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Inside the NBA Posted: Wednesday March 26, 2003 9:37 AMJoe Dumars's deft deal making has made Detroit a big winner By Ian Thomsen
Dumars, 39, took over as G.M. in June 2000, just before Detroit's franchise player, Grant Hill, made it clear he was joining the Magic as a free agent. "You have to learn on the fly and go by your instincts," says Dumars, who turned the crisis into a bonanza by working a sign-and-trade that brought Chucky Atkins and Ben Wallace from Orlando. While Hill is recovering from his fourth surgery on his left ankle, Wallace, the league's leading rebounder, has helped recast the Pistons as a high-effort team, one that ranked fifth in field goal defense (43.1%) at week's end. Dumars's success as a player has given him the confidence to trust his instincts, which have told him not to build around a couple of high-scoring stars. Despite spending first-round picks on guard Mateen Cleaves (in 2000) and forward Rodney White (in '01), Dumars didn't hesitate to unload those two players when he saw they weren't working out. "If you truly know it's not a good fit, then you have to move on," he says. "You don't compound mistakes by trying to hide them." Dumars built his team in part by showing faith in underrated players like Cliff Robinson, Corliss Williamson and Jon Barry. Last season he predicted, "I will get a bona fide point guard," then did just that by signing the 6'3" Billups to a six-year, $34 million contract. Through Sunday, Billups had averaged 15.7 points, 3.6 assists and 3.5 rebounds in 30.4 minutes. He has found his niche after playing for five teams in five years. "When a guy has bounced around as much as Chauncey and he's still a good player," says Dumars, "that tells you something about his mental strength." As a result of the 1997 trade of Otis Thorpe, Dumars holds Memphis's top draft choice -- the Grizzlies retain it only if it's the No. 1 selection -- and he can take on salaries because Detroit's payroll of about $41 million for next season is at least $10 million below the anticipated luxury-tax threshold. "I would love to add a high-scoring guy," says Dumars, "but it has to be the right player. It has to be a guy who fits in with the chemistry we already have." Issue date: March 31, 2003
For more Inside the NBA see this week's issue of Sports Illustrated, on newsstands Wednesday, March 26. Click here to subscribe to SI.
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