Monday, June 4, 2007

The End of an Era?...













Not sure what is going to happen with my boys. It's been so much heartache this last series. Something IS going to happen and whatever it is will be a bitter pill to swallow. Someone I hold dear to my heart, someone whose jersey hangs in my closet, someone whose t-shirt has adorned my body countless times - will be gone. Who? No clue. But I do know that these Pistons will never be the same. Their heart beating as one will never be the same. Ben Wallace leaving was hard beyond mesaure but he left on his own accord. Whoever Joe D trades or does not resign will be un bearable. Rip is my favorite player in the NBA and he was before he was even a Piston. If he leaves, I'll be truly heartbroken. Anyways, all I can do now is sit and wait and hope that whatever happend won't hurt as much as I imagine and it will work out for the best.

It was a magnificent run and I hope we can pick up where we left off. I know we didn't make it to the finals and we truly should have, but making it the the conference finals 5 years in a row is amazing. I only hope we don't drop off next year. These Pistons changed my life and I'll be forever grateful to them singularly and as a unit.


Here's an article from the Detroit News that'll have to suffice until I find a better one.

See you at the Palace
-M

REW SHARP: Pistons' era over; it's OK
Demise reminiscent of Bad Boys' fall to Jordan, Bulls
June 4, 2007
BY DREW SHARP
FREE PRESS COLUMNIST
CLEVELAND -- The funereal tone was justified. Something died Saturday night, something precious. And tucked away in the solitude of the Pistons' training room, a lonely Antonio McDyess slumped atop a table with his head drooped.
Most of his teammates already were dressed and gone after the Pistons' Game 6 elimination in the Eastern Conference finals against Cleveland, but McDyess couldn't bring himself to face the truth. He was in mourning. You never want to say good-bye to something in which you invested every ounce of your sweat, but there comes a point when reality smacks you in the head and there's no alternative but to pay heed.
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McDyess' face, tear-dried with blood-dyed eyes, matched the current state of the Pistons.
"It's like I'm at the end of my career," McDyess said later. "It's tough, because (after Game 6), I finally accepted that it's just not going to happen for me. I'm not going to win a championship. I felt that this team was the one to get us there, but it seems like it's over for me now."
Chris Webber and Rip Hamilton traded tears in the shower, another premature playoff demise hitting the guy only here for five months as hard as the guy here for five full years.
"Hope requires strength," Webber said, regarding his future, "and I'm not sure I've got the strength to make that investment right now."
It's over. And there's nothing wrong with acknowledging the end. It proves that you didn't take the heights to which the Pistons soared the last five seasons for granted. You appreciate the commitment required.
But only when you concede the end can you pave the way for rebirth. It's the circle of basketball life, and the Pistons find themselves in a familiar position.
This fall was only shocking in its execution. Its timing shouldn't amaze. Five years usually is the shelf life of sustained NBA excellence. Players get tired of each other. They stop talking to each other. And worse, they stop listening to each other. A key factor in the Pistons' defensive breakdowns during LeBron James' one-man Palace assault in Game 5 was a lack of communication.
"That's not up to me," Chauncey Billups said when asked if this ouster should signal a reinvention. "I love the guys I play with. We love being around each other. We had some really great years, and if we keep it all together, we can have a few more great years. Nobody's too old. But it's really not up to me."
Close your eyes, press the rewind on your memory and you'll hear the same rationalizations from another Pistons point guard staring at the end of a championship run.
This was 1991. This was Michael Jordan fulfilling his destiny in decapitating the Bad Boys in a conference finals sweep, drawing a conclusion to that storied five-year Pistons era.
You're not panicking if you're the rest of the Eastern Conference this morning, but neither are you pandering to the quixotic illusion that this was some isolated episode.
Cleveland isn't Miami.
When the Heat bounced the Pistons in six games last year, there was no denial that it was the superior team. But the Heat's rise to the conference championship resembled a one-year aberration. Shaquille O'Neal was healthy and hearty for probably the last time in his career. He badly wanted that Kobe-free championship.
The Cavaliers, however, aren't going anywhere. They are now the destination of the graying veteran of proportioned skill looking for a supporting role in acquiring that elusive championship ring.
The Pistons aren't that stop anymore.
Forget the whispers about Grant Hill delaying retirement for a year and returning to Detroit as a reserve. Moves like that are for teams hoping to maintain an advantage over their closest pursuers. The Pistons today are playing catch-up, and that requires the integration of younger legs with an equally blossoming spirit.
"We blew it," McDyess said.
It is McDyess' option for whether he'll return next season. The Pistons want him back, but McDyess isn't fooling himself. He knows what he wants and knows what's demanded. But he witnessed firsthand the Eastern Conference's future become its present a year earlier than most projected. And LeBron James looks to be the type that is protective of his possessions.
It's never easy accepting the end, but it's the only way that you can map out the next beginning.

Sunday, May 20, 2007

Mr. Smooth...

MITCH ALBOM
Billups the coolest dude in Detroit
May 20, 2007
BY MITCH ALBOM
FREE PRESS COLUMNIST

He moves fast when he takes it slow, and he takes it slow even when racing downcourt. He can scare you with a smile on his face, show strength without flexing a muscle, be the shortest man on the floor yet the biggest player out there. He is respected even more than he is liked -- and he is liked as much as anybody in the league.
Hey, NBA. We know LeBron is coming to town, with his Eddie Murphy-like commercials and eight-figure shoe deals. But LeBron can stay in the biggest bed in the biggest suite in the fanciest hotel.
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Chauncey Billups is still the coolest man in Detroit.
It's not even close. New York has Jeter and L.A. has Kobe, but when you step into the Motor City, if you want one guy to ensure that you never pay for a drink or a meal, one guy to guarantee you are hailed, slapped on the back, and always, always listened to, it's the point guard from the Rocky Mountains with the smoothly shaved dome and the stylish clothes.
Cool Breeze.
"We might have to get him one of those fur coats and hats," Joe Dumars laughed when I suggested that, if this were the 1970s, Chauncey could be Super Fly -- or at least Walt (Clyde) Frazier. He is a leader, a guy you want to be like and a guy you want to like you. When he takes you under his wing, you're behind the velvet rope. He will throw an arm around your shoulder, then call you, "Boss." He'll be respectful as a cadet, but tough guys will step out of his way. This is a man who earned the nickname "Smooth" when he was in fifth grade. Fifth grade? Who's smooth in fifth grade?
"What was cool to you back then?" I asked Chauncey.
"New shoes," he said. "But they cost money. They used to have layaway plans, you know? So when a shoe first came out, my mom would be like 'I'm gonna put it on layaway.' By the time you got the shoe, it wasn't brand new anymore. It had been out a while, and people weren't impressed.
"That didn't sway me, though. I wore 'em proud."
Why was that?
" 'Cause I knew the way I carried myself was more important than any shoe," he said. "Besides, they were new to me."
Cool Breeze.
An A-list of buddies
Chauncey Ray Billups has a butler's name, a gymnast's body, an assassin's jump shot and a father's touch. When we spoke over the phone Saturday, he was on the sidelines of his daughter's soccer game in Rochester. He is not embarrassed by that. Billups fits in everywhere, like a Zelig of the NBA. He seems natural in a shopping mall, behind the wheel, sitting across from David Letterman or surrounded by All-Stars in Las Vegas.
People gravitate to Billups. They just want to be around him. He proudly says "I ain't got no enemies." But when you ask him to name his closest friends in the league, he exhales.
"Who, well, Tyronn Lue, Kevin Garnett, Al Harrington, we're tight, Baron Davis, oh -- Stephon -- Stephon Marbury, Jared Jeffries, Damon Jones, D-Jones is one of my closest buddies ..."
He keeps going, but we only have so much space. And of course, that's not even mentioning his fellow Pistons, whom he holds on an even higher level, and who only look up to him the way the way Buffy and Jody looked up to Mr. French.
"He's at the head of the table, and he determines how people eat," Kevin Garnett once told the media of Billups. And that's Kevin Garnett talking! Chauncey's teammates always have felt that way. Remember, he didn't enter the league with LeBron hype. He was the third pick of his draft class -- after starring at Colorado -- but the Boston Celtics gave up on him, and eventually, so did Toronto, Denver, Orlando and Minnesota. The funny thing is, at all those stops, Billups says, he played and acted the same way as he does now.
"My demeanor, how I am, it never swayed, man," he says. "A lot of guys in this league when they're not playing a lot of minutes they got a chip on their shoulder, they're mad at everybody. I've never been that way."
Perhaps that's why Dumars, as president of basketball operations, was so quick to snag Billups for the team he was building, a team devoted to effort, not ego. Billups was the perfect captain for that kind of ship, because nobody works harder, yet nobody can be more relied upon down the stretch. Remember, Billups didn't earn the nickname "Mr. Big Shot" for playing a shrinking violet. He can clank 10 jumpers in a row, but in the final seconds of the fourth quarter, his aim will go deadeye and the longest shot will swish through the net.
And in an era where free-throw shooting is a nail-biting experience, Billups is one of the rare players who allow you to exhale. In the clinching Game 6 against Chicago on Thursday night, he went to the stripe 14 times. He made all 14 -- including six in the final 68 seconds.
"Who else would you want with the ball at that point than Chauncey?" Dumars asked.
Think about it.
We'll wait ...
Always a nice guy
When Billups, 30, was growing up in Denver, there was a convenience store nearby called Junior's. Like any kid, he wanted to go there often, but "because it was a rough neighborhood" he wasn't supposed to go alone. No problem. He'd simply convince three or four cousins, and they'd follow him. And if cousins weren't around, he'd go to the park and pretty soon have a small posse by his side.
"For whatever reason, I've always been able to talk to anybody, any age, any race," he says. "No matter what background you got, I'm comfortable."
He developed this openness from two sources, he says: his mother and the older kids he emulated while playing basketball at the Skyland Rec Center in Denver. There, he dribbled the way they dribbled, shot the way they shot. But the thing he remembers most is when they talked to him. Maybe just a word, a nod, a "how you doing?"
"They made me feel so good, and they didn't even know it," he says. "It's why I do what I do, why I am like I am with people, because I know what it meant to me, just to take a little time -- and it's really no time at all -- just a 'how you doing? How's it all going?' If I can help a person out, be it a kid or a grown man, whatever, I'll do it."
Which is what makes him cool, because he's not too cool to do that. Billups perspires, but he doesn't sweat. He inspires excitement, yet he remains calm. You could send him to the Middle East, and he'd get both sides talking. You could drop him into a domestic dispute, and they'd all come out holding hands. He shoots straight. He straight shoots. When you ask him a question, he responds so matter-of-factly, you sometimes assume it's a cliche -- until you listen and realize you haven't heard it before.
Like the other night, after the Pistons eliminated Chicago and someone asked about the effect of blowing a 3-0 series lead and scrambling to win in six.
"I think a loss or two wasn't too bad for us," he said. "Things were coming too easy, we were just kinda running through the whole thing."
How often do you hear that? How often do you find a guy equally at home on the streets or in the mountains, at a nightclub or at a Children's Hospital charity event? How often will a guy admit that as a kid he idolized Michael Jackson, even had a knockoff copy of the jacket Michael wore in the "Beat It" video? ("I never wore no glove, though," Chauncey said, "but I mighta tried on one of those pairs of socks.")
How often does a man admit he started shaving his head when he was 22, because he was on the road a lot "and I don't like new people cutting my hair"? And now you can't imagine him looking any other way.
How often does a point guard who likes to shoot command the praise of coaches, players, GMs, media and fans alike -- and almost unanimously?
He is the engine under the hood. The man in the back room whispering in smoke. Bring on Cleveland and the Eastern Conference finals, with LeBron this and LeBron that. King James is clearly a superstar, but there's a difference between being a superstar and being a standard setter. And there could be a reason why James wears a 2 and a 3 and Chauncey wears a 1.
This may not be the flashiest team. This may not be the flashiest town. But the road to any Eastern Conference crown travels through Detroit, so you might as well get to know the sheriff. We call him Chauncey. He doesn't do layaway anymore.

Friday, May 11, 2007

Funny Quote...

I read this in the detroit free press...

Billups -- who landed on the third team this year after making the second team last year -- started 70 games and averaged 17 points and 7.2 assists during the regular season.

Billups, not one to get caught up in the glow of receiving honors, took the news in stride.
"Not that much importance to it," he said. "But it feels good. It definitely feels good to be honored like that."

Wallace was asked about the honor, knowing Billups was within earshot.

"What did he do? Third-team NBA? What did he do?
"Me, Webb, Slash (Jason Maxiell) and Nazr been saving Chauncey ... all year. All the blow-bys! We've been back there taking the fouls, making the blocks, and he's been getting all the credit.

"I'm sick of it. He owes me some dinners or trophies or something."

Billups listened and laughed, then said: "Why would you even ask him?"

Wallace finally admitted that Billups earned the honor.
"Sike," Wallace said. "No, it's a good honor, though."


-m