Going against the grain
June 8, 2004 | 12:00am
LOS ANGELES Not too many readers agreed when I picked the Detroit Pistons to win the National Basketball Association (NBA) championship before the playoffs began last April.
But now that theyre three wins away from capturing their first title in 14 years, Im beginning to sound like Madam Auring. Not that Im gloating. Because the best-of-7series is far from over.
Sure, the Pistons upset the applecart by shocking the Los Angeles Lakers, 87-75, at the Staples Center here Sunday night (Monday morning, Manila). Lest Detroit fans forget, it takes four wins to clinch the series, not one.
Still, beating the Lakers at home was huge particularly as the Pistons now hold the homecourt advantage under the Finals format of 2-3-2.
Pistons coach Larry Brown isnt celebrating prematurely, thats for sure. He knows what its like to lose focus after going up 1-0 in the Finals. Three years ago, Brown coached the Philadelphia 76ers against Phil Jacksons Lakers and won the Finals opener on the road, too. The Lakers, however, bounced back with a vengeance and took the next four games to seal it in five.
Brown learned his lesson the hard waythrough experience. More than any other coach in the NBA, he knows getting the jump on Jackson and the Lakers is no sure ticket to the Promised Land.
After Sundays game, Brown said hell continue to put the pressure on the Pistons to put the pressure on the Lakers. Its all about motivation.
"I dont want them to be satisfied," said Brown. "We have to come to play the same way if we are to have any chance of winning the title. Were not just focusing on the next game but every possession. We all watch TV and we know how good the Lakers are, how well-coached they are. Our goal is to win a championship and we recognize theyve got a coach whos won nine championships, arguably the best big man in the league and a young kid whos just phenomenal. We played great. I dont know if we can defend better. We did an incredible job and thats what its going to take to win the championship."
Defense did it for Detroit. The Pistons know no other way to win. They held the Lakers to 75 points, 15 below their average, and limited the bench to only four points. Shaquille ONeal and Kobe Bryant combined for 59 points and took 60 percent of their teams field goal attempts. The distribution of labor was lopsided. Future Hall of Famers Karl Malone and Gary Payton chipped in only a combined seven points in an atrocious showing.
In the third period, Bryant tried to take over and fired six straight shots, connecting only twice. ONeal probably wondered if hed ever get the ball back. A dour Shaq commented in a post-game interview that he got "tired of waiting." ONeal took 11 less shots than Bryant but outscored the Michael Jordan want-to-play-alike, 34-25.
Jackson was clearly outcoached by Brown. The Zen Master was a step late in making adjustments and took unnecessary risks in playing unlikely combinations in crucial stages of the game. The Lakers couldnt stop the Pistons pick-and-fade play that produced open looks because the spacing left too much room for the rotating defender to cover.
Whats scary is the Pistons won convincingly despite Rip Hamilton scoring only 12 points, nearly 10 below his average. Of course, you can argue that Malone and Payton should be able to play a lot better in Game 2. They, more than anyone else on either squad, want the ring badly. Malone took an $18.5 Million paycut for the chance to win a title with the Lakers while Payton agreed to a $5.1 Million salary for the same reason.
Brown said the key to containing Bryant is to prevent him from scoring cheap shots in transition because easy baskets fuel his attack. Tayshaun Prince and Hamilton alternated on Bryant in Game 1 but it was Prince who was mostly on him. Brown said Prince has gotten tougher defensively after facing Desmond Mason, Richard Jefferson and Ron Artest in the playoffs.
Jackson said the Pistons bench stepped up. "Defensively, we were squared off," he noted. "We did a good job on Hamilton but the difference in the game was they hit shots under duress, under the gun from the 24-second shot clock. Their bench beat us bad and weve got to find a way to stop that." The Pistons relievers had a 19-4 edge.
Jackson blamed the Lakers for playing "lethargic" and said they came out flat in the third quarter where the Pistons dropped a 24-17 bomb.
But now that theyre three wins away from capturing their first title in 14 years, Im beginning to sound like Madam Auring. Not that Im gloating. Because the best-of-7series is far from over.
Sure, the Pistons upset the applecart by shocking the Los Angeles Lakers, 87-75, at the Staples Center here Sunday night (Monday morning, Manila). Lest Detroit fans forget, it takes four wins to clinch the series, not one.
Still, beating the Lakers at home was huge particularly as the Pistons now hold the homecourt advantage under the Finals format of 2-3-2.
Pistons coach Larry Brown isnt celebrating prematurely, thats for sure. He knows what its like to lose focus after going up 1-0 in the Finals. Three years ago, Brown coached the Philadelphia 76ers against Phil Jacksons Lakers and won the Finals opener on the road, too. The Lakers, however, bounced back with a vengeance and took the next four games to seal it in five.
Brown learned his lesson the hard waythrough experience. More than any other coach in the NBA, he knows getting the jump on Jackson and the Lakers is no sure ticket to the Promised Land.
After Sundays game, Brown said hell continue to put the pressure on the Pistons to put the pressure on the Lakers. Its all about motivation.
"I dont want them to be satisfied," said Brown. "We have to come to play the same way if we are to have any chance of winning the title. Were not just focusing on the next game but every possession. We all watch TV and we know how good the Lakers are, how well-coached they are. Our goal is to win a championship and we recognize theyve got a coach whos won nine championships, arguably the best big man in the league and a young kid whos just phenomenal. We played great. I dont know if we can defend better. We did an incredible job and thats what its going to take to win the championship."
Defense did it for Detroit. The Pistons know no other way to win. They held the Lakers to 75 points, 15 below their average, and limited the bench to only four points. Shaquille ONeal and Kobe Bryant combined for 59 points and took 60 percent of their teams field goal attempts. The distribution of labor was lopsided. Future Hall of Famers Karl Malone and Gary Payton chipped in only a combined seven points in an atrocious showing.
In the third period, Bryant tried to take over and fired six straight shots, connecting only twice. ONeal probably wondered if hed ever get the ball back. A dour Shaq commented in a post-game interview that he got "tired of waiting." ONeal took 11 less shots than Bryant but outscored the Michael Jordan want-to-play-alike, 34-25.
Jackson was clearly outcoached by Brown. The Zen Master was a step late in making adjustments and took unnecessary risks in playing unlikely combinations in crucial stages of the game. The Lakers couldnt stop the Pistons pick-and-fade play that produced open looks because the spacing left too much room for the rotating defender to cover.
Whats scary is the Pistons won convincingly despite Rip Hamilton scoring only 12 points, nearly 10 below his average. Of course, you can argue that Malone and Payton should be able to play a lot better in Game 2. They, more than anyone else on either squad, want the ring badly. Malone took an $18.5 Million paycut for the chance to win a title with the Lakers while Payton agreed to a $5.1 Million salary for the same reason.
Brown said the key to containing Bryant is to prevent him from scoring cheap shots in transition because easy baskets fuel his attack. Tayshaun Prince and Hamilton alternated on Bryant in Game 1 but it was Prince who was mostly on him. Brown said Prince has gotten tougher defensively after facing Desmond Mason, Richard Jefferson and Ron Artest in the playoffs.
Jackson said the Pistons bench stepped up. "Defensively, we were squared off," he noted. "We did a good job on Hamilton but the difference in the game was they hit shots under duress, under the gun from the 24-second shot clock. Their bench beat us bad and weve got to find a way to stop that." The Pistons relievers had a 19-4 edge.
Jackson blamed the Lakers for playing "lethargic" and said they came out flat in the third quarter where the Pistons dropped a 24-17 bomb.
BrandSpace Articles
<
>
- Latest
- Trending
Trending
Latest
Trending
Latest
Recommended