MCfan23
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No One Ever Met Anyone Like Him
At 44, Thomas still has the angelic countenance of his playing days, only with more lines, but, as anyone who has ever gotten in his way could tell you, he's no one to mess with.
By now everyone knows there's another Isiah, who will do whatever he feels he must. Of course, if you factor in his background and discount his appearance, it would be surprising if it was any other way.
He was the poorest of the poor, the youngest of nine children of a single parent on the West Side of Chicago, without enough to eat or even heat some winters. His older brothers had been basketball players of note too, but were fast disappearing into the drug culture of the street.
Thomas told of his mother, Mary, coming to the door with a shotgun when the Vice Lords gang tried to enlist her sons. However, he corrected the record in his 2002 book, "Fundamentals." He said his oldest brother, Lord Henry, had stolen eight ounces of heroin, which they wanted back.
Isiah was the one his family adored and placed their hopes on, getting him a scholarship at St. Joseph's High in the suburbs. He was the one who bused hours a day and adapted so fast, he says his friends accused him of "talking white."
He was the one who never forgot where he came from, even as he drove relentlessly to get as far away as he could.
As president of the players' association, Thomas was the last of the superstars to run it in the tradition of Oscar Robertson, for the little guys, before the David Falk clients took it over and ran it for themselves.
Thomas was also the one who made all the enemies, and all the stuff happened to.
He was left off the 1992 Dream Team, reportedly because Michael Jordan didn't like him. He was shunned by Detroit Piston owner Bill Davidson, who had promised to put him in charge of the franchise he had turned around, reportedly for telling the press, although insiders suspect the involvement of another Davidson favorite, Tom Wilson, the head of the business side.
Somewhere in the process of going from nowhere to the top, Thomas became known as devious, no mean feat in a subculture in which everyone schemed for every waking moment. Maybe with Thomas, it was just easier to see.
Cat-quick on the floor, he displayed a dazzling intelligence off it. He definitely thought up some new ones, like the time when he was Toronto Raptor president and he returned to Detroit on a scouting trip, in disguise.
"I go to some University of Detroit games," Piston publicist Matt Dobek says. "I don't even remember who the opponent was, Xavier or somebody like that. There's like fifteen hundred people in the building, the place is empty.
"We're behind the visiting team's bench. I'm sitting there and a guy comes up, says excuse me, sort of a nondescript-looking guy. He sits behind us the whole game. Never says a word.
"Two, three months later, Mike O'Hara [of the Detroit News] calls me up and says, 'Do you know who that was? Isiah Thomas!'
"I said, 'No, it wasn't. He would have at least said hello.'
"I've known Isiah for 20 years. I wrote a book with the guy!"
Thomas has a thing about information. Asked about a current college player who is generally marked down by his fellow general managers, Thomas says, "That's what they want you to think."
"I guess it started when I got drafted," he says of his reputation. "You're the turnaround guy, you go in when things are bad and you fix it.
"When I first got drafted to Detroit, that's kind of what we did. Toronto was a startup. Indiana [which he coached for three seasons] was basically a turnaround because they had stripped the team down after they had gone to the [2000] finals. Now you're here trying to strip it down and turn it around….
"There have been some guys that over the years have taken shots at me, but there are just as many who have been kind to me. And I've always looked at it as the entertainment business, which is what we're in. Some days you wear the white hat, some days you wear the black hat.
"That comes with the territory. When I played with the Detroit Pistons, we had to wear the black hat because the Lakers and the Celtics had all the white hats."
Thomas always has a move in mind. It's always daring, imaginative and has a chance, however slim.
Last season, it was Rasheed Wallace, who was persona non grata in Portland and said he'd take the $5-million veterans exception to play for Thomas. It might have happened, but the price dropped so low, the Pistons acquired Wallace, won the NBA title and persuaded him to stay.
Now, insiders are watching Thomas' warm relationship with LeBron James' agent, Aaron Williams, just in case James wants to leave Cleveland in 2008.
Thomas has a coach to hire this summer. The top candidates are Phil Jackson and Larry Brown, who are also on the Lakers' list, so imagine the possibilities.
They want action? No matter how this turns out, Thomas will show them action.
"Don't worry about Isiah," said his old coach, Chuck Daly. "You could drop him out of an airplane at 10,000 feet and he'd land on his feet."
Fortunately or not for Thomas, he landed here this time. Now it's Isiah and Gotham, take your pick.
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Keeping busy
Trades for forwards Mo Taylor and Malik Rose just before the NBA trading deadline Thursday were the latest deals Isiah Thomas brokered since taking over as New York Knick president of basketball operations in 2003. A look at Thomas' major moves:
• Dec. 30, 2003: Shipped forward Clarence Weatherspoon to the Houston Rockets for guard Moochie Norris and center John Amaechi.
• Jan. 5, 2004: Acquired guard Stephon Marbury, swingman Penny Hardaway and center Cezary Trybanski from the Phoenix Suns for forward Antonio McDyess, guard Howard Eisley, guard Charlie Ward, forward Maciej Lampe and the rights to guard Milos Vujanic. The Knicks also gave Phoenix their first-round pick in the 2004 draft as well as a future conditional first-round pick.
• Jan. 14, 2004: Fired Coach Don Chaney and his top two assistants Brendan Malone and Lon Kruger. In the news conference, Thomas announced that Brooklyn native and Hall of Famer Lenny Wilkens would replace Chaney, who left with a 72-112 record since taking over for Jeff Van Gundy in 2001.
• Feb. 15, 2004: Acquired forward Tim Thomas and center Nazr Mohammed in a three-way trade involving the Atlanta Hawks and Milwaukee Bucks. In return for Thomas and Mohammed, the Knicks sent forward Keith Van Horn to the Bucks and center Michael Doleac and a conditional 2005 second-round draft pick to the Hawks.
• March 12, 2004: Signed forward Vin Baker, who was released by the Boston Celtics in February.
• Aug. 5, 2004: Acquired guard Jamal Crawford and forward Jerome Williams from the Chicago Bulls for guard Frank Williams, forward Othella Harrington, Trybanski and center Dikembe Mutombo.
• Jan. 22, 2005: Hired assistant coach and former Knick player Herb Williams as head coach after Wilkens resigned.
• Feb. 24, 2005: Acquired forwards Mo Taylor (from Houston) and Malik Rose (from the San Antonio Spurs). The Knicks got Taylor for Baker, Norris and a 2006 second-round pick. They acquired Rose and 2005 and 2006 first-round picks from the Spurs for Mohammed and guard Jamison Brewer.
We suck.
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