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<UID>
9402040674
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
940930
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, September 30, 1994
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1F
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<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1994, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
PISTONS GOT GREAT BARGAIN IN ONE-IN-A-MILLION HILL
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
He never mentioned money. He never gushed about some new car he was going
to buy, or some new mansion with a hundred rooms. He made no joke about how
"the ladies in Detroit better watch out," as  one top draft choice had done
years before him. He didn't preen or mug. He wore no earring. He didn't boast,
"There's a new sheriff in town!"

  You want to know the first thing Grant Hill did as a Piston? He listened to
a question. And before he answered, he noticed the crowd in the back, and
asked, politely, "Could you all hear that?"

  That might strike you as trivial. Believe me, it is not.  In this day and
age, when sports are collapsing under the weight of their own greed and
athletes seem able to speak only one word -- it begins with "m" and ends with
"e" -- any sign of consideration,  even asking whether the folks in the back
heard the question, should be noted.
  So take note. The Pistons got more than a player when they signed Grant
Hill at the Palace on Thursday. They got, as coach Don Chaney put it, "a
package." That package contains: one brain, well-tended and developed; one
heart, battle-ready; two hands that can score and defend; one torso that can
twist until the basket  is his; a set of eyes that have seen glory and defeat;
a set of ears that have absorbed the best college coaching in America; a mouth
that thinks before it speaks; and a memory that holds the life lessons  of pro
sports, as taught by a dad who lived them.
  When you break it down that way, $45 million seems like a bargain.
  "I appreciate all that Mr. McKinney has done," Hill said Thursday, moments
after signing.
  Vice president of basketball operations Billy McKinney smiled. "I
appreciate the way he just got all that money and still calls me 'Mister.' "
  Up Hill from here.
Dumars is foundation  for rebuilding
  "I know people have high expectations of me," said Hill, wearing a gray
suit, white shirt and conservative tie, "but I have high expectations of
myself."
  The crowd seemed to swallow  every word he said and beamed as if he were
related to them. It has been awhile since the Pistons drafted a big-time,
All-America college star. There were years when the team was so good, the top
pick  was cut before the season.
  Of course, those years ended with championships. More recently they've
ended with boos. So now they rebuild. Joe Dumars is the foundation. Lindsey
Hunter and Allan Houston  are important bricks. Oliver Miller and Mark West
might be new walls.
  Hill is the cornerstone.
  "Billy and I talked about the type of people we wanted around here," said
Chaney, watching his new  player smile and shake hands with well-wishers. "We
got rid of some bad people and we're going after people who know what it takes
to win. . . . I don't have to teach Grant how to be unselfish. It's there."
  So are many other rarely seen qualities. For one thing, the kid graduated
college, an anomaly among top picks. He started a Detroit charity before he
even saw a dime from the Pistons. He involved himself in the negotiating and
financial elements of his career -- rather than telling an agent "just send me
the check." 
  And I can't remember the last time I heard a draft pick refer to  his
father's career as "a Renaissance."
  Which is another thing. The parents. So many times you attend press
conferences, and either the parents aren't there, or they sit and smile meekly
and say  "Whatever he wants is OK by us."
  Not Thursday. Here were parents who don't consider their job finished just
because their child calls a press conference. Calvin Hill, the former NFL
star, said his  son must "keep his balance. Just because he's making money as
a pro athlete, he isn't insulated from the real world. I remember thinking,
when I first got into pro football, that the rules didn't apply  to me. I want
him to know they do."
  Maybe some draft picks would be embarrassed by this, a father telling
reporters that $45 million doesn't mean his son is all grown up.
  I thought it was terrific.
Hill  had Webber's number
  And lest you think I'm over-impressed with education -- what a sad world
when thinking that would be wrong -- note that the 6-foot-8 Hill also has the
competitive fire of a typical sports superstar. He not only led his Duke team
to two -- and almost three -- national championships, but when asked about
Chris Webber on Thursday, he quickly responded, "I've never lost to Chris
Webber.  Our teams played in the AAU as kids, and we won at 13, at 14, at 16,
and then in college at Duke. I've never lost to him.'
  "You sure?" someone asked.
  "Oh, yeah."
  He smiled. And then, remembering  his manners, he quickly added, "Chris
will probably have something to say about that this year."
  We have in this kid the etchings of something important: character. That
has always been Dumars' trademark  as well. And the thought of these two on
the same team is reason enough to buy a ticket. I don't know how much the
Pistons will win this season. But I know there won't be half-baked effort,
sleepy defense  and laughing after losses, as there has been in the past. Win
or lose, the team led by Dumars and Hill will never shame itself.
  And maybe, that will be the kid's biggest contribution. At a time when  you
want to throw the sports section in the trash, Hill delivers the element we
need most on the playing fields and hardwood courts of America:
  Something to be proud of.
  Up Hill from here.
Yak  fact: Grant Hill is the 14th player from Duke to be a first-round pick.
All previous picks played in the NBA; their average career lasted 5.6 years.
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<DISCLAIMER>

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<KEYWORDS>
YAK FACT; YAKFACT
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