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<UID>
9701130243
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
970505
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, May 05, 1997
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo JULIAN H. GONZALEZ/Detroit Free Press;Photo MARY SCHROEDER/Detroit Free Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>



Doug Collins watches and frets.
Slava Kozlov, second from left,  is sandwiched by teammates
after scoring the Wings' winning goal 1:31 into the third
overtime Sunday.  Complete coverage in Sports, Page 1C.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1997, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
OVER ... AND OVERTIME
HILL RUNS INTO A MOUNTAIN -- AND SEASON ENDS
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
ATLANTA --  Every time Grant Hill tried to take the season into next week,
it kept spitting back in his face. He drove to the basket, went to lay the
ball in, and had it swatted against the backboard  by the mountainous Dikembe
Mutombo. He drove to the hole, dished the ball to Otis Thorpe, and watched his
shot blocked by the mountainous Mutombo. He took a whippet pass from Joe
Dumars, went up for  the easy slam -- and had it blocked again by the
mountainous Mutombo. On that play, Hill was left in that most embarrassing
position, hanging alone, holding nothing but cold iron. He finally let go,  of
both the rim and the season. He dropped like a leaf.

Never mind how Doug Collins screamed during Sunday's time- outs, "THE
TOUGHEST TEAM WILL WIN! THE TOUGHEST TEAM WILL WIN!" In the end, this  was
less about heart than height. 

 
  And for all the ways you can dissect the Pistons' fate this morning --
home, done, still looking for their first playoff series win in the
Hill-Collins era -- the  fact is, they are out because they have no big man,
no defense in the middle, and no rebounding to speak of. Basketball is still a
tall person's sport. And there's something wrong when your point guard,
Lindsey Hunter, is your leading rebounder in your season's biggest game.

  "Maybe I can hang from a pole this summer and see if my arms grow longer,"
said a grim, head-shaking Hill, after the Pistons blew an eight-point lead in
the fourth quarter and exited the playoffs with an 84-79 loss to Atlanta in
Game 5.  "Mutombo got me cleanly on those blocks. I thought I was past him and
then he came around  with those long arms and got me."

  He sighed. "Now I have to try not to have nightmares about it all summer."

  Hill meets Mountain. Mountain wins.

  Poor Grant. More than anyone on the team,  Sunday was about him. Could he
come up as big as his shadow? Could he pull this franchise to the next level
by himself?  The answer -- although not entirely his fault -- was no. He had
nine points in  the first half, 12 points in the third quarter, and nothing --
zero -- in the fourth.

  Now he sat in the locker room, a black turtleneck on his torso, a towel
around his waist, lost somewhere between  coming and going.  Which is very
much how we feel about this Pistons' season this morning, isn't it?
Magnificent at times, superb in its improvement. But when it comes to the part
that really counts,  the post-season, they are still out in the first round,
same as last year -- and the Hawks don't have Shaquille O'Neal or Penny
Hardaway. 

  Hill meets Mountain.

Big men rule

  "You know, there  are a lot of intangibles in this game," said Joe Dumars,
pulling on his socks in the quiet locker room. "But one thing you can count on
is a 7-foot-2 guy is always going to be 7 foot 2."

  He forced  a sad laugh. "That must be nice, to have that every night."

  And make no mistake, that was the difference. Mutombo -- who virtually won
Game 1 by himself -- had 17 points and six blocks in Game 5.  Oh, yes, it
would have helped if Dumars hit a few more of his shots. And it would have
helped if Hunter were more on target, and if Hill could have gone to the
free-throw line more than six times. And  yes, the highlight film will show
you two semi-miraculous Atlanta baskets in the final 75 seconds that sealed
the win:

* A top-of-the-key jumper by Christian Laettner -- think of his game-winner
for  Duke against Kentucky -- that gave Atlanta a two-point lead. 

* A "let's see you do that again" heave by Steve Smith, who hadn't made a
three-point basket all day, but who threw one up as he was falling  out of
bounds. It swished to put the Hawks up by five.

  Still, as brilliant as those shots were, they would have been afterthoughts
if Hill had not been swatted away by Mutombo, if Thorpe had not  been pushed
around inside, if Terry Mills had not been outdone by Laettner. Big men rule.

  "What do you know now that you didn't know when this series started?" Hill
was asked.

  "Not to believe  the good feeling just because you're up a game," he said.
"A few days ago, we thought we were going to the second round for sure.
Everyone was confident. And now this."

  He's right. True champions  kill the snake when they have it by the throat.
The Pistons should have taken this series in Game 4. They had the Hawks
reeling, but came out light, and Atlanta dictated the game. 

  "They made adjustments,"  said Collins.  "A shot here, a rebound there  . .
. "

  His voice trailed off. He looked like he might weep.

  "How disappointing?" someone asked.

  "It's painful to lose. But am I proud of them?  Yes I am. We've made a
180-degree turnaround from when I took over two years ago. And that's what I
promised we'd do."

  A word about Collins. He has indeed done a magnificent job of rebuilding
this franchise. He inspires wins on nights when other coaches can't get their
players' attention -- which accounts for the great regular-season mark. And he
finds talent in players that others didn't know  existed.

  But if he doesn't lighten up, he's going to smother this team to death.
There were points in Sunday's game where he did everything but step on the
floor and take the ball out of a Piston's  hands. On one play, in the fourth
quarter, Hunter got the ball on a break and had a one-on-one to the hole. Doug
stopped him dead in his tracks, screamed,  "No, hold! No!" Hunter stopped and
exhaled  in frustration. The ball was worked around, and eventually went back
to Hunter for a long-distance shot -- a shot that missed.

  I know Collins does it because he cares. I know he eats, breathes and
sleeps this team. But he has to trust the players up and down the court, or
they will never deliver and will always resent him. 

  Speaking of which, I think we can say good-bye to Otis Thorpe. His
unpredictability was an albatross this series -- he was flat-out awful in Game
4 -- and if he is back here next year, pouting and scowling and walking away
from the huddle, then this team might not make  it to January without a
murder.

What next?

  So where do they go from here? The Pistons still haven't won a playoff
series since the year they surrendered the title to the Bulls, 1991.

  "We need  to get bigger," Collins admitted. "We need to find new inner
strengths from the people we have. And we need to find a big man who wants to
come to Detroit to play with Grant Hill."

  Hill. Yes. Unfortunately  for Grant, this series may raise more questions
than it answers. Here was a playoff that came down to the last five minutes,
and why was Hill not calling for the ball? He did not have it in his hands  to
start the plays. Isn't that what the superstar does?  

  Earlier in the day, we'd seen Orlando and Miami go to the wire, with Penny
Hardaway taking one shot and Tim Hardaway taking the next. And  we all know
how Michael Jordan calls for -- no, demands -- the ball when the game is on
the line.  Where was Hill in this one? Was it Collins' over-designing? 

  Or was it simply that after those two  blocks by Mutombo, Hill was rattled?

  If so, he has a long summer to get his equilibrium back. "It's not as bad
as two years ago," Hill said, "when we were planning our summer in February."

  No,  it isn't. But championship players need to hate any final moment that
doesn't come with a trophy. Hill needs to detest days like Sunday, so much so
that he keeps them from happening. I know he's the  most wonderful guy on the
planet. But anger and selfishness can be good things when you have as much
talent as Hill does.

  Of course, height's a nice thing, too. And unless the Pistons want Hill
hanging  in that closet, stretching his arms, they'd better do something this
off-season. They will likely lose Mills. They need to keep Hunter. Dumars'
contract will be a financial Rubik's Cube. And moving Thorpe  will not be
easy.

  For now, you can nod proudly to an improving franchise, which gave us many
a great night in the regular season. But this post-season cannot be called a
success simply because the Pistons tried hard. 

  Hill meets Mountain. Mountain wins. Now the long, hot summer, and then they
start climbing again.
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<DISCLAIMER>
THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED ARTICLE.
</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
SPT; GRANT HILL; PISTONS; BASKETBALL; PLAYOFF; HAWKS; GAME
</KEYWORDS>
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