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<UID>
9302150424
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
931216
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, December 16, 1993
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1993, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
OLDEN IS BEHOLDEN TO NOBODY BUT HIMSELF
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
Olden Polynice was 7 years old when he came to America. He got off the
plane at Kennedy Airport, holding his younger sister in one hand and his
younger brother in the other. He was supposed to wait  at the gate, but
instead, in a new country, in a strange place, he decided to start walking.

  He couldn't read the signs, so he looked at the pictures. He saw suitcases,
symbolizing baggage claim,  and he followed them. He was almost to customs
when his mother and father, whom he hadn't seen in two years, came rushing by,
heading for the gate. They spotted their children on the other side, led  by
Olden, going straight toward the doors, next stop New York City. 

  They did a double take.
  "Olden, where are you going?!"
  So, right from the start, he followed his own direction. That he  grew from
a Haitian child who used to sneak onto railroad trains and eat sugarcane into
a muscular NBA center now posting sweet statistics only proves one thing: He
hasn't changed. He still goes his  own way. 
  "I speak my mind," he says. "I always have."
  You get no argument in the NBA on this. After all, Polynice, 29, has done
all of the following: called a team hotel "a dump"; gone  on  a hunger strike
during the season; had his own radio show; helped LA clean up after the riots;
played a year in Italy; changed his uniform number to 0; thrown a garbage can
during a  tantrum; scribbled  cryptic messages onto the back of his sneakers;
and was accused, over the summer, of pulling a gun on his girlfriend -- by his
girlfriend. 
  "I didn't do that!" he insists. "That was totally a lie. That was just
someone making something up because she couldn't get what she wanted."
  Just the same, if Olden tells you he's going right, you probably don't tell
him to go left.
 
He's a bright spot  for Chaney
  On the other hand, when Olden wants to go straight down the middle, you
just stand back and admire. He is having a benchmark season, scoring nearly
three times as many points as his career  average, grabbing three times as
many rebounds, and playing twice as many minutes. He pulls down more boards
per game (13.7) than any other center in the NBA -- and that includes O'Neal,
Robinson and  Olajuwon. People keep waiting for him to do something goofy --
join a monastery? marry Grace Jones? -- but he  just  keeps churning.
  It is hard to find good signs on the current Pistons. Here is  one
exception. You get the feeling Don Chaney looks down his roster each night and
sighs at every name except Olden Polynice.
  "We keep waiting for the bubble to burst," Chaney admits of Polynice's
14.6-point average and .581 shooting percentage. "But it hasn't. Maybe this is
for real.
  "I know this, Olden feels good about himself right now. And that's
important for him. I've learned, from  last year, he is one of those players
that you just can't ride. You have to compliment him more than criticize. If
you scream and yell, he just flips the switch off, and he's not listening."
  Which  is precisely what happened with Ron (ARGGGHHH!) Rothstein, the Ozzy
Osborne of sideline coaches. Polynice and Rothstein never connected. They were
liquid and gas. "Talk to me like a man," Polynice says.  "Don't yell at me
like a child. I hated that."
  Of course, starting a hunger strike in the middle of the season is enough
to make any coach go vocal. Granted, it was for a good cause (Haitian
refugees).  But considering Polynice is a pro athlete who cannot work without
a nourished body, the idea was better in theory than in practice.
  "It was something I had to do," he says. "If you'd grown up where  I grew
up, you would understand."
Haiti taught him to demand his share
  Polynice remembers ducking under desks in Haiti when gunfire erupted in
the streets of Port-au-Prince. And he remembers walking  past the presidential
palace, seeing how clean it was, and how dirty his neighborhood was by
comparison. It was the start of a chip that he carries on his shoulder: Make
life fair. Give me my share,  too.
  Polynice is a force this way. Tell him he can't do something, he's in your
face demanding to know why. When he puts that strength into basketball, he is
a monster. 
  The knock has been that  it comes and goes. Polynice says, "If you give me
minutes, I can produce." He is getting the minutes. With the Pistons these
days, if you can stand without crutches you get minutes.
  Still, his numbers  have never been this good before. Is it his contract,
which runs out this year? "If it is," Chaney says, laughing, "I wish we could
do a one-year deal every year."
  Polynice denies the contract angle.  He says he has matured. He doesn't let
every little thing bother him anymore. He now has the letters W.H.E.N. on his
sneakers: Work Hard Every Night. 
  "Next year, after I redo my contract, I'll be  back to do the same thing
I'm doing now. And then the people will have to say, 'Damn, that boy's good.'
"
  Which beats saying, "Hey, where's he going?"
  Mitch Albom will sign "Fab Five" and "Live  Albom III" at 4 p.m. today,
Waldenbooks, Roseville; and Friday at noon, Waldenbooks, Renaissance Center,
Detroit; 5:30 p.m., B.Dalton, Summit Place Mall; and 7:30 p.m., B.Dalton,
Lakeside Center.
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