, man!"
  A warm breeze blows. A small crowd begins to gather. Above the entrance to
Westinghouse hangs a fading sign that reads: "Our Children,  Our Future."
  Listen to him.
  He is home.
Humble beginnings 
  Mark Aguirre was nearly born on a train. His mother, Mary, was only 16
years old, living in Arkansas, when she became pregnant.  In her ninth month,
she rode north to Chicago, where some of her family lived, thinking perhaps
she would give this baby to her sister, Daisy, who wanted a child and was
better prepared to raise it.  By the time Mary arrived in Chicago, however,
she was in labor. Her family rushed her from the train station to the
hospital. A few hours later, Mark was born.
  "It's too bad," his Uncle Frank, a  middle-aged man in a bright-colored
sweat suit, is saying now. "If you'da been born on that train, you'da been
able to ride free for the rest of your life. You know that, Mark? You could
take a train  ride from Chicago to Los Angeles right now if you wanted! Free
of charge. Yes, sir. They do that for babies born on trains, you know."
  Aguirre laughs. He is slumped in the sofa in the front room of his Aunt
Daisy's home, a row house on a street full of row houses, where the door is
open and children race in and out, squealing and chasing each other, crawling
into Aguirre's lap and wrapping themselves  in his long arms. The room is
warm; there is no air-conditioning. The pale walls are dotted with photos of
the family. There is a picture of Mark and his wife, Angela, on one. In the
corner, above the  wooden-cased TV set, is a certificate. "The James Naismith
Trophy . . . Mark Aguirre, De Paul University . . . as the most outstanding
college basketball player in the U.S."
  Aguirre was raised,  at least a little bit, by everyone in the room and on
the picture walls.  His grandmother, who died in the 1970s, took care of him
for years. He also shuffled between aunts' houses and his mother's place.  His
father figures were his uncles and his cousins. "The first time I met my real
father was when I was 6 years old," he says. "I don't even remember where it
was. It was like, 'I know who you are, and  I know you are not living with my
mother.' After that, I didn't see him for a while."
  Mark Aguirre has taken a lot of criticism over the years. In Dallas, for
whatever reasons, the press hated him  so much, that when he was traded to
Detroit, one Dallas  columnist declared it "the greatest day in Mavericks
history." Aguirre was seen as moody, rude, aloof and lazy --  although he has
not taken those  traits to Detroit.  Still, if you are being fair, you must
wonder about the people criticizing;  you wonder if those people had one
mother and one father and one nice roof over their heads when they  grew up.
It is a difference. It is a problem in sports. It is the gap that separates
the American Season-Ticket Holders from so many of their American Sports
Heroes.  They come together as adults, but  they were so different as
children, so different in the part of life that forms all the things we are to
be.
  Home.
Living with death 
  "Right there," says Aguirre, slowing the car and pointing to a wood-faced
building called the Pleasant Green Trinity Church. "See that? The preacher
there had a daughter that I was so in love with. Oh, man! I was 11 years old
and I'm telling you, this girl  was on my mind from the minute I got up in the
morning. Her name was Yolanda, and I used to pick dandelions and give them to
her. I mean, I was crazy about that girl.
  "And then one day, she died.  She got sick and died. I snuck down to the
funeral, and I went in the church. And I saw her inside the coffin, they had
it open, and it just really messed me up. I realized that she was never coming
 back. That was it. She was gone forever. With all the stuff that happened in
my neighborhood, I never really understood about death until then. It screwed
me up for a long time."
  It would not be  Aguirre's only loss. His grandmother, whom he adored,
would die a few years later. His mother, Mary, would die of cancer in the
mid-'80s. "They taught me so much," he says now. "My mom really tried to  keep
me straight. And my grandmother used to tell me, 'Don't run to trouble. Run
away from trouble.' "
  He stops at a corner grocery on Karlov Street in K-Town, another part of
the West Side. The  windows are old and the merchandise behind the counter,
candy and chips and  cold cuts, is protected by glass. This is another place
where Aguirre grew up,  in the house behind the small grocery, and  another
group of family is waiting here for him: his Aunt Tiny -- "She raised me, too"
-- his sister Angela, more uncles, more cousins, more nieces and nephews. Some
kids passing by stare at the tall  man in the fancy car who is hugging and
kissing all these neighbors.
  "Hey, Mark Aguirre!" one yells. 
  Aguirre looks up and smiles.
  "Y'all gonna lose to the Bulls!"
 Memories are important
  Ah, yes. The Bulls. Basketball. The pressure to win Game 3. It is all fans
will talk about between now and Saturday, and many will marvel at where the
Pistons get their resilience, their will, how  they can  keep coming back
against the odds.
  You  drive out to an athlete's roots one day, and you may find an easy
answer.  You could find it on the streets in Brooklyn, where John Salley and
Vinnie  Johnson grew up, or in the dusty heat of Natchitoches, La., where Joe
Dumars grew up, or here in Chicago, the West Side, where Aguirre and Isiah
Thomas used to sneak into Chicago Stadium with the concessions workers to
watch the Bulls, the same team -- and the same building -- they must now
defeat to reach their dream of a third NBA title.
  "Memories are really important," Aguirre says, holding two nephews and a
niece on his lap. "No one who watches me play will ever know about this. You
can take pictures. You can tell stories. But you'll never know what it was
like to grow up here unless you did  it. Never."
  He shrugs and we leave him, in the midst of family, all of whom are still
here, basking in the glow of their "famous" relative  and dreaming of a way
out for themselves. Aguirre is right.  You never know unless you live it. But
you think about growing up and you think about survival and you realize maybe
winning a basketball game isn't really such pressure after all.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
BIOGRAPHY; MARK AGUIRRE; DPISTONS; FAMILY;Pistons
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
