<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9102030371
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
910905
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, September 05, 1991
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1C
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1991, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
JOHNSON GLAD HE GAVE
PISTONS HIS BEST SHOT
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
He answered the door with a dazed look, like a man who'd just been slapped
in the face. "I don't know why they did it," he said, letting his guest inside
and digging his hands into his pockets.  "Maybe it was my birthday. I just
turned 35. Maybe that's it."

  He looked around his house, a new place, on a lake. He bought it a few
months ago. They say never buy a house if you're a professional  athlete; it's
the kiss of death. "We were supposed to start some construction on Monday."
He forced a laugh. "Better hold off on that, huh? Aw, maaan."

  Aw, maan, indeed. The Microwave has been  unplugged. Cut. Cut? Can they
do that? Can they really cut the man who has played more games, taken more
lumps as a Piston than anyone else in history?  Can they cut the man who, just
last summer, on  a raucous night in Portland, threw in that final jump shot
with :00.7  on the clock, the shot no one else wanted to take, the shot that
won the Pistons their second consecutive NBA championship? The  Microwave? VJ?
Cut? Can they do that?
  They just did. Johnson is gone because he is aging and because he costs
too much and because general manager Jack McCloskey -- who just a few months
ago, after  the brutal playoff elimination by the Chicago Bulls, insisted
there was "no reason to shake up this team" -- now seems intent on doing just
that. Johnson is tossed off the roster in hopes that another  team will take
him and his  salary so the Pistons can make more moves, as if the five guys
they've  dumped isn't enough. 
  "I don't know about all that," said Johnson. "None of my business now,
anyhow."
  He gazed out the window at his patio furniture and the lakefront. It was a
beautiful summer afternoon, cool breeze, warm sun. Far too nice a day to die.
"If this was illegal," Johnson sighed, "I could  call the police. I could say
I was robbed.
  "But it's not illegal. It's business."
Business? What about memories?
  It's business. It's business. Why is it every time someone says, "It's
business,"  someone else's heart is broken? Vinnie Johnson was the historical
cornerstone of this team, the brick laid during the hungry years, when the
Pistons were names like Paul Mokeski and Larry Drew and they  couldn't sell
out if they gave away dinner. Johnson arrived one November day in a trade for
Greg Kelser, a local hero. Fans said, "Bad move! Kelser is better!" Today,
Kelser announces the games. Vinnie  still plays them.
  Or he did until Wednesday.  Oh, another team will almost surely pick him
up. But what does he do with all those Detroit memories? Vinnie Johnson can
remember nights at Joe Louis Arena, nights at the Silverdome, nights at the
Palace. He remembers when Atlanta was the hated rival, then Boston, then Los
Angeles, then Chicago. He remembers conking heads with Adrian Dantley in that
horrific seventh game at the Garden. And he remembers running off the court in
LA, diving into a pile of champagne-soaked teammates, screaming, "WE DID IT,
BABY! WE DID IT! BAAAD BOYS! BAAAD BOYS!"
  He remembers all of it, good and bad. And yet the legend of Vinnie Johnson
is not what he remembers, but what all those other teams will never forget.
Folks in Boston still wince when you speak his  name. New Yorkers just blow
cheekfuls of air and shake their heads. Portland fans? They still haven't
forgiven him. All those blind turnaround jumpers, the spinning, twisting,
no-way-he-makes-that-shot  baskets? Raised on the playgrounds of Brooklyn,
Johnson was that rare player who actually felt the basket; seeing it was
unimportant. In a game in which defense wins and quickness decides, scoring is
 still what makes your heart race.
  And Vinnie Johnson could score like God.
'I ain't moving -- this is my home'
  He leaned now against the clean white counter of his new kitchen. Friends
sat  around, saying nothing, everyone sort of stunned. From the other room you
could hear the TV playing softly. 
  "I don't want to say anything bad," Johnson said. "It's been 10 great
years here. I don't  want to be remembered for a controversy. I want to be
remembered as making that last shot in Portland. As a champion.
  "When I came here, this team was 21-61. It worked out. So maybe things
happen  for the best."
  He said it, but he didn't mean it. The Pistons had just told him, in
essence, that they would rather pay him not to play here than pay him to stay.
How would you feel? A guy like William Bedford stays on the roster, at nearly
$1 million a year, and Vinnie goes? Where's the justice in that? There is talk
that Detroit is dropping Johnson to make room for Washington's Darrell Walker.
 There is talk of an even bigger trade about to come. There is always talk. It
doesn't change this: Once again, a player who gives his best years for a team
is, in the end, tossed aside like smelly sneakers.
  "Hey, if you're writing a story, tell all those realtors out there not to
call me," Johnson said. "I ain't moving. This is my home. No matter what
happens. I've been here too long to change that."
  He walked the guest  toward the door, passing a portrait of himself in
mid-jump shot, the wrist about to flick another low- flying missile at  the
basket. "It's business," they say, but that doesn't  take the sting out of it.
The face has been slapped. The Microwave has been unplugged. And things just
got a little colder around the Palace.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
BASKETBALL; COLUMN; VINNIE JOHNSON; REACTION; DPISTONS;  END;Pistons
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
