The driving force of the Bad Boy Pistons — two-time NBA champion and the fiercest competitor at his position in his era.
Isiah Lord Thomas III was born in Chicago, Illinois in 1961 and attended Indiana University before Detroit Pistons selected him second overall in the 1981 NBA Draft. His 13-season career — spent entirely with Detroit — produced two NBA championships (1989, 1990) and Finals MVP in 1990. He was selected to 12 All-Star games. He led the Bad Boy Pistons — a physically intimidating team known for his Jordan Rules defensive schemes — over the Boston Celtics and Chicago Bulls to back-to-back titles. He averaged 19.2 points and 9.3 assists per game across his career. His performance in Game 6 of the 1988 NBA Finals — scoring 25 points in the fourth quarter on a severely sprained ankle — is considered one of the most courageous single-game performances in championship history. He was a member of the Dream Team in 1992 though his relationship with Michael Jordan complicated his inclusion. He was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 2000. He later worked as a television analyst and had mixed results as a general manager. He is regarded as one of the five best point guards in NBA history.
Leading Detroit Pistons to back-to-back NBA championships, clutch performances, exceptional leadership
How They Played
Elite floor general, clutch scorer, tenacious defender, exceptional basketball IQ and leadership
Lasting Impact
One of greatest point guards ever, Hall of Famer, fierce competitor who defined winning culture
NBA Champion 2x (1989,1990)
The Bad Boy Pistons dynasty he led was so physically aggressive that the NBA changed its rules specifically to curb their tactics — the "Jordan Rules" were designed against them.
Did You Know?Career Honours
- NBA Champion 2x (1989,1990)
- Finals MVP (1990)
- All-Star 12x
- All-NBA First Team 3x
- Hall of Fame (2000)