Led by the core of Isiah Thomas, Joe Dumars, Dennis Rodman, Bill Laimbeer, Vinnie Johnson, Mark Aguirre and Rick Mahorn, the Pistons of the late 80s were arguably the most physical and intimidating group of players to ever step foot on a basketball court. And everyone hated them for it.
The “Bad Boys,” who were allegedly called “classless bullies” by Celtics great Red Auerbach, reached the Finals three years in a row, winning two championships (’89 and ’90) through selfless play, solid defense and rebounding, and a physicality of Biblical proportions.
But before they were great, they had to endure crushing losses to the Celtics in ’87 (Bird, McHale, Parish), the Lakers in ’88 (Magic, Jabbar, Worthy) and battle out a youthful and hungry Bulls team with Jordan and Pippen to six games in the Eastern Conference Finals in ’89.
The Bad Boys found themselves in fist fights with just about every superstar of the era, meaning just about every fan not from Detroit hated these guys.
For the better part of a decade, it was an ‘us vs. the world’ mentality for a team who would rather punch a player in the face than allow a layup. It’s a mentality that would never work in today’s game, but in a period before stricter flagrant foul calls, it bought the Bad Boys two championships.