ty 4191 wrote:tsherkin wrote:ty 4191 wrote:
The ESPN 30 For 30 Special "Bad Boys" certainly paints him out to be a stat chaser and very selfish teammate on the Pistons. He feuded openly and royally with- at least- Chuck Daily and Mark Aguirre over both playing time, and, his own scoring while on the team.
Aguirre wasn't on the team with Dantley, he was traded for Dantley from Dallas.

But yes, Dantley's attitude was called into question a lot on Detroit.
Please refresh my memory; who else was he fighting with on the team, besides Daly?
Okay well for one that 30 for 30 would be a long time after the fact so I'd take that with some salt. Mind you I'd take everything regarding internal relationshps with a little salt.
My mostly otoh recollections ...
There's reporting of an instance of a shouting match with Dantley and Daly. I think Daly may have denied it at the time, but that might have been keeping things under wraps.
There's a general sense that the Thomas-Dantley relationship was strained though it's hard to tell how much of that is after the trade and a sense Isiah was behind it. There's some reporting that Thomas (and Laimbeer) were of the view that FMVP "going to Disneyland" money would be shared across the team, whilst Dantley would have intended to keep it.
Another angle is that Dantley would have bristled at ceding more minutes to Rodman.
That said Dantley's "teacher" label (to my understanding), seems to have been legitimate and was a mentor to younger players, I think especially Dumars and Salley and perhaps Rodman for instance in terms of looking after themselves (though I think I have heard some taking a cynical angle on this, this isn't my understanding of things).
Mind you it's very possible just to argue that Dantley was just about to turn 34, so with Aguirre nearly five years younger at the cost of a pick they were confident was going to be late they could extend their window, ease in more minutes for Rodman just by virtue of the change in scenery resetting expectations (and Aguirre being Isiah's friend).
Other factors/reporting ... the Pistons core was Jack, Chuck, Isiah and Bill and then everyone else. Dantley simply wasn't at the core and understood that. The departure of Versace, whom he was closest too and the nearest thing to a Dantley guy on the inside also hurt his standing/security. And honestly I pretty sure I've also read that at one point earlier in the decade McCloskey had made
everyone available. "Trader Jack" just wasn't that sentimental.
My belief is Dantley very much wanted to stay and to win a title in Detroit.
My main influence (and I have just re-skimmed a bit of it) is Stauth's
The Franchise.