Drew Sharp details Dave Bing's toughest test yet

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An exclusive sneak preview from Drew Sharp's new biography of embattled Detroit icon Dave Bing

Champaign, IL—Instead of enjoying a luxurious retirement, former Detroit Pistons star Dave Bing chose to become the mayor of Detroit after many people had long ago written off the city as dead. That’s just the latest in a series of “never take the easy way out” decisions reflecting the will of a man who lost sight in one eye as a child yet went on to become one of the NBA’s top 50 players of all time. Now the basketball hall of famer, who also built a start-up company into one of the nation’s most thriving corporations, faces his toughest challenge yet in Detroit’s city hall.

In this exclusive excerpt from his new book, Dave Bing: A Life of Challenge (Human Kinetics, November 2012), Detroit Free Press sports columnist Drew Sharp details one of the most difficult appearances Bing has ever made in his political career—a speech he gave at a community outreach center on Seven Mile Road in Detroit on November, 6, 2011—when he outlined the troubling situation facing the city and the spending cuts and layoffs necessary to save it.

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Now, on November 16, 2011, Bing faced perhaps his most daunting task. The city under his command was spinning in a cauldron, a creature of its own political hubris and fiscal neglect. And it was sure to get a lot hotter for everyone—the mayor included—before it cooled off.

Reporters received an advanced text summary of Bing’s speech. It was filled with the standard calls for sacrifice while still promising delivery of essential services. Some elements of the plan were new, such as the privatization of certain city services, including mass transit and electrical services.

The imminent threat of bankruptcy gave Bing license to demand dramatic cutbacks, especially in the city’s pension and health care commitments to city employees. And the man still had a trump card he could play if left no other alternative—the emergency manager.

The local television stations cancelled their scheduled 6 p.m. newscasts so they could cover the critical speech live. The timing of the speech magnified its importance. Bing didn’t want this desperate message buried in the morning or afternoon news cycle.

Ample discussions took place among the inner circle regarding the desired pitch for the speech. Bing didn’t want to come across as a bludgeoner, constantly pounding home the bad news, because he feared that such a tone would suggest futility. The speech must have some balance, conveying the necessity for historic budget cuts while also appealing to the notion that this would be the best hope for molding a newer, more financially viable Detroit.

Communications consultant Bob Warfield thought it best that the speech not occur at City Hall. This was a purely symbolic gesture. If you’re hoping to appeal to the people, it’s probably better that you’re out there with them rather than insulated within the trappings of political power.

There had been criticisms, primarily from the city pastors, that Bing had distanced himself from those who elected him into office. The accusations were greatly exaggerated, if not downright ill-founded. But moving the speech away from the antiseptic pallor of the Coleman A. Young Government Center was the right call.

Bing’s team scheduled the speech for the Northwest Activities Center, a community outreach center on Seven Mile Road, not far from the Sherwood Forest area of Detroit. This area was one of the few residential pockets in the city still fairly populated; it was perched on the northern fringes of the city limits. However, even that area underscored the infrastructural problems befalling Detroit.

Woodward Avenue, the city’s primary artery cutting a north–south swath through the city, represents the eastern border of Sherwood Forest and its neighbor, Palmer Woods, home of some of the biggest, most stately homes in the city. But drive up Woodward on a winter’s evening and it is completely in the dark. There were no streetlights and few businesses open. In the distance, however, there was an oasis illuminating the evening skies.

It was Ferndale, one of the southern entries to Oakland County, situated immediately across Eight Mile Road. Not only were there lights, but there was vibrant activity for a cool, windy winter’s night. Restaurants, bars, and little shopping boutiques were open and busy. The disparity was stark and alarming, but nonetheless perfectly symbolic of the serious challenges facing Detroit. If the city wasn’t realistic about what it could no longer provide, it would basically be pulling the plug on the city.

Bing actually looked forward to this opportunity to make his argument to the public that Detroit had no alternative but to accept less. “You don’t want the state taking over the city, do you?” became the administration’s battle cry and the impetus for selling the argument that Detroit should be able to take care of itself, regardless of the punitive measures taken.

In the hours leading up to the speech, there was actually great anticipation within the administration. This was finally “his time, his moment.”

Nobody ever questioned Bing’s empathy or his limitless degree of humanity. This was a guy who seriously cared about doing what he strongly believed was the right thing. He truly lived the pain of those families who lost loved ones in a rise of homicides in the city during 2011. He had spoken with many young people in the city of Detroit who sadly didn’t see themselves living much longer, justifying why they were drawn more to negative influences. How would telling the people of this city that they must accept less alter that sense of futility?

Could he move the mountain?

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Dave Bing: A Life of Challenge tells the against-all-odds tale of the Detroit mayor who has achieved an unprecedented combination of success as an athlete, businessman, and politician. Author Sharp, a city native who has known Bing since he was drafted by the Pistons in 1966, provides an intimate look at the man who didn’t just once deal in steel, he demonstrated it every day in his resolve to make the most of himself and his community.

To request a review copy of Dave Bing: A Life of Challenge or an interview with author Drew Sharp, please contact Maurey Williamson at maureyw@hkusa.com or 1-800-747-4457, ext. 7890.

Maurey Williamson

Marketing and Publicity Manager

217-403-7890

maureyw@hkusa.com

Human Kinetics
1607 N. Market Street
Champaign, IL 61820
www.humankinetics.com

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What Dave has achieved - a great basketball career, success in business, and a prominent political post at a challenging time - speaks to how all athletes should look at, and not limit, themselves. We should always stand for something more than what the box score says about us.
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, 6-time NBA Most Valuable Player
Dave Bing's journey from the Basketball Hall of Fame to City Hall is a compelling story with lessons for all of us. His life has spanned one of the most unique and transformative periods of American history. The details of his actions and achievements in the context of the Black experience in Detroit and the United States will inspire and inform readers from all walks of life.
Kevin Johnson, Mayor of Sacramento, NBA All-Star
The Dave Bing story is an extraordinary take on an extraordinary life.
Joe Dumars, Hall of Fame NBA star, business entrepreneur and president of the Detroit Pistons
Drew Sharp, a lifelong Detroiter, has followed all of Bing’s careers up close. He has skillfully told the story of this unique and compelling American life, with new insight and depth.
Michael Rosenberg, Sports Illustrated