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<UID>
9302100345
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
931105
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, November 05, 1993
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1F
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1993, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
JORDAN OUT, LAIMBEER IN DOESN'T SEEM RIGHT
</HEADLINE>
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<BODY>
All right, America. The time has come. Here, on the morning of the new NBA
season, the basketball question you've been wanting to ask for weeks:

  How come Michael Jordan retired and Bill Laimbeer  didn't?

  "Ha!" Laimbeer says, sneering. "That's easy! I don't have $300 million
like he does."
  Cute. But not the answer. 
  True, Jordan, 30, may be resting his still-lean body while Laimbeer,  36,
gets up each morning with a different joint creaking in his freckled white
frame.
  And true, Jordan may be zipping in private jets to some tropical golf
course while Laimbeer looks at his beloved  clubs and sighs until next summer.
  And yes, if Laimbeer announced today that he were leaving the game, the
world would not weep, as it did for Jordan. It might cheer. It would not weep.
  But  there is more to it. Laimbeer, the only man in NBA history to have
his cardboard image chain-sawed by fans, does not play the way he once did. He
doesn't even play at the speed he used to, which, if  he were a car, we would
call "park." 
  "I've cut down on my moving around at home," he says. "Basically, I sit
around and do nothing."
  Ah. Aging like a fine wine.
Old Piston wouldn't want farewell  tour
  So, if you think about it, this whole thing is backwards. Jordan was
beloved, worshiped, and at the top of his game. Laimbeer inspires the world's
loudest boos, and is generally thought of  by NBA peers as something out of
"Jurassic Park."
  Yet Jordan quit, and Laimbeer stayed. He stayed as his skills diminished.
He stayed as his minutes withered and his scoring average dipped. He stayed
as players, coach, GM, and many fans who composed the glory years of this
franchise disappeared.
  Could it be? He wants a farewell tour? 
  "Hah! I could care less."
  I know. Another look  at Boston Garden?
  "I could care less."
  Wait. Don't tell me. He wants to say farewell to the worthy opponents he
has battled over the years.
  "I could care less."
  What then? It's not  like he's using this season -- which he says will be
his last -- to prepare for his next career. He doesn't know what that will be.
It could be golf, fishing, "or maybe TV commentary."
  I can see  Laimbeer on the mike, working with a play-by- play guy.
  "Wow, Bill, what a move by Olajuwon!"
  "Big deal."
  "There goes Pippen. Some dunk, huh, Bill?"
  "Great. Where's the food?"
  The fact is, it is hard to imagine Laimbeer, and his 6-foot- 11 perplexing
persona, doing anything other than playing Pistons basketball. 
  And maybe that's why he's still here.
Kareem taught him  about longevity
  Do you know the only opposing player who ever heard Bill Laimbeer say
good-bye? Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. After the Pistons beat the Lakers in the 1989
Finals. Abdul-Jabbar was retiring, and Laimbeer found him, leaned in, and
said, "I don't care about all the points and rebounds you got. What impressed
me was how many years you played."
  And what did Kareem say?
  Laimbeer shrugs.  "Nothin.' "
  Well, what did you expect? Sentiment? This is still Bad Boy Bill we're
talking about. The man who'd cross a crowded highway to annoy an opponent. The
man, when you ask if he has ever  had a surprise party, says "My family knows
better than that." Sentiment?  You have a better chance of seeing him high
jump in the Olympics.
  And yet, you learn something from the Abdul-Jabbar story. This is what
Laimbeer admires: guys who put in their time. Laimbeer himself has played 13
seasons and almost never missed a game. When he started, he took it seriously,
and now that he's a bench player,  he takes that seriously, too. On Thursday,
in the final preseason practice, he was yelling at teammates during
scrimmages, same as always. Part of the reason he has stayed, he says, is
because the franchise  needs him to work with the younger guys, and he feels
an obligation. I don't know if that's true. I'd like it to be.
  Over the years, I've traded a lot of venom with Laimbeer. But I've also
seen the side he loves to bury. As he nears the end, that may be harder to do.
  When I ask, for example, the toughest part of playing today, he says,
"Focus. You don't like to admit it, but sometimes  your kids start creeping
into your mind out there."
  Bill Laimbeer? Kids?
  When I ask about his legendary temper with the media, he says  "Hey, it
was my job to harass the media, to draw the attention, and keep them from
getting on my teammates."
  Laimbeer? Admitting his tricks?
  When I ask about his body holding up, he laughs and says, "After the first
exhibition game this year,  I couldn't play for three days!"
  He laughs? Tells secrets? Admits shortcomings?
  Ah. Now we see the answer. Jordan left because he could no longer be a
24-hour superstar. Laimbeer will leave  because -- no matter how hard he tries
-- he can no longer be a 24-hour jerk.
  In which case, I don't blame him for going.
  Some legends are better left intact.
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