作者kolay (土耳其的天空)
看板Pistons
標題[外電] Hollinger's Team Forecast: Detroit Pistons
時間Thu Oct 4 21:51:05 2007
http://insider.espn.go.com/nba/trainingcamp07/insider/
columns/story?columnist=hollinger_john&page=PistonsPreview0708
Detroit Pistons At A Glance
LAST SEASON
W-L: 53-29 (Pythagorean W-L: 55-27)
Offensive Efficiency: 106.2 (6th)
Defensive Efficiency: 101.1 (6th)
Pace Factor: 89.6 (30th)
Highest PER: Chauncey Billups (21.38)
2007-08 SEASON
Training Camp: Pistons Practice Facility
Projected W-L: See "Outlook" section
Highest PER (proj.): C. Billups (19.98)
Schedule | Roster | Camp Index
GO TO: 2006-07 Recap Offseason Moves Biggest Strength/Weakness
Outlook
2006-07 Recap
Tell me if this starts sounding familiar: After breezing through the Eastern
Conference regular season, winning 27 road games, earning the top overall
seed and being heavily favored to make the Finals, Detroit's offense imploded
around the first of May. The Pistons stumbled to lose the conference finals
in six games as their low-mistake offense mysteriously became bogged down in
turnovers, and observers were left to question coach Flip Saunders' repeated
misfortunes in the postseason.
Anyone getting a sense of déjà vu yet?
I suppose the remarkable similarity between Detroit's past two seasons
shouldn't surprise us, as they've been the most consistent team of the past
half-decade in nearly every respect. This time around they shuffled the deck
a little, with the departure of Ben Wallace creating a shifting of seats in
the frontcourt, but the end result looked remarkably similar.
Slowest Pace: 2006-07
TEAM W-L PACE FACTOR
Detroit 53-29 89.6
Portland 32-50 91.0
Dallas 67-15 91.9
San Antonio 58-24 92.0
Miami 44-38 92.1
League average 41-41 94.3
Once again, Detroit was the league's biggest plodder, and this time by a wide
margin. The Pistons not only had the league's slowest pace, but did so by
more than a full possession per game. Most of this was a result of their
deliberate offensive approach, which involved taking care of the ball,
milking the shot clock and shooting jump shots, but Detroit also excelled in
transition defense.
The patient offense and the fairly rare forays to the rim contributed to the
most impressive aspect of the Pistons' season, a remarkably low turnover
rate. Detroit had miscues on only 13.5 percent of its possessions, easily the
NBA's best mark; relative to the league average this fact alone saved them
nearly three points a game.
That approach also had some negatives, however. The Pistons were below the
league average in free-throw attempts, even though guard Chauncey Billlups
was a one-man foul magnet. Oddly enough, they were below average in 3-point
attempts too; usually teams that are low in high are high in the other.
Richard Hamilton and Tayshaun Prince were big reasons why: They attempted
very few 3s for wing players who shoot reasonably well, usually preferring to
step in and fire from 17.
Fewest Possessions Ending in TOs: 2006-07
TEAM PCT. of POSS. W/TO
Detroit 13.5
Washington 14.1
Toronto 14.2
Phoenix 14.7
Sacramento 14.9
League average 16.4
But between the lack of turnovers and a solid offensive rebound rate (28.3
percent, good for 11th in the league), the Pistons accomplished a rare feat.
They were well above the league norm in offensive efficiency, finishing sixth
overall, even though their true shooting percentage was below the league
average. In other words, the Pistons had a good offense even though they
weren't good shooters, because they gained so many more shots than their
opponents by avoiding turnovers and grabbing rebounds.
Detroit ranked sixth in defensive efficiency too, as Wallace's departure led
to a rather unexpected outcome: The Pistons leading the league in blocked
shots. Detroit sent back 7.45 percent of opponent deliveries, and it was a
true team effort. Rasheed Wallace was the only Detroit player to send back
more than one a game, but Jason Maxiell, Nazr Mohammed and Dale Davis all
rejected better than two shots per 40 minutes off the bench.
The Pistons retained most of their other tendencies, too. They cut off the
3-point line, ranking fourth in opponent 3-point attempts per field goal
attempt, and they were a low-gamble team that had the league's fourth-lowest
rate of steals.
Where losing Wallace hurt wasn't in blocks or shooting percentage, but in two
other areas -- fouls and rebounds. Wallace was amazing in part for his
ability to defend so well without ever fouling; using Mohammed and Chris
Webber in his place produced considerably more hacking. Detroit still beat
the league average in opponent free-throw attempts per field goal attempt,
but a year earlier they were phenomenal.
The damage might have been worse on the glass. Detroit grabbed only 70.9
percent of opponent misses, the sixth-worst rate in the league, as nobody was
capable of picking up the slack for Wallace's absence.
One other Pistons trend continued post-Wallace: their freakish run of
amazingly good health. While Detroit wasn't as insanely injury-proof as it
was a year earlier, every key Piston played at least 70 games, and Tayshaun
Prince, Antonio McDyess and Carlos Delfino went the full 82.
However, they were much better able to handle any injury (or foul problems)
that came up. The emergence of Maxiell and the midseason pickup of Webber
made the frontcourt much deeper, something that's likely to become more
important as their five-man nucleus gets up in years.
Offseason Moves
Joe Dumars has done a remarkable job in Detroit, so why would this summer be
any different? After being stung by Wallace's departure a year ago, he made
sure Detroit kept its star in Billups, while making moves to start putting
the next generation of Pistons in place.
Billups
‧ Re-signed Chauncey Billups
Dumars wasn't getting burned again, and he read the market correctly. With
few teams having cap space and those that did being in rebuilding mode,
Detroit had a huge advantage in the bidding and leveraged it to keep Billups
with a very reasonable five-year, $60 million deal. The best part of the deal
is that the last year isn't guaranteed, which will give Dumars a huge trading
chip in the summer of 2011 if Billups' play begins to decline.
Additionally, despite Billups' age (31) the risk here isn't too large. Big
point guards who can shoot well tend to age very well, so it's reasonable to
expect Billups to remain competent until he's 34, at which point the deal is
no longer guaranteed.
Johnson
‧ Re-signed Amir Johnson, let Dale Davis go
Two years from now this deal might seem like a screaming bargain. Detroit
signed Johnson for $11 million over three years, paying him based mostly on
potential but also on the crazy D-League numbers he put up last season. The
6-11 forward will be a major part of the frontcourt rotation this year, and
athletically a massive upgrade on Davis and Chris Webber.
The Pistons let Webber go as well, but as training camp begins, his return
remains a strong possibility.
‧ Extended Antonio McDyess
This move was a much bigger risk than the Billups deal, but McDyess played so
ridiculously well in the second half of last season that I'm not sure Dumars
had a choice.
The alternative was letting McDyess opt out of his deal and play the open
market, and that might have proven much more costly than the two-year, $14
million extension Detroit gave him. While they have to be skittish about
paying him until he's 35, especially given his history of knee problems, he's
been healthy and productive since coming to Detroit, and plenty of lesser big
men are making more dough than this.
Stuckey
‧ Drafted Rodney Stuckey, Arron Afflalo, and Sammy Mejia
The draft choice from the Darko Milicic trade yielded Stuckey, who couldn't
possibly be a better fit. Detroit has needed a combo guard who could relieve
Billups and Richard Hamilton ever since Mike James left; now they have one.
The stats and scouts both agree that he's a keeper. I'm not nearly as
impressed with Afflalo, a grinder with a decent jumper who will struggle to
create shots. Mejia, a second-rounder, might not make the team.
Hayes
‧ Traded Carlos Delfino for two 2nd-round picks; signed Jarvis Hayes
Dumars has a policy of trading anyone who wants out, and after three years
Delfino was ready to go. No big loss, especially if Hayes can stay healthy.
He'll try to be the next medical miracle for Detroit, as he couldn't stay in
the lineup for more than a week at a time in Washington but I'm sure will
crank out 82-game seasons now that he's got the magical elixir of a Pistons
jersey protecting him.
‧ Signed Cheick Samb
This was a bit of a surprise. A second-round pick by Detroit two years ago,
he's played in Europe ever since. He's 7-1, 195 pounds, which seems
impossible but apparently isn't; needless to say, he can't outmuscle a paper
clip and looks to be at least a year away from contributing.
Biggest Strength: Frontcourt Depth
After years of ragging on the Pistons' bench, I now must report that they
have as much in the tank as anyone in basketball, especially in the
frontcourt. The starting combo of Wallace and McDyess is solid, but the
Pistons' real strength is off the bench. Jason Maxiell is an active, tough
forward who makes plays without needing the ball, while Nazr Mohammed, though
strangely unloved by his employers, remains a solid performer.
But the real prize here is Johnson, a 21-year-old who turned pro out of high
school and barely has been seen since. The Pistons swear he's a killer and
his numbers from the D-League are spectacular; at worst, he should be a stud
shot-blocker right out of the chute.
So stacked was Detroit that letting Dale Davis and perhaps Chris Webber leave
wasn't even a difficult decision. If Cheick Samb acclimates quickly and
discovers the joys of steak, he could add to the mix, too.
Biggest Weakness: That Attitude
Has any team become more insufferable than this one? The underdog mentality
that the Pistons rode to the 2005 championship has been perverted into a
weird sense of entitlement and arrogance, crystallized by their utter refusal
to give Cleveland any credit during the conference finals last year.
Similarly, their us-against-the-world esprit de corps has been modified to
place Flip Saunders and every active referee in the "world" category,
resulting in the meltdowns that proved so costly against Cleveland.
Rasheed Wallace is the leading protagonist, of course. His bickering with
Saunders helped create the defensive confusion that allowed LeBron James to
thrash Detroit's defense at the end of Game 5, while his inexcusable
unraveling in the fourth quarter of Game 6 provided the coda to Detroit's
season.
But the more disturbing part is the extent to which the other Pistons have
taken on Wallace's attitude. Rather than a bunch of good guys helping keep
their excitable teammate under control, as we saw in 2004, today it's more
the case of Wallace's histrionics setting the example for the others.
For instance, the Pistons led the league in technical fouls by a wide margin
last season. And if you think that's just because of Wallace, think again:
Even if you take out Wallace's league-leading total they still ranked third.
In other words, the whole team bitches at the refs now, not just 'Sheed.
Hamilton is so wound up in Detroit's victimhood that he finished right behind
Wallace with 15 T's last season, while McDyess and Billups have become nearly
as bad. Only Tayshaun Prince has remained immune thus far, but I'm sure
'Sheed is figuring out how to get through to him.
Outlook
In the wake of the playoff defeat it's easy to forget that Detroit won 53
games, and had the scoring margin of a 55-win team. Let's not write their
epitaph quite yet. While Detroit's struggles in May have been baffling, there
are few teams I'd rather have between November and April.
The better news is that even if the Pistons' ridiculously good fortune on the
injury front ends, they are now in position to handle it. Stuckey looks like
the real deal and can play two positions, Johnson and Maxiell look like the
next generation in the frontcourt, and multiple role players (Hayes,
Mohammed, Flip Murray) are waiting in the wings.
In fact, if there's a concern about this team, it might be with the starting
five. McDyess is 33 and is extremely likely to see last year's stellar
numbers drop a bit; Wallace is the same age and might wreak havoc off the
court even if he does OK on it. On the perimeter, it's a similar story with
Billups (30) and Hamilton (29); only Prince (27) has any reasonable
expectation of being better this year than last.
The other part of the battle will be mental. Despite the incredibly good fit
between Detroit's different pieces, one wonders if this nucleus could use a
shake-up to rattle some of the complacency and arrogance out of them.
Obviously this is an area where Dumars should tread carefully, but if
early-season defeats are greeted with the same whining and excuses he might
be encouraged to act.
In the big picture, I like what the Pistons have done and where they're at,
and they have a decent shot at extending their streak of 50-win seasons to
seven. The only problem is that their competition in the Central Division is
starting to leave them behind. This isn't the
50-wins-books-an-automatic-conference-finals-trip East of old, and unless
Detroit's youngsters can pick up the slack extremely quickly the Pistons'
five-year streak of playing into June is likely to come to an end.
Prediction: 48-34, 3rd in Central, 5th in Eastern Conference
--
I knew I loved you before I met you
I think I dreamed you into life
I knew I loved you before I met you
I have been waiting all my life
--
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