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Maybe Ben Wallace now understands, 2 articles out of Detroit

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  • #16
    Re: Maybe Ben Wallace now understands, 2 articles out of Detroit

    The last two were complete garbage. If people honestly believe that we are the same team as last year, and we are worse because we don't have Ronnie, they should pay attention. We are already better than last year, and if we had Ronnie, they would really get it.

    I don't agree with the Pistons in 5 stuff, but it will likely be 6, possibly 7, depending on if we play like game1 or game7 of last series.
    Don't ask Marvin Harrison what he did during the bye week. "Batman never told where the Bat Cave is," he explained.

    Comment


    • #17
      Re: Maybe Ben Wallace now understands, 2 articles out of Detroit

      Pretty wild.... so nobody expects the Pacers to win, only one person expects it to go to 7, and most expect it to go to 5?

      We can do better than that.
      This space for rent.

      Comment


      • #18
        Re: Maybe Ben Wallace now understands, 2 articles out of Detroit

        Originally posted by Grey
        Rob Parker is wrong to label all of the Pacers "thugs" when only Artest and Jackson went into the stands with malicious intent.

        Just the same, it's wrong to say all of Pistons fans were guilty when fewer than 20 of them actually threw anything.
        Sorry bub but it was a hell of a lot more than 20 fans. Maybe 220.

        I agree that not all the fans are the problem. Actually the normal fan sitting in the lower bowl is not the problem. The problem happened when those people left and Detroit "security" didnt stop the thug criminal idiots from going down closer to the fans. The problem rests squarely with Detroit security and thats why they should be playing in front of any empty arena since they cant provide a safe place to play.

        I know you will try to claim they have fixed the problem but didnt Iverson just get hit with a coin?

        Comment


        • #19
          Re: Maybe Ben Wallace now understands, 2 articles out of Detroit

          Originally posted by Anthem
          Pretty wild.... so nobody expects the Pacers to win, only one person expects it to go to 7, and most expect it to go to 5?

          We can do better than that.
          These are Detroit mediots what do you expect them to say?

          Comment


          • #20
            Re: Maybe Ben Wallace now understands, 2 articles out of Detroit

            Here's another one. I don't remember Carlisle implying that he was proud of his players actions in the brawl.

            http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7790491/

            Pacers face uphill fight without Artest
            Main man from Nov. 19 brawl missing from Pistons-Pacers

            COMMENTARY
            By Michael Rosenberg
            NBCSports.com contributor
            Updated: 10:49 a.m. ET May 9, 2005

            It's hard to believe, but just a few months ago, the Pistons and Pacers were the best thing going in the NBA.

            They had credibility: The Pistons were defending champs, the Pacers were coming off a 61-win season. They had an intriguing rivalry, with coaches who had each been on the other side.

            And they played the game, to quote Pistons coach Larry Brown, "the right way." In the wake of the Shaq-Kobe Divorce from Hell, the Pistons and Pacers were welcome old-school diversions.

            Then came the events in Auburn Hills, Mich. on Nov. 19. It was the one of the ugliest nights in American sports history. And the Pistons and the Pacers got rapped as the worst creatures in sports.

            "In the wake of Nov. 19 and all those excessive, repeated replays of all the ridiculous things that went on there that night, our guys got labeled as bad people and guys with low character," Pacers coach Rick Carlisle told the Indianapolis Star. "As I sit here today, I can tell you that I've never been any prouder to be around a group of guys, gentlemen, class people and high-character people, from Jermaine to Stephen Jackson, to (Jamaal) Tinsley to Reggie Miller, right on down."

            Like O'Neal and Jackson, Carlisle did not acquit himself well that night — he said he was "proud" of his players for how they handled the situation. Perhaps he was proud of how well they fought.

            But since then, well, the Pacers have been one of the most amazing stories in the NBA. They were 7-2 when they left the Palace that rainy November night. Without Ron Artest, O'Neal and Jackson, they still treaded water for a while, thanks largely to Carlisle's coaching. In early February, they were 20-24. Then they got hot, finished 44-38 and made the playoffs.

            The Pistons also had a brawl-induced hangover. On Christmas morning, they were 12-12. That afternoon, they won a much-hyped rematch with the Pacers in Indiana.

            And they are 46-17 since then, including a five-game first-round triumph over Philadelphia.

            "We've put that behind us," Pistons forward Antonio McDyess said of the brawl. "I don't know if they have or not."

            That screaming you hear is coming from Indianapolis. And it goes something like this:

            Hey, Antonio, how the hell can we put it behind us? We lost our best all-around player!

            That, of course, is the problem with this series. We can say it should be all about basketball. But once the players answer all the initial questions, and every angle of film has been replayed in super-slo-mo the requisite 370 times, and every pundit is done talking about the effect of the brawl on the situation in North Korea … well, once all that happens, Ron Artest will still be missing from the Pacers' lineup.

            And without Artest, the Pacers are looking at an uphill battle.

            How uphill? Like, straight up a cliff.

            To add to their misery, the Pacers are a mobile sports-injury exhibit. Over here, we have the Hamstring Section, starring Jamaal Tinsley. And that's the Shoulder Exhibition, featuring Jermaine O'Neal. And over there, that's the Knee Display, with Stephen Jackson.

            And on your way out, please step by the Varicose Veins Model, Reggie Miller.

            OK, we're kidding about that last one. Miller has played better than any 39-year-old shooting guard should. But the point is that the Pacers seem like a beaten team, even before tipoff of Game 1 Monday night.

            At least they have made peace with their life after the brawl.

            When Miller was asked about the brawl, he told the Star, "It's over for us."

            How do these teams feel about renewing their rivalry? Pretty good, actually. The Pacers have been clear that they welcome the challenge. And in the post-game locker room after the Pistons shoved the 76ers out of the playoffs, the sentiment was almost unanimous.

            The Pistons would be happy to play anybody. But they'd be happier to face their rivals. McDyess was the only dissenter.

            "I said I would rather play Boston," McDyess said, "but they said they would rather play Indiana because it's so much fun. They look up to the challenge. That's what gets us up."

            The tension between the teams has always been limited to fan-fan, or player-fan, or player-opposing coach (Carlisle rubbed some Pistons the wrong way.) But the only player-player tension was between Artest and Ben Wallace, and with Artest suspended of the series, that won't be an issue.

            O'Neal and Rasheed Wallace are buds. Chauncey Billups, the vocal leader of the Pistons, is friends with most of the Indiana team.

            "I don't think there is bad blood with nobody," Billups said.

            The only way to really move past the brawl is to play the series.

            You have to get it on before you can get it over with. It's time for Pacers-Pistons, the workingman's playoff series. Basketball so intimate, the teams can diagram each other's plays.

            Not that they'd want to.

            "Kind of boring," McDyess said of Indiana's style. "Kind of puts you to sleep. They slow down every play. Indiana kind of lulls you to sleep and gets wins."

            Sorry. Not this week. If there's one thing this series won't do, it's put people to sleep.

            Michael Rosenberg is a columnist for the Detroit Free Press. An archive of his columns can be found at http://www.freep.com/index/michaelrosenberg.htm

            Comment


            • #21
              Re: Maybe Ben Wallace now understands, 2 articles out of Detroit

              Originally posted by dannyboy
              Here's another one. I don't remember Carlisle implying that he was proud of his players actions in the brawl.

              http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7790491/

              Pacers face uphill fight without Artest
              Main man from Nov. 19 brawl missing from Pistons-Pacers

              COMMENTARY
              By Michael Rosenberg
              NBCSports.com contributor
              Updated: 10:49 a.m. ET May 9, 2005

              It's hard to believe, but just a few months ago, the Pistons and Pacers were the best thing going in the NBA.

              They had credibility: The Pistons were defending champs, the Pacers were coming off a 61-win season. They had an intriguing rivalry, with coaches who had each been on the other side.

              And they played the game, to quote Pistons coach Larry Brown, "the right way." In the wake of the Shaq-Kobe Divorce from Hell, the Pistons and Pacers were welcome old-school diversions.

              Then came the events in Auburn Hills, Mich. on Nov. 19. It was the one of the ugliest nights in American sports history. And the Pistons and the Pacers got rapped as the worst creatures in sports.

              "In the wake of Nov. 19 and all those excessive, repeated replays of all the ridiculous things that went on there that night, our guys got labeled as bad people and guys with low character," Pacers coach Rick Carlisle told the Indianapolis Star. "As I sit here today, I can tell you that I've never been any prouder to be around a group of guys, gentlemen, class people and high-character people, from Jermaine to Stephen Jackson, to (Jamaal) Tinsley to Reggie Miller, right on down."

              Like O'Neal and Jackson, Carlisle did not acquit himself well that night — he said he was "proud" of his players for how they handled the situation. Perhaps he was proud of how well they fought.

              But since then, well, the Pacers have been one of the most amazing stories in the NBA. They were 7-2 when they left the Palace that rainy November night. Without Ron Artest, O'Neal and Jackson, they still treaded water for a while, thanks largely to Carlisle's coaching. In early February, they were 20-24. Then they got hot, finished 44-38 and made the playoffs.

              The Pistons also had a brawl-induced hangover. On Christmas morning, they were 12-12. That afternoon, they won a much-hyped rematch with the Pacers in Indiana.

              And they are 46-17 since then, including a five-game first-round triumph over Philadelphia.

              "We've put that behind us," Pistons forward Antonio McDyess said of the brawl. "I don't know if they have or not."

              That screaming you hear is coming from Indianapolis. And it goes something like this:

              Hey, Antonio, how the hell can we put it behind us? We lost our best all-around player!

              That, of course, is the problem with this series. We can say it should be all about basketball. But once the players answer all the initial questions, and every angle of film has been replayed in super-slo-mo the requisite 370 times, and every pundit is done talking about the effect of the brawl on the situation in North Korea … well, once all that happens, Ron Artest will still be missing from the Pacers' lineup.

              And without Artest, the Pacers are looking at an uphill battle.

              How uphill? Like, straight up a cliff.

              To add to their misery, the Pacers are a mobile sports-injury exhibit. Over here, we have the Hamstring Section, starring Jamaal Tinsley. And that's the Shoulder Exhibition, featuring Jermaine O'Neal. And over there, that's the Knee Display, with Stephen Jackson.

              And on your way out, please step by the Varicose Veins Model, Reggie Miller.

              OK, we're kidding about that last one. Miller has played better than any 39-year-old shooting guard should. But the point is that the Pacers seem like a beaten team, even before tipoff of Game 1 Monday night.

              At least they have made peace with their life after the brawl.

              When Miller was asked about the brawl, he told the Star, "It's over for us."

              How do these teams feel about renewing their rivalry? Pretty good, actually. The Pacers have been clear that they welcome the challenge. And in the post-game locker room after the Pistons shoved the 76ers out of the playoffs, the sentiment was almost unanimous.

              The Pistons would be happy to play anybody. But they'd be happier to face their rivals. McDyess was the only dissenter.

              "I said I would rather play Boston," McDyess said, "but they said they would rather play Indiana because it's so much fun. They look up to the challenge. That's what gets us up."

              The tension between the teams has always been limited to fan-fan, or player-fan, or player-opposing coach (Carlisle rubbed some Pistons the wrong way.) But the only player-player tension was between Artest and Ben Wallace, and with Artest suspended of the series, that won't be an issue.

              O'Neal and Rasheed Wallace are buds. Chauncey Billups, the vocal leader of the Pistons, is friends with most of the Indiana team.

              "I don't think there is bad blood with nobody," Billups said.

              The only way to really move past the brawl is to play the series.

              You have to get it on before you can get it over with. It's time for Pacers-Pistons, the workingman's playoff series. Basketball so intimate, the teams can diagram each other's plays.

              Not that they'd want to.

              "Kind of boring," McDyess said of Indiana's style. "Kind of puts you to sleep. They slow down every play. Indiana kind of lulls you to sleep and gets wins."

              Sorry. Not this week. If there's one thing this series won't do, it's put people to sleep.

              Michael Rosenberg is a columnist for the Detroit Free Press. An archive of his columns can be found at http://www.freep.com/index/michaelrosenberg.htm
              Just another example of how these "reporters" don't actually know anything about the Pacers. They still have Jamaal listed with last year's injury. Stephen Jackson is nothing but a scrub to them. These people truly think the JO is our only player worth being on the same floor as them.
              House Name: Pacers

              House Sigil:



              House Words: "We Kneel To No King"

              Comment


              • #22
                Re: Maybe Ben Wallace now understands, 2 articles out of Detroit

                Thanks UB,
                As if I didn't like the Pistons before, now I really don't like them. You'd think they were undefeated and going for their 4th straight title reading some of those predictions.

                -Bball
                Nuntius was right for a while. I was wrong for a while. But ultimately I was right and Frank Vogel has been let go.

                ------

                "A player who makes a team great is more valuable than a great player. Losing yourself in the group, for the good of the group, that’s teamwork."

                -John Wooden

                Comment


                • #23
                  Re: Maybe Ben Wallace now understands, 2 articles out of Detroit

                  Ya know, these hacks have done something nobody else has been able to do, make me wish Artest was playing. Just so he could rub their all-knowing smugness in the dirt they write.


                  (Notice how they make winning in 6 even sound like a cakewalk)
                  Ever notice how friendly folks are at a shootin' range??.

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Re: Maybe Ben Wallace now understands, 2 articles out of Detroit

                    Originally posted by Harddrive7
                    HUH?? I mean I realize that this is just one man's opinion...But DAMN! Are we aging already?
                    Ummm......I thought that was an interesting quote too. Besides Reggie and Dale we have a very young team. Just because we don't play fast break ball all the time does not mean we are old. What a load of garbage.
                    Dallas Clark>Tony Gonzalez

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      Re: Maybe Ben Wallace now understands, 2 articles out of Detroit

                      Originally posted by shags
                      That 2nd article's one of the biggest piece of crap I've wasted my time reading. THIS is the type of thing the press needs to avoid writing. Calling the Pacers "thugs"? That's just stupid and wrong.
                      At least I was smart enough not to read it.

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        Re: Maybe Ben Wallace now understands, 2 articles out of Detroit

                        "Like O'Neal and Jackson, Carlisle did not acquit himself well that night — he said he was "proud" of his players for how they handled the situation. Perhaps he was proud of how well they fought."

                        What is he talking about??? Rick never said he was proud of their behavior during the brawl! He said he was proud of the way they have come together, have overcome so many trials, and have stood tall in the thick of the heat they took after 11/19. This reporter just ticks me off because he is putting "spin" on Carlisle just like Detroit did after they fired Rick to justify their actions. Sickening. I hate Detroit! Hope we find a way to upset them. Wish I knew which of our teams will show up...we are very inconsistent and anything could happen if we play well, or we could be crushed if we don't.

                        Comment


                        • #27
                          Re: Maybe Ben Wallace now understands, 2 articles out of Detroit

                          It's called taking something out of context. It seems to be happening a lot lately. I guess the media has decided that the acutal games aren't exciting enough so they have to go manufacture something to write about.

                          Comment


                          • #28
                            Re: Maybe Ben Wallace now understands, 2 articles out of Detroit

                            Carlisle did say something on that night to the effect of: "I don't think our guys did anything wrong, BUT I haven't looked at it on replay yet."
                            "It's just unfortunate that we've been penalized so much this year and nothing has happened to the Pistons, the Palace or the city of Detroit," he said. "It's almost like it's always our fault. The league knows it. They should be ashamed of themselves to let the security be as lax as it is around here."

                            ----------------- Reggie Miller

                            Comment


                            • #29
                              Re: Maybe Ben Wallace now understands, 2 articles out of Detroit

                              Originally posted by Ragnar
                              The part about all the looks on the peoples faces was total crap. Everyone was throwing things they were all guilty and Detroit should be playing in front of an empty arena.

                              I fully expect another incident this week in Detroit if we win a game there. And once again they will send the cameras to Indiana to see if it happens again idiots.

                              The only faces I remember are Ben Wallace's little Neice and Nephew scared to death that their morbidly obese Dad was punching Fred Jones in the back of his noggin.

                              My predicition for the series:

                              Pistons in 7
                              Home team wins 3 games
                              Avg. Score: 76-74
                              3 ejections
                              18 technical fouls
                              9 bomb threats

                              Items thrown:
                              $4.76 worth of loose coins
                              3 full cups of Bud Light
                              19 1/2 tubs of popcorn
                              8 cups of Diet Coke
                              9 cups of Regular Coke
                              "The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results."
                              - Benjamin Franklin

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                              • #30
                                Re: Maybe Ben Wallace now understands, 2 articles out of Detroit

                                Originally posted by Ragnar

                                I know you will try to claim they have fixed the problem but didnt Iverson just get hit with a coin?
                                How do you stop someone from doing that though? Take all their change at the entrance? I see no reason to think any crap will go down again this time.

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