SPORTS The Michigan Daily Friday, June 5, 1987 Hoge 12 Pistons' remarks scrutinized 4 This situation is all black and white, and that's the problem. After the Detroit Pistons fell to the Boston Celtics in the seventh game of the NBA conference finals, rookie Dennis Rodman, who is Black, commented on the playing ability of Larry Bird, who is white. Said Rodman, "(Bird) ain't God, he ain't the best player in the NBA. Not to me...." Asked why Bird was named the NBA's Most Valuable Player the three previous seasons, Rodman answered, "He's white.... That's the only reason he gets it.... I don't care. Go right ahead and tell him." If Rodman had been the only player to say this, it may have been shrugged off quickly. He is only a rookie, and rookies are known to make mistakes. In front of more media members and more fans (those watching television included) than he ever before played in front of, he had just lost the biggest game of his life. He was hurting, and he made a mistake. To err is human. But Rodman wasn't the only Piston to say this. Isiah Thomas, who is Black and the same age as Rodman, but much more a veteran of the NBA than Rodman, also commented on Bird. "When Bird makes a great play, it's due to his thinking and his hard-work habits," said Thomas. "It's all planned out by him. It's not the case for Blacks. All we do is run and jump. We never practice or give a thought to how we play. "You hear it on television. You see it in the papers. I remember watching the NCAA finals.... I listened to Billy Packer, who I like, and who I think likes me, and he said, when Indiana was sending in Rush Delivery BY JEFF RUSH 1. !TM.. 215 S. STAT ANN ARBOR 313-663-74 JAPANESE RESTAURANT APPETIZERS QUICK LUNCHES SUKIYAKI TERIYAKI FRIDAY SUSHI BAR UNTIL 2 PM DAILY SPECIAL TAKE-OUT HOURS: Mon.-Sat. 11AM-9Pl Sun.-closed until Sept then 3PM-SPM (Dean) Garrett and (Keith) Smart, 'Well, here come the athletes into the game.' "The word athletes. I think that that's an unconscious statement concerning race. I don't like it.... "Magic (Johnson) and Michael Jordan and me, for example, we're playing only on God-given talents, like we're animals, lions and tigers, who run around wild in a jungle, while Larry's success is due to his intelligence and hard work. "Blacks have been fighting that stereotype about playing on pure instinct for so long, and basically it still exists - regardless of whether people believe it or not." Truth hurts? Rodman's and Thomas' words by themselves are ugly, sure, and have caused much controversy throughout the country. That doesn't mean the words are wrong, though. High school literature teachers stress that characters should be judged by their actions. Okay. Bird, Rodman and Thomas all are characters. Let's give it atry. Rodman said Bird wasn't a legitimate MVP, winning the award only because he is white. Bird's actions show otherwise. When Boston was reeling after two Pistons wins tied the series, the Celtics turned to Bird. He made the 'E ,MI 03 steal that won game five. He also averaged 36 points a game in the final three games, scoring almost every time Boston absolutely needed a point. On top of that, in the three previous seasons Bird has won the official MVP award, his peers agreed that he deserved the award two of the times. Most of his peers are Black. Rodman is wrong; Bird wasn't named MVP because he is white. Thomas' comments deserve closer scrutiny. He insists that journalists constantly give white players credit for thinking through situations on the court, making the best decision, and then carrying it out. The same journalists portray Black players as merely reacting to situations like some animal, according to Thomas. Several instances during Celtics' playoff games come to mind. In the series with the Pistons, the announcers, all white, kept referring to Pistons' rookies Rodman and John Salley as the runners. They are both quick, especially so for big men. But would the announcers refer to two similarly quick big white men as runners? With time running out in the fifth game against the Pistons, Bird stole the ball, and according to the LS M r. 13 announcers, had "amazing presence of mind" to pass to Dennis Johnson for the winning basket instead of himself shooting the ball while off 4 balance and falling out of bounds. The same kind of comments seemed to continue Tuesday night in the championship series, after Rodman's and Thomas' comments had caused a furor, and after announcers should have given some thought as to whether they were guilty as charged by Thomas. Bird seemed to commit an error by taking the ball to the hoop by himself in a one-on-four situation. Normally a player is expected to pull up and wait until some teammates make it to the offensive end of the court. Bird chose not to, but made the basket anyway. The announcers stressed that Bird had made a thinking play, not wanting to wait and waste time off the clock while his team was so far ' behind the Lakers on the scoreboard. Would the announcers have given similar credit to a Black player in the same situation, or would they call it a dumb play even if the basket was made? On top of that, CBS announcers Hubie Brown and Billy Cunningham both shrugged off the substance of what Thomas said, saying only that they couldn't 4 understand how a "nice young man" like Thomas could say such things about a player as good as Bird. Brown and Cunningham paid no attention to Thomas' belief that announcers perpetuate the stereotype that white players think while Black players merely react. Guilty as charged. Aftermath It's interesting that after all the charges and countercharges have been leveled, Rodman and Thomas are the only two players taking the heat. Though they were the first to raise the issue, their comments were hardly the worst. After hearing Rodman's words on Bird, Celtic Kevin McHale suggested that somebody should hang Rodman from the ceiling of the Silverdome. Uh huh. And maybe McHale would look better in Klan white than Celtic green. Somebody forgot to tell him that to forgive is divine. Michigan Daily SPORTS 763-0376 DEPARTMENT STORE BUYOUTS AT TREMENDOUS SAVINGS. UP TO 90% OFF ORIGINAL PRICES. YOU HAVE TO SEE THE SAVINGS TO BELIEVE ITI College students' fine quality sportswear starting at $6.00. Gr'Men's designer clothes and /r women's summer dresses A / y starting at $10.00. Are you short of for college? S DENT AID SEARCH SERVICE can help you! 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