<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9001220081
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
900606
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Wednesday, June 06, 1990
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo CRAIG PORTER
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>



Dennis Rodman  hoists Isiah Thomas as the Pistons celebrate
late in their 105-99 victory over the Portland Trail Blazers in
Game 1 of the NBA finals Tuesday night at the Palace.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SEE ALSO METRO FINAL EDITION, Page 1A
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1990, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
ISIAH TO THE RESCUE
PISTONS STRUGGLE, WAKE UP IN TIME
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
Late in the game, with the score tied, the crowd on its feet, Chuck Daly
leaned toward his captain and snapped an ammonia capsule under his nose. Isiah
Thomas jerked his head as if someone had slapped  him right across the cheek.
The message was clear: Wake up.

  Message received.

  "I've used those capsules before," Thomas would say, laughing, after
leading a furious Detroit rally that gave  Game 1 of the NBA Finals to the
defending champs, 105-99. "But usually it's on some night in New Jersey,
middle of the winter, when there's like 5,000 people in the stands and you're
just trying to stay  awake."
  Right. Not in the NBA Finals. But whatever works. Suddenly, after an
evening of near sleepwalking, the Pistons were back in control, with Thomas
clanging the breakfast bell. Wow! Did you see those final seven minutes? You
must have heard them! Here was the little giant going stone-cold nuts down the
stretch, firing away, jumper, lay-up, jumper, three-pointer -- scoring 12 of
the Pistons  last 16 points! Here were Dennis Rodman, John Salley and Bill
Laimbeer,  building a fort around the Portland offense. Here were the Palace
fans at their most intimidating, making like  a jet engine and  prompting Buck
Williams and Jerome Kersey to miss four crucial free throws. 
  "Hey, we didn't think you guys were gonna get here in time," the crowd
seemed to gush as their heroes walked off the court, victorious. "'Glad you
showed up.'
  Oooh, Isiah. And, oooh, Portland. You just got a lesson in NBA
championships. Take 'em when they're given, because they may not come again.
For most of  the night, the Pistons were hanging from the tree, ripe for the
picking. All the Blazers had to do was climb the ladder and pluck. But that is
easier said than done, especially for a team making its  first championship
appearance in 13 years. Before the game, Thomas had talked of the advantage he
thought the Trail Blazers had in this series opener. "The pressure is on the
home team in the first game.  If they play their cards right, they could win
this thing."
  For much of the night it seemed they might. The Blazers were quicker than
Detroit, a few inches higher, closer to the basketball and definitely  on the
right side of the referee's whistle. Buck Williams was rising and throwing in
jumpers, and Clyde Drexler was driving to the hoop and dropping in baskets,
and Kevin Duckworth, who -- I say this  with all due respect -- is the size of
a Winnebago, well, old Kevin was swishing one-handers from the outside. The
Blazers looked like lay-up machine.
  And the Pistons? They . . . were . . . moving  . . . in . . . slow . . .
motion. After three quarters, they were shooting all of 36 percent. "In the
Finals," Salley would say, "the body is nothing without the head." And this
body was headless. These  weren't bombs Detroit was missing. Try lay- ups,
turnarounds in the paint. Try dropped passes and missed cues and guys out of
sync on defense. It was like one of those dreams where you're falling and
falling and at the last second, you wake up. Fortunately, it was Thomas (33
points) who touched earth first. Once there, he seemed to race around the
court, slapping his teammates in the face. "You up?  You up?"
  They're are now. By one.
  Wake up and smell the victory.
The will to win
  "It's will, not skill," Thomas would say to a mob of reporters after the
game. They nodded. They scribbled.  But most wanted to know about that fourth
quarter. Sixteen points? Those rainbow jumpers. 
  "What does it feel like? How do you do it? When do you know you've got
it?"
  They are the questions  of people who have never watched Thomas. He does
this all the time. On Tuesday, it happened to be in front of the whole
country, that's all. "We're a team," he said. "This game was decided by who
wanted  it more, that's all. When we came out after that time-out (down by 10,
with 7:05 left) I just went around to each of our guys and said, "How badly do
you want it? How badly do you want it?"
  He then  went out and gave them his answer. Now let's be honest. There
were many times during this game when  Isiah tried to do it all and came up
short. His shots clanked, his passes were taken away. You could  hear the
crowd rumbling at times. "What's he doing? Tell him to pass it more."
  But the fact is, on nights like this, Thomas is the quickest flint the
Pistons have. As go-to players go, he's a darn  good choice, especially when
he's driving and hitting from outside. So it was that he went down the lane
and scooped it in, and went down the lane and hung for a bank shot, and pulled
up outside and  let the ball fly, his arms straight out, his wrists bent in
textbook form. You can argue with his decisions. On this night, you couldn't
argue with the results.
  "He's our captain; he does things  like that," Daly said. "That was one of
his great performances."
  And what about that ammonia capsule?
  "Old high school trick," Daly quipped. "Goes back to Punxsutawney High in
Pennsylvania.  Hey. We needed something. I'm just glad we had a few of those
in the bag."
  Wake up and smell the victory.
Blazers were rattled
  Or the defeat, if you're the Trail Blazers. And they'll be thinking  about
this one, believe it. This is the type of defeat that sits on the brain like
old food sits between your teeth. The Blazers had the champions down at home.
They let them up. They failed to score  for over four minutes down the
stretch. 
  "Detroit shut us down late in the game" said Williams. That's being
polite. The truth is, the Blazers were rattled in those final minutes,  they
took bad  shots, made bad decisions, and did not rebound. They looked
overwhelmed, as if every Piston basket yanked something around their necks.
  Fortunate? You bet the Pistons were fortunate. After all, they finished
the game with a 37 percent shooting. But you win any way you can, even if it's
with your smallest player  on the floor. And even if he got a little help from
an ammonia tablet.
  "Those  things are like getting punched in the nose," he said, making a
face. "You know, how your eyes get all full of water and everything?"
  We know. 
  And so does Portland.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
GAME; BASKETBALL; DPISTONS;Pistons
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