While there undeniably will be talk of the Pistons' six straight conference finals appearances, the Detroit Pistons as we know them and will remember them essentially boil down to four-and-a-half years of tragedy.
Sports, like ancient theater, toes the line of comedy and tragedy and eventually wavers off the crack toward one side or the other. There is no comeragedy. Oedipus gets his eye stabbed out (and takes a stab at his mother). Tragedy. Nick Bottom is turned into a donkey in a forest. Comedy. Medea slaughters her children like it's a pig pen. Tragedy.
Ultimately, the modern Detroit Pistons -- which consist of Rasheed Wallace, Tayshaun Prince, Rip Hamilton and Chauncey Billups -- will be seen as the court's version of ancient tragedy. This core group was believed to have shown so much potential in the few months after Rasheed Wallace's acquistion. They put on the greatest defensive exhibition in NBA history, holding five consecutive teams to below 70 points and creating a record so secure it's harbored in the Palm's underground vault, located right next to Wilt's 50 points a game and Oscar's triple-double season average. The exposition.
They upset what was supposed to be the greatest amalgation of talent since the 1980s in the Finals by defeating Kobe, Shaq, Karl and Gary, men whose singular monikers speak louder than surnames. They were the ultimate team, destined for multiple championships because they didn't need one player to win. They had each other. The rising action.
The 2004 Detroit Pistons were supposed to be the years away from the climax, which would have consisted of multiple championships for "the ultimate team." We knew there was supposed to be a bright future in store for the congregation of players, coaches, and newly revitalized Pistons fans. We didn't know that we had already seen the denouement.
Any other team would hoist six conference finals appearances and trumpet it far above their head, but the Pistons' ceiling never rose when the showings stacked up. Finally, when the number reached six this year and bowed out for the fourth time, nearly all will come tumbling down.
Changes will be made. Players will be traded, coaches will be realigned, veterans will retire, youngsters will take on larger roles and aging athletes will begin their ride into the NBA sunset -- also known as contracts with the Milwaukee Bucks and Memphis Grizzles. Like a colony of ants near an aardvark, nobody is safe. Chauncey Billups and his deteorating body could be shipped out. Rasheed Wallace's attitude could be gone -- and don't forget his effervescent game. Tayshaun Prince's arms could be shown the door (he already left his offensive game in the Orlando series, so there's no use in kicking it to the curb now). Antonio McDyess could have played his final game as a Piston, or a professional, if he can't emotionally invest himself in another championship run. All are expendable in Auburn Hills, with the possible exceptions of Rip Hamilton, whose jumper is worth each million of his contract, super rookie Rodney Stuckey, and Jason "Pogo Stick" Maxiell (tell your friends about that nickname -- it's a keeper).
Yes, change is coming on Five Championship Drive, and it's all because the road to the Palace isn't being renamed with a six. The team that showed more promise than Mark Prior's right arm four years ago likely will be hacked away by architect Joe Dumars, a great competitor who knows when to call it quits. Throughout all the changes in Detroit during the past four years -- the coaches, bench players and contracts -- the greatest switch came when the Pistons realized they had one. Yet too often, the switch short circuited and pride came before the fall.
This year was different though. This year, there were no excuses. The coaching staff was stacked, the bench was replenished, starters' minutes were down, and health was basically a non-issue. Players openly talked about no excuses, no reasons for failure, and they showed it. Most defensive plays were executed with heart. Hustle was palpable through the t.v. set. Fists were pumping, feet were moving, and bodies were flying. For about 15 straight games in the postseason, the switch was on.
But somebody forgot to pay the electric bill.
And so we're left with a team who has reached the summit, climbed back down, and realized how hard it was to make it to the top in the first place. Bodies are older, egos are inflated, bridges are broken (How many heart to hearts do you think Rasheed and Flip have had this year?) and traditions have been worn. In six years, the Pistons lived by the idea that if it ain't broke, don't fix it. But now, it's time for the contractor to break out the tools. Something needs fixing, and that means the end of an era -- one that produced a championship but left us wishing for so much more. An era in which opportunities were blown and titles probably were inexcusably lost. They reached the top, but could never return. And never will.
What a tragedy.
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12 years ago
