<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
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<UID>
9202160390
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
921211
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, December 11, 1992
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1F
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<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color
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<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1992, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
RODMAN'S LIFE ON THE REBOUND
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
There was a knock on the door. Dennis Rodman, who was not answering
knocks or phones, peeked out the window. He did not recognize the man, or the
little boy, or the pickup truck.

  He cracked  the door open.

  "This is from the Pistons," the man said, holding out an envelope. Rodman
took it. Inside was a neatly typed notice saying he had been suspended,
without pay, effective immediately.  After six years of a storybook NBA
career, he was off the team. Rodman stared at the paper.
  "Uh, Dennis?" the delivery man said.
  "Huh?"
  "This is my son. Can he have your autograph?"
  What  do you do when your world is a contradiction? When your bosses want
you, but your bosses suspend you? When people ask for your autograph, then
whisper that you're crazy? When the daughter you love can't  be with you,
can't even see you, and, in grief, you tattoo her face on your forearm and
make a Christmas video showing presents you will mail to her? 
  To understand Dennis Rodman -- to even understand  a story about him -- you
must unhook your standard gauges, because he has been living in this very
strange place, and is only now surfacing from its cold waters. Hold him up to
normal rules, he shrivels.  Judge him by the real world, he seems spoiled and
pampered.
  Sure, most Americans don't get paid time off to think about their lives.
And they can't use divorce or depression as a reason for skipping  work. But
such logic will get you no closer to unlocking the enigma of Dennis Rodman.
  To do that, you must talk to him, really talk to him, and listen to his
riddled responses. Inside that rubber-band  body -- which houses the greatest
rebounder in basketball today -- there also lives a little boy, a millionaire,
a tractor driver and an American celebrity.
  All trying to make peace with one another.
  "It wasn't just my marriage breaking up that killed me," says Rodman, 31,
standing alone after a practice this week. "It was everything happening at
once. My daughter. Chuck Daly leaving. John Salley  leaving. It was like
everything you worked for was gone at once, like somebody said, 'OK, load it
all into this wagon and take it away.' You come home and say, 'Where did my
life go?' . . . 
  "I was  all screwed up, twisted, turned around. . . . If the marriage thing
had  happened when everyone was still here, I could have handled it. But all
this stuff happened at once. . . . I was trying to find  something to stand up
on, to hold against, and I couldn't."
  What happened to Rodman, at first glance  anyhow, seems sad but not unique.
His brief marriage to his wife, Annie -- which can politely  be called
turbulent -- broke up, and she took their daughter, Alexis, to Sacramento.
Then Daly, the only pro coach Rodman had known, went to the New Jersey Nets.
Salley, Rodman's X-Factor partner, was  traded to Miami. And the Pistons hired
Ron Rothstein as their new skipper, who Rodman resented because he had
seemingly hovered over Daly as Pistons TV/radio commentator last season.
  Rothstein "was  in the wrong place at the wrong time," Rodman says. "I
don't have any animosity to him. But what the Pistons did . . . well, you
shouldn't have a coach here and have another guy watching over him like  a
hawk, knowing that other guy is gonna take over. 
  "So it's hard for me to look at Ronnie and not think that, you know? It's
hard to just forget everything."
  Rodman, who often shrugs while speaking  and looks off into space as if a
voice there is trying to explain it all, skipped most of Rothstein's training
camp. Held out. Made no contact with the Pistons. He came to the exhibition
opener -- against the Nets, Daly's new team -- and sat in the stands, with
sunglasses and a baseball cap. At halftime, he met with Daly -- not Rothstein
-- in a training room.
  "Dennis, if you're so unhappy, why don't  you just run away to a desert
island somewhere and forget about basketball?" Daly said, kiddingly. Then,
seeing the sorrow in Rodman's face, he said, "Hey, I love you. If you were my
son, you would be  with me right now." 
  Before the meeting ended, Rodman gave his old coach a portrait of himself,
 a smiling Dennis with his fists raised.
  A portrait? 
  "I wanted Chuck to have something of  me, something he could always look at
and . . . know that someone loved him, and appreciated him, and . . . no
matter what, he was grateful for all he had done. . . . "
  You hear Rodman stammer, and  you know the truth: What he was giving Daly
were the very things he wanted for himself.
Many dark, endless days
  The days that followed were dark and endless for Rodman, the NBA's
defensive player  of the year in 1990 and 1991. He refused to answer his door.
He refused to talk to teammates. He stayed in the house, banged on a drum set,
played video games. He called the phone company, asked to have  his number
changed. When the phone company said, "All right, Mr. Rodman, this is your new
. . . " he held the receiver down on a table so he wouldn't hear it. He was
building a cocoon. He didn't want  to know his own number.
  The only time he ventured out of his house was to go to Gold's gym, where
he worked out feverishly, hour after hour. He took out his anger on weights
and bulked to a new  muscled mass, which only further pumped his new tattoos,
a Harley- Davidson logo on one arm and the detailed portrait of his daughter
on the inside of the other. In Rodman's strange way, he called this  "a
birthday present for my little girl."
  A birthday present?
  "I can't see her right now" -- his wife's desire -- "but there's not a day
goes by I don't think about her. When I think about her,  she, like, takes my
body and mind away. When I don't think about her, I'm sad."
  He taps his painted arm, just above the word "Alexis."
  "Now, when she's in my mind, I can always look at her."
Different  is his code name
  If this all strikes you as, well, different, understand that "different"
might as well be Rodman's code name. He did not reach the NBA by the usual
transportation. He did not play high school basketball. He worked as an
airport janitor and spent a night in jail before the NBA was even a fantasy.
His sisters arranged a tryout for him at a junior college in Texas. He was
already  20 years old. And when he switched to Southeastern Oklahoma State, in
a tiny, often racist, Oklahoma town, he met a 12-year-old white boy on a
basketball court, went home with him for dinner and eventually  moved in with
the kid's family.
  Rodman has been known to give wads of money to homeless strangers, just
reach in his pocket and leave it there, and he has been known to blow the same
wad on extravagances  for himself. He says he told the Pistons "they could
keep my money, give it to Mark Aguirre, give it to charity, I don't care," and
yet he later half-jokes that maybe the Pistons will give him "an $8  million
contract extension, like the Lakers gave to Magic, or the Knicks gave to
Patrick, you know, for all they've done for the organization."
  Rodman, who refuses to use the word "depressed," says  he came back to the
Pistons not for the money, but for his daughter, who likes to watch him on TV.
He says he deeply resented the Pistons' disbelief that he was injured during
his absence -- "I don't  care what any doctor finds, I know my body, I could
hardly walk, and I don't fake injuries. I never would do that." He says he was
jumping off one leg all of last season, yet he played through the pain  and is
doing it now.
  And if all this makes you dizzy, just consider what Rodman -- last year's
NBA rebound leader -- has done since rejoining the club Nov. 24: Not a game
has passed that he hasn't  grabbed at least 20 boards. Six games in a row? And
he hardly looks tired? Can any other player do that?
  "I feel like a lion out there now," he says, suddenly. "I'm all wild and
free."
He just  wants to be himself
  This is what Dennis Rodman wants these days: to be himself. To wear floppy
clothes. To wear ugly flannel shirts. To come in, do his job and leave if he
chooses to, without explanation. 
  "Before, all these people would talk to me, and a lot of the time I didn't
feel like talking," he says. "Like, when I go out, I was with my friends, and
next thing you know, they're over there,  and I'm over here, talking to
strangers who are asking me about the game. I don't want to give a speech. I
just want to be a regular person. When someone asks me how I'm doing or how
I'm feeling, I always  say 'fine' or 'great.' But I want to say, 'I feel like
s---.' "
  Rodman was swamped with advice during his absence. He says strange
psychiatrists actually came to his house and knocked on his door.  He sees a
professional "about once a week now," and he says they talk, but he doesn't
really "want them knowing what's going on inside of me."
  In his unique fashion, Rodman prefers the Stage Deli  in West Bloomfield,
where he often sits for hours, over a bowl of chicken soup and dry tuna,
listening to the advice of Harriet Goldberg, a woman in her 60s who co-owns
the restaurant.
  "She tells  me, 'Whatever you think will make you happy, you should do.'
That's what I need. I don't need people to tell me, 'Just take the money and
sit at the end of the bench.' And I don't need people to say  I'm crazy. I
just need people to say no matter what you need or do, we'll still be
friends."
  There is no telling what comes next. The Pistons could trade Rodman, if
other teams believe he is back  for good. Or he could finish his career in
Detroit. He is still avoiding the phone and most doorbells, still citing the
demons, but in the last two weeks, he has found a way to smile on occasion and
even raise the old fist now and then. What this means is anyone's guess.
  "Are you happy?" comes the final question.
  "I am . . . getting there," he says.
  One can only pray for a benevolent  sense of direction.
  Mitch Albom will sign "Live Albom III," his new book, at noon today at
Mickey's, 161 W. Congress in Detroit, and 6 p.m., Walden Books, Saginaw; also
Saturday, 1 p.m. B. Dalton,  Macomb Mall, and  3:30 p.m., Barnes & Noble,
Rochester Hills.
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