NEW DELHI: The NBA of the 1980s hits differently in retrospect. Amid the rough-and-tumble nature of the sport, where giants like Larry Bird and Magic Johnson cast their towering shadows, a 6-foot-1 guard from Chicago’s West Side was built to bend the game to his will.Even today, Isiah Thomas, the “Baby-Faced Assassin” who led the Detroit Pistons to back-to-back NBA championships, remains one of the most cerebral architects the game has ever seen.
Speaking to TimesofIndia.com exclusively on the sidelines of the second edition of BUDX NBA House in New Delhi, the Hall of Famer opened up on a journey that took him from the gang-ravaged streets of Chicago to the pinnacle of global sport and business.
The West Side blueprint
From a young age, Thomas’s trademark survival instinct on the court was forged in an environment where reading a room was a matter of life and death. “Growing up on the West Side, the daily instincts that you have to develop that you didn’t know you were developing, survival instincts, you really had to learn how to read people,” Thomas told this website.“You had to be able to look a block away and decide if the guy who was standing on the corner was gonna let you walk by or hurt you. Learning how to read people early in life, and then applying that to the game, you understood people’s emotions, their feelings, their highs, their lows… the things that they feared.”
Michael Jordan and Isiah Thomas (Photo by Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images)
Outthinking the giants
While the “Bad Boys” Pistons were often characterised by their bruising physicality, Thomas insists their real edge was psychological. To break the stranglehold of the Lakers and Celtics, Detroit followed a specific mental blueprint.“We always believed that mental is to physical as four is to one,” he explained. “While most of our opponents talked about physicality, we used our mentality to really beat the opponents. For us, it was always about forcing the not-so-good players to shoot more than the good players. The superior shooters, we would try to do everything to get the ball out of their hands.”Commanding respect as the smallest man in a room of giants required more than just skill. According to Thomas, the secret lies in two virtues.“Listen would be the first thing, and also be trustworthy,” he shared with a smile. “You don’t command or demand that respect without them giving it to you… and the way that happens is they have to trust you. They have to trust your daily living habits, your work habits. But you have to listen first.”
From the court to the boardroom
Today, Thomas is as much a fixture in boardrooms as he was on the court, serving as a successful CEO and investor. However, the transition required unlearning the seasonal nature of sports.“In basketball, you go by seasons; the season ends and you start over again. In business, it’s a constant build,” Thomas laughed. “I had to learn to think long term in terms of five, 10 years out as opposed to just thinking seasonal.“Public failures to me have always been a way to learn from and get better from. Even though they hurt, and they do hurt immensely, your worst moments can really be your best moments to learn from. When you win all the time, you really never see what it is that you’re doing wrong.”
Former NBA player Isiah Thomas (AP Photo/Chris Szagola)
The evolution of the game
As we are now in 2026, the league has finally caught up to Thomas’s decades-old dream of positionless basketball. Watching 7-footers like Nikola Jokic dominate the assist categories is the fulfilment of a point centre vision he championed long ago.“What I was talking about decades ago was really just about learning where every player would have the opportunity to learn the same skills,” Thomas added. “A small player would learn how to play in the post. A big player would learn how to play on the perimeter. To see where the game is at today… where we have a centre like Jokic leading the league in assists is a dream that you had for basketball.”Beyond the statistics, Thomas sees basketball as a literal lifesaver.“When we say, ‘I love this game,’ for a basketball player, it’s the thing you trust. It’s the game that breaks your heart, but it’s also the game that heals you. And being in that team environment, with teammates you’re working together with to accomplish one goal, whether you accomplish it or not, there are relationships, friendships, and social skills that develop, and all of that turns into love,” he stated.“They say love conquers all, and in a lot of ways, the game and the ball bring love.”