The time has come to see if Detroit are lucky, good or great...

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  • wildcatchild
    MVP
    • Jan 2003
    • 2129

    #16
    Re: The time has come to see if Detroit are lucky, good or great...

    Detroit is the Patriots of the NBA! Go Tay!
    "He who controlleths the backboard, controlleths the game." - Adolph Rupp

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    • Bird006
      MVP
      • Mar 2003
      • 961

      #17
      Re: The time has come to see if Detroit are lucky, good or great...

      Originally posted by wildcatchild
      Detroit is the Patriots of the NBA! Go Tay!
      Not yet, bud.

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      • ludacris06
        Banned
        • Sep 2003
        • 1527

        #18
        Re: The time has come to see if Detroit are lucky, good or great...

        Man this thread is a joke.

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        • Court_vision
          Banned
          • Oct 2002
          • 8290

          #19
          Re: The time has come to see if Detroit are lucky, good or great...

          Originally posted by ludacris06
          Man this thread is a joke.
          Good to see you missed the point...again.

          You don't think people are questioning the Pistons?

          Try this below:






          Those who don’t believe in the Detroit Pistons’ legacy will put an asterisk to their Game 7 win over the Miami Heat and say that, once again, the Pistons benefited from a key injury to an opposing star.

          Those who do believe will say that this battle-tested group may be every bit as good as the Bad Boys of the late 80s.

          Whatever you believe, the facts are as follows: the Pistons won for the 10th straight time when needing a victory to clinch a series (including four straight wins when faced with elimination), became the first team in 23 years to win an Eastern Conference Finals Game 7 on the road, and are the first Eastern team since Kidds's Nets to go to the Finals in consecutive years.




          Their 88-82 win at Miami was a marvel of poise and execution down the stretch. The Pistons never panicked midway through the fourth quarter, when they trailed 74-68 and the Heat had three straight tries to go up by eight. The Heat missed on all three possessions, and the Pistons responded with an 8-0 run that turned the game for good.

          And when it came time to make free throws, the Heat missed two critical ones in the final two minutes, while Chauncey Billups calmly sank six straight

          The Pistons withstood Shaquille O’Neal’s best offensive game of the series (27 points), weathered an emotionally pumped home crowd, galvanized by the return of Dwayne Wade, and survived a spectacular 12-point third-quarter display by Wade himself.

          For the series, they survived the distractions of Larry Brown’s next career move and Rasheed Wallace’s Game 5 meltdown.

          Which brings us back to the non-believers, the ones who say the Pistons have lucked out on the injury front. In 2004, they beat the Pacers with an ailing Jermaine O’Neal, came back from a 3-2 deficit to beat the Nets and an ailing Jason Kidd, and whipped a Lakers team with a hobbled Karl Malone in the Finals.

          This year, they beat a Pacers team minus Ron Artest, and came from 3-2 down once again to beat a Miami team that was clearly not the same with its leading scorer and floor general unable to break down the defense and play end-to-end with his customary zeal. In the fourth quarter, Wade missed all six of his shots, appearing exhausted and in pain by the end, though some of his pain was doubtless caused by Keyon Dooling’s shot selection. As good as the Pistons played, with Ben Wallace setting screens and breaking free for a crucial dunk, and Rasheed Wallace tipping in a huge shot to preserve a three-point lead—Heat fans will remain convinced that a healthy Dwaye Wade would’ve made the difference.

          So which is it? Are the Pistons that good, or have they caught a break in every big series they’ve played?

          The San Antonio Spurs will offer the best test yet. The former champs against the current champs.

          Though Tim Duncan’s ankle has been suspect since a bad sprain suffered in March, he was as dominant as usual against the Suns. Duncan is healthy, as are Manu Ginobili, Tony Parker, Bruce Bowen, and Robert Horry.

          Both teams play great defense. Both teams play sound, old-school, fundamental basketball. Both teams feel like they don’t get respect. Both teams depend on a trio of scorers (Rasheed Wallace-Rip Hamilton-Billups vs. Duncan-Parker-Ginobili), yet both teams are more known for selfless, five-man play than individual heroics. Finally, both teams have marvelous coaches in Larry Brown and Gregg Popovich.

          Detroit vs. San Antonio may not get the TV ratings the NBA hopes for, but it should be a classic. The difference may come down to the effectiveness of the role players, guys like Brent Barry, Nazr Muhammad, Linsday Hunter, Elden Campbell. For that, I give the edge to the Spurs, who will seize the title back in a thrilling Game 7 home court win.



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          • ludacris06
            Banned
            • Sep 2003
            • 1527

            #20
            Re: The time has come to see if Detroit are lucky, good or great...

            I think you quoted the wrong person.

            Comment

            • elicoleman
              Im The Baby/Gotta Love Me
              • Sep 2002
              • 34655

              #21
              Re: The time has come to see if Detroit are lucky, good or great...

              Being a die hard fan of the Patriots and having to listen to the "lucky" phrase by many people for quite a while, I'd say that if you make it back to back years, you are obviously much better than lucky.
              Originally posted by CardsFan27
              This is the 3rd time John Calipari has been to his first Final Four!
              What I'm Currently Listening To

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              • bballrox88
                Rookie
                • Feb 2004
                • 81

                #22
                Re: The time has come to see if Detroit are lucky, good or great...

                You don't make the finals twice in a row on luck, or by being good. This is a great team with arguably the most rounded starting-five this decade or two. They proven every series that they are up to the challenge, winning many decisive games on the road and have fought with their backs against the wall. They may not be flashy, but they do win, and that's really all that matters.

                Let's just say a great player like Shaq or Duncan was on the Piston roster last season when they won it. I would gurantee that everyone would consider the Pistons were a great team just because they had a superstar. But no, that's not how the Pistons are. They win with everyone contributing every night, their lack of respect comes from the lack of a superstar.
                "I think steve got the beta because he hasnt logged on in a while, he could be playing it!!! Has anyone else heard anything?"- some noob

                "You need to investigate the possibility of acquiring a life"-Fossen

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