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Originally Posted by aurorakmw I'll take game 7 loss against the Spurs last season any day over this style of play on the Detroit Pistons. It's unseemly on our guys and beneath them, and even if we win this whole thing by some miracle, I still won't have enjoyed watching them, which is what it's all about for me. |
Nicely said.
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Originally Posted by aurorakmw Whether a "defense first" team can still play and win titles in the new NBA is a "whole nother question."  But even if the phrase "Defense Wins Championships" is dead, I would not mind going down with the Pistons Fanship |
Interesting. So if Flip stays around (any possibility he steps down this summer?) you think Dumars & Hammond should continue to surround him with defensive, gritty players? IOW, you'd rather see "Piston-type" players continue to flounder in Flip's system, as opposed to seeing less conventional players for a Piston team *cough* flashy/offensive *cough* possibly win it all?
Very interesting. This might deserve its own thread. Something like, "What should the Pistons look like in the New NBA?"
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Originally Posted by SKluck Why is everyone blaming Flip for having a perimeter-based offensive style? Last year we were better in the post, but only because LB gave a lot of attention to Ben. We have no players that are good in the post (Sheed don't count). Is it Flip's fault we have no post presence? Come on. Give him a good big man, he'd make him work. |
I don't think you need a "good big man" a la Shaq or Duncan, in order to develop a solid inside game. There are other ways to create inside scoring.
For instance, the current Piston offense doesn't have the guards driving and dishing. Watch when Miami runs JWill into the paint. Either you stop him and he dishes to Shaq, or he scores. I watch other teams do this all the time - I watch college teams do this ALL THE TIME - so why can't we do stuff like this? This would cut Miami/formerly Cleveland's defense in half. But no. Instead, Chauncey makes his first pass from the perimeter, leaving the onus on someone else to move it inside, which is a problem because, often times,
they can't move it inside. So they settle for a jumper.
But that's not all. LB always had at least two guys going for tip-ins, which also accounts for inside scoring. I just don't see that happening in Flip's system.