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Spurs (4) Pistons (3)

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The NEW NBA Champions are

  • The Detroit Pistons

    Votes: 4 33.3%
  • The San Antonio Spurs

    Votes: 8 66.7%

  • Total voters
    12
Re: Spurs (2) Pistons (0)

Ima pull a Sheed...


"The pistons will win Game 3 no matter what, that's what the NBA wants and thats what will happen"
 
Re: Spurs (2) Pistons (0)

If the Pistons get swept by the Spurs, you could argue the Sonics and Suns gave the Spurs much more trouble and matched up better.
 
Re: Spurs (2) Pistons (0)

Im really surprised that the Pistons arent putting up more of a fight. These finals are turning out to be very boring. I think the Pistons are gonna win the next game, but I could see the Spurs sweeping them.
 
Re: Spurs (2) Pistons (1)

Detroit 96, San Antonio 79
Boxscore

AUBURN HILLS, Mich. (AP) -- The defending champion Detroit Pistons got a burst of life, and so did the NBA Finals.

Playing with a furious energy that was nowhere to be found in the first two games, Ben Wallace and Richard Hamilton led the way as the Pistons won 96-79, thoroughly outplaying the San Antonio Spurs in the second half of Game 3 Tuesday night.

Television ratings have been down and interest has been low, but the Pistons did their part to try and change that, now that the best-of-seven series suddenly looks much more competitive and a little more compelling.

So where did the Pistons' energy come from?

``I don't know, you know? That's a mystery,'' Hamilton said. ``You know, tonight we really came out here and took care of business at home ... we defended, we helped each other out and we got a win.''

No longer is there a chance for a sweep, and never again will anyone question whether the Pistons can even play with the likes of Manu Ginobili, Tim Duncan and Co.



Ginobili got hurt in the game's first 30 seconds was reduced to a non-factor for the first time in the series, and Duncan could not match the energy or enthusiasm generated by Wallace, the Pistons' Defensive Player of the year. Wallace's dunk with 4:27 left gave Detroit its largest lead, 88-73, and the Pistons held on easily from there.

Now, the Pistons will look to even the series at 2-2 in Game 4 on Thursday night and to ensure that the series will be heading back to Texas.

Hamilton scored 24 points, including 10 in the third quarter when Detroit took the lead for good, and Chauncey Billups added 20 . But although the Pistons got most of their points from their backcourt tandem once again, they were anything but a two-man team.

Wallace had 15 points, 11 rebounds, five blocks and three steals, and Tayshaun Prince and Antonio McDyess each added 12 points.

Detroit became the first team to score 90 points against the Spurs in 13 NBA Finals game, putting together the type of poised, pumped-up performance they hadn't displayed since Game 7 of the Eastern Conference finals at Miami.

Detroit had lost by 15 and 21 points in the first two games of the series, but they ditched the downtrodden demeanor that contributed to their undoing in Games 1 and 2.

Everything about the Pistons was different, from their defensive intensity to their dedication in terms of getting more people involved on offense. Hamilton was more assertive in shaking off the pesky defense of Bruce Bowen, Prince was much more effective limiting Ginobili, and Wallace seemed especially motivated to put two very sub-par performances behind him.




Wallace blocked five shots in the first quarter alone, and he had half of Detroit's offensive rebounds in the first half when Detroit had a 24-12 edge in points in the paint and an 11-0 advantage in fast-break points.

He set the tone right from the start, stealing the opening inbounds pass after he was called for a jump ball violation, then racing downcourt for a dunk and a three-point play.

Wallace ended an eight-game streak of scoring in single digits and a five-game streak with fewer than 10 rebounds.

Ginobili went down just a few seconds later, bruising his left thigh in a collision with Prince just 21 seconds into the game. Though he wasn't sidelined for long, the star of Games 1 and 2 had just four points at halftime with four turnovers. he finished with seven points and six turnovers.

Tony Parker led the Spurs with 21 points.

San Antonio opened the second half with a 13-5 run ending in an alley-oop reverse slam by Wallace off a pass from Hamilton, a play that brought the fans out of their seats and left rapper Eminem waving a red, white and blue towel from his seat behind the Spurs' bench.

But the Spurs came right back with a 9-0 run to regain the lead 56-54 before the Pistons closed the quarter with a 16-9 run to take a five-point lead into the final quarter.

``There are no games to waste,'' Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said beforehand. ``We've created an opportunity for ourselves, and it would be great to take advantage of it.''

They didn't, and now it's a whole different series.

Notes

Wallace's five blocks in the first quarter tied Bob Lanier's club record for blocks in a quarter. ... Doctors used CPR to revive a man who had an apparent heart attack during the first half in the seats behind the north basket. The fan received a loud ovation as he was wheeled out on a stretcher holding his thumb up. ... Keyboardist and vocalist Stevie Wonder played the national anthem on a harmonica.

http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/recap;_ylc=X3oDMTBpYTg2ZTBwBF9TAzk1ODYxOTQ4BHNlYwN0bQ--?gid=2005061408
 
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Re: Spurs (2) Pistons (1)

Detroit had to bounce back at home, no doubt. But I think that they're going to lose their flare fast. SA is going to come back strong in Game 4. If SA steals one here, then this series is over.

I just hope this finals ends abruptly, with Detroit losing in Game 5, an embarrasing 15+ loss. That way, Larry Brown can be angry and vengeful, thus not taking the Cavs job. That's my #1 concern for this series.
 
Re: Spurs (2) Pistons (1)

lyXo said:
Detroit had to bounce back at home, no doubt. But I think that they're going to lose their flare fast. SA is going to come back strong in Game 4. If SA steals one here, then this series is over.

I just hope this finals ends abruptly, with Detroit losing in Game 5, an embarrasing 15+ loss. That way, Larry Brown can be angry and vengeful, thus not taking the Cavs job. That's my #1 concern for this series.

screw that, how about a last second game winning shot by nazr mohammed with 0.01 left on the clock in game 7

he did the same thing to nazr in PHILLY that he has done to all his young players.. THUS, "THEY HAD THIER RUN INS"

not only would a last second shot hurt, but it would most likely make LARRY too clinically depressed to go on anymore.... :thumbup:
 
Re: Spurs (2) Pistons (1)

how about sheed gets super pissed and socks him one because of the thought of leaving Detroit..
 
Re: Spurs (2) Pistons (1)

screw that, how about a last second game winning shot by nazr mohammed with 0.01 left on the clock in game 7

he did the same thing to nazr in PHILLY that he has done to all his young players.. THUS, "THEY HAD THIER RUN INS"

not only would a last second shot hurt, but it would most likely make LARRY too clinically depressed to go on anymore....

I'd rather have it in Game 5, so it's in Detroit. That way he can be disgraced in front of all the Detroit fans rather than have the opportunity to crawl into a hole.
 
Re: Spurs (2) Pistons (2)

AUBURN HILLS, Mich. – He had a towel hung over his head during what would have been crunch time, if only the Detroit Pistons hadn't spent all night crunching him.

Manu Ginobili, who owned these Pistons and owned these NBA Finals when his San Antonio Spurs surged to a 2-0 lead, was marginalized again Thursday. He was left as ineffective as his team suddenly looked.

And as bizarre as these Finals have been – four blowouts (the latest by Detroit 102-71) that somehow have led to a series squared at 2-2 – and as much of a 180 as everyone has done in Michigan, nothing has been as stunning as the suddenly stagnant scoring of Ginobili.

After hanging 53 points and driving the Spurs' offense with endless slashes into the lane in the first two games, Ginobili has shorted out in Detroit. He's scored just 19 points (12 on Thursday) on just 15 shots (nine on Thursday) leaving the Spurs without an offensive engine and the Pistons with all the momentum.

"It's like a snowball," Detroit's Chauncey Billups said.

A snowball with a chance in Texas if the Pistons can continue to manhandle Manu in Sunday's critical Game 5 at The Palace.

Detroit has made no major tactical adjustments on Ginobili. This simply is a matter of the Pistons going to work, getting nasty and clogging the lane any time he drives.

It's simple. It's effective. It's frustrating to deal with.

"It's been like that against Denver," said Ginobili, trying to sound like this was nothing new. "It's been like that against Seattle. So we know it's going to be like that."

But the Pistons aren't Denver. And they aren't Seattle.

On Thursday, Detroit coach Larry Brown fed Ginobili a steady diet of long arms (Chauncey Billups) and quick feet (Lindsey Hunter). Whenever the Argentinean guard got past the first line of defense, a fired up Wallace (Ben or Rasheed – it hardly mattered) waited.

"That's difficult," Billups said. "People think when they get by [the perimeter] it's going to be an uncontested layup. Like in the first two games, it was an uncontested layup because our energy wasn't there. But now we're back to ourselves again, and you've got to deal with our second line of defense."

This is what it is to play Detroit, which can strangle the life right out of you. The game did come easy to Ginobili in the first two games, with open lanes and swoop shots allowing him to get plastered all over the highlight shows.

But from the first roar of this wild home crowd, the Pistons' mentality has been completely different. The defensive pressure has led to fast-break points (22 more on Thursday) and easy baskets at the other end. A team that couldn't shoot straight now is explosive.

"I'm just not finding the basket," Ginobili said. "They are really collapsing in the lane, and when we move the ball it's just not there. I don't think it's so much about X's and O's. I think the determination they showed, the aggressiveness, it was the reason they won."

If there is anything that should rock the Spurs right now it is that realization. The Pistons are the league's most emotional team, one that's capable of making huge swings in quality of play and in tune with its home crowd, but also veteran enough to win on the road.

The Pistons got blazing early and never cooled down Thursday. Seven players scored in double figures. They had 23 assists and a Finals-record three turnovers. They made 13 steals. Hunter (17 points) looked like Michael Jordan.

Ben Wallace hit three jump shots.

"I really believe, in all honesty, that this is probably the best game a team that I've been involved with [has played] in such an important game," Brown said. "I don't know if we could have done any better."

The Motown beast now awoken won't hinge on adjustments or philosophies, but on guts and character.

For the Spurs, it will rest on Ginobili. Tim Duncan may be the star of this team, but his points come in the flow of the offense. Without Ginobili stirring the drink, there is no flow. There is no offense.

Ginobili claimed it will take better team play to break the Pistons' defense, and that certainly is true. But if Ginobili is ready for prime time, if he is to be one of the game's truly great players, if he is going to live up to the plaudits heaped on him early in the series, then he must make that happen, not wait for it.

That's what the great ones do. That's what this good one must.

Because the snowball is rolling.


Dan Wetzel is Yahoo! Sports' national columnist. Send him a question or comment for potential use in a future column or webcast.

http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news?slug=dw-manu061605
 
Re: Spurs (3) Pistons (2)

Great game tonight. Robert Horry (Big Shot Bobby) hits the trey at the end of OT to get the win and take the Spurs back home with a 3-2 lead.

Spurs just need one more game and I doubt that they will lose both games at home. They only lost 3 games total at home all season.

Final Score
Spurs 96
Pistons 95
 
Re: Spurs (3) Pistons (2)

Robert Horry or Steve Kerr has been on 10 of the last 11 NBA Championship teams. It looks like Horry could make it 11 of the last 12, after his clutch shooting tonight. That was unbelievable! Every time he shot another, I thought "Wow he's going to the well too often", then he went straight down the middle with a LH dunk and jammed his shoulder! Takin one for the team! Classic!

The streak started with Horry winning two titles with the Rockets in 1994 and 1995. Kerr then won three consecutive titles with the Bulls from 1996 to 1998. Kerr won another title, this time with the Spurs in 1999 before Horry won three consecutive crowns with the Lakers from 2000 to 2002. Kerr kept the streak alive when he won his fifth and final ring with the Spurs in 2003.

http://aol.nba.com/features/clickandroll_040517.html
 
Re: Spurs (3) Pistons (2)

Robert Horry just is so clutch. His shooting tonight just amazed me. And that dunk to the rim with his left was awsome.
 
Re: Spurs (3) Pistons (2)

Robert Horry is just amazing... He is just sooo good and sooo clutch.
 
Re: Spurs (3) Pistons (2)

i bet you anything that if horry was playing for the cavs and we needed him to hit a clutch shot at the end of a playoff game he would airball.

that left-handed dunk was sick though, i had no idea he had that much left in him.
 
Re: Spurs (3) Pistons (2)

Duncan choked in the 4th big time. I wonder if he'll continue having ankle/leg injuries or issues for the rest of his career. His actual lift on shots these days is average to poor, not like the Tim of 2003. I'm beginning to think the "best player" in the game is all too subjective now because it's not an objective, open and shut case these days.
 

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