Detroit Pistons blow third straight fourth quarter lead in loss to Chicago Bulls

Well, after three games, a theme has emerged.

The Pistons cannot hold a lead. Against New Jersey and Oklahoma City, the problems were at the defensive end. In Saturday’s 101-91 loss to Chicago, the problems were at both ends of the court as the Bulls out-scored the Pistons 34-9 in the fourth quarter and erased what was at one time a 21-point Pistons lead.

It was the third straight game the Pistons should’ve closed out, the third straight team the Pistons did enough right to look like a competent NBA team and the third straight game we watched with a helpless feeling, sensing what was coming as Chicago chipped and chipped away at that lead without any sign of a response from Detroit.

After three games, it’s safe to ask. Why does the team look so good at times, good enough to build leads against two sure playoff teams, yet can’t hold on?

They are in games because their bench, offensively at least, is going to be superior to virtually every team they play this season. Ben Gordon and Charlie Villanueva (and Will Bynum when he’s healthy) will come in and abuse virtually any second unit player on any other team at their respective positions. Against the Bulls, the Pistons bench topped 40 points for the third straight game. Gordon couldn’t miss in the first half, Villanueva hit a couple big threes. They’re both streaky and will have some off nights shooting, but it’s a safe bet that they’ll also keep the Pistons in a lot of games by simply out-scoring the opponent’s bench.

The starters, on the other hand, will struggle to score most nights. None are what I would call poor players, but it’s going to be rare that any of the five starters on the Pistons will be better offensive players than their positional counterparts. The starters play better defense as a unit, they turn it over less as a unit, but they will inevitably rarely outscore the opposing starters.

The simple answer is, “Why not flip Gordon or Villanueva to the starting lineup?”

Well, the Bulls game proved why that won’t work. Gordon and Villanueva were very good in the first half. Gordon was being guarded at times by Kyle Korver and C.J. Watson. Villanueva was matched up with Brian Scalabrine for a long stretch. Hard not to look good against those players. But then Chicago adjusted in the second half and shortened their bench. When Gordon and Villanueva came in in the third, Chicago left Taj Gibson and Joakim Noah in up front for a bit. They also left Derrick Rose in, meaning Gordon would have to guard him some when Rodney Stuckey went out of the game.

It wasn’t pretty. Gordon didn’t make a shot in the second half and had three turnovers during a key Chicago run. John Kuester went back to Rip Hamilton, who didn’t have a good game offensively, for most of the fourth, and despite some beat writers protesting on Twitter — “But Gordon has 21 points and Rip only has five!!!” — Kuester had to do it. Hamilton wasn’t shooting it well, but at least he wasn’t booting the ball all over the court when he tried to put it on the floor the way Gordon was. Gordon also struggled to get shots off when Keith Bogans or James Johnson guarded him in the second half.

Villanueva shot it well through three quarters, then when Gibson started guarding him in the fourth, Villanueva went 0-for-6 from the field in the quarter.

Austin Daye had another non-existent game as a starter, and I’ve written previously that I think Villanueva has out-played him and will eventually supplant him as a starter. Although I still feel that Villanueva is the better option at the four right now, putting him in the starting lineup, or putting Gordon in the starting lineup, would eliminate really the only advantage the Pistons have right now, their bench scoring.

The Chicago meltdown was by far the ugliest to watch, made worse by the fact that I had to watch the game on League Pass and listen to Stacy King and whoever Chicago’s other broadcaster is blather on and on about nonsense. The Pistons were once again competitive. But unlike the OKC and NJ games, which were back-and-forth all game long, the Pistons were firmly in control of this game and lost it. Good teams sometimes lose games like the ones the Pistons lost in their first two. But bad teams always lose games the way the Pistons lost against Chicago.

Monroe’s first minutes

Pat Caputo can rest easy: Greg Monroe has finally played in a regular season game. With the Pistons in control in the first half, Monroe played seven minutes, made his only shot and had three rebounds. Not bad. But he also had three fouls in seven minutes and turned it over once, setting an illegal screen. I’ve written it often, but rookie big men generally take longer to adjust to the NBA than other rookies. There’s much more contact in the post, players are stronger and it’s simply hard not to foul a lot. Monroe looked comfortable and hopefully he’ll build on the little bit of time he saw tonight.

McGrady’s first bucket

Through three games as a Piston, Tracy McGrady has looked a little reluctant to shoot. That’s never a sentence I thought I’d write about McGrady. He shot 1-for-3 and scored his first two points of his Pistons career and also had four rebounds and an assist. The bad? Three turnovers in 17 minutes. McGrady has a long ways to go (if he has anything left) to be a helpful player to the Pistons, but I do appreciate that he hasn’t tried to force things when he’s been on the court. He had one nice play where he drove past Korver and found Jason Maxiell for what would’ve been a dunk had Max not been fouled. Unfortunately, he also had one of his shots deflected by Korver (not sure it can be called a block … it was an awkward play and Korver kind of got his hand on a shot that appeared to slip out of McGrady’s hand a little bit), which is another sentence I never thought I’d write about McGrady.

Stuckey’s point guard progression

Rodney Stuckey has been the biggest positive for the Pistons through three games. Stuckey has 23 assists and only four turnovers, he’s making good decisions and he’s getting to the line a lot. Including his 11 free throws against the Bulls, Stuckey is averaging over seven attempts per game. He didn’t shoot it well in the second half against the Bulls — going just 1-for-6. I believe Stuckey should be a 47 percent or better shooter this season, if it’s going to be called a successful season for him, and he’s at 46 percent right now. With his improved decision-making, however, he’s been the most important player on the court for the Pistons, particularly with Bynum out, making Stuckey the only point guard-like player on the roster.

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News and notes from UK’s loss to Miss St

(H-L photo/Pablo Alcala)

(H-L photo/Pablo Alcala)

News and notes from UK’s 24-17 loss to Mississippi State:

  • Kentucky dropped to 1-5 in the SEC, its worst record after six conference games since starting 0-6 in the league in 2004.
  • On UK’s final play, a pass attempt which Mississippi State intercepted at the goal line, apparently wide out Chris Matthews didn’t get the call at the line to go to the end zone. Quarterback Mike Hartline, who was hurried a bit, threw long, and Matthews had cut off the pattern. It was supposed to be a jump ball. Instead, MSU db Jonathan Banks was the only one jumping at the goal-line, and got the pick.
  • In its six SEC games, Kentucky is -5 in turnover margin. The Cats have given the ball away 14 times, and taken it just nine times. The Cats were a -2 against State, giving it up four times, taking it twice.
  • Kentucky gained just 89 yards on 43 carries, the third straight game it had failed to rush for 100 yards.
  • It was also the third straight game without Derrick Locke.
  • Mississippi Sate’s 214 yards rushing was second most against UK this season, behind Auburn’s 311.
  • State averaged 5.49 yards per rush, the fifth team to average at least five yards a carry against Kentucky. Louisville averaged 5.94, WKU 5.67, Florida 5.33 and Auburn 5.98.
  • Randall Cobb had a career-high 12 catches for 171 yards and one touchdown.
  • It was Hartline’s first three-interception game since the Alabama game of last year. He also threw three that day against the Crimson Tide.
  • Hartline completed 23 of 41 passes for 258 yards, with two touchdowns and those three picks. That figures to a pass efficiency rating of 110.42, his lowest since posting a 104.17 at Florida.
  • Danny Trevathan had 16 tackles, his fifth straight game of double-digit tackles.
  • Craig McIntosh has made seven consecutive field goals.

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John Clay’s Sidelines

A not so happy birthday for Maradona

SOCCER/Diego Maradona is spending his 50th birthday on Saturday far from the two things that have dominated his life — soccer and being constantly in the public eye.

That leaves Argentina’s greatest player at a crossroads a few short months after a humiliating 4-0 defeat by Germany in the World Cup quarter-finals cost him the job as coach of his beloved Argentina.

Having cheated death more than once and defied doubters to get the job in November 2008, it would be unwise to write off his chances of returning to it one day.

Indeed, former Boca Juniors and Argentina team mate and friend Claudio Caniggia saw him recently and confirmed Maradona was still interested.

“He looked well,” Caniggia said in an interview with the sports daily Ole published on Thursday.

“Obviously, there’s pain. He still hopes for a chance, but he’s well,” said Caniggia, who pointed out that far more experienced coaches have been unable to steer Argentina beyond the last eight since 1990. “Although he doesn’t say so to me, I’m sure inside himself he thinks he deserves to carry on. I think he deserved to.”

The job is, in fact, still open with Maradona’s 1986 World Cup-winning team mate Sergio Batista enjoying a head start as the interim coach and the backing of Argentine Football Association president Julio Grondona.

An AFA selection committee set up specially to chose the coach to steer Argentina to the 2014 World Cup in Brazil is expected to deliver its verdict on Tuesday.

Whoever gets the job will have to prove his capacity when Argentina host the Copa America in July. Argentina lost the final to Brazil the last two times it was played in 2004 and 2007. It was also Argentina’s last trophy way back in 1993.

There is no indication that Maradona is on the list, but just as he was called on before to bail out the team when they were in crisis, as a player first ahead of the 1994 World Cup and then as coach two years ago, his supporters will push his case at the first real sign of failure.

Maradona is not short of supporters, a mark of the respect he still commands on the basis of a playing career that marked him out as one of the game’s true greats.

Some are in government and Maradona was at President Cristina Fernandez’s side on Thursday as the country mourned the sudden death at 60 of her husband, former head of state Nestor Kirchner.

October is a special month for Maradona. He was 10 days short of his 16th birthday when he turned out for Argentinos Juniors, a modest first division outfit, for the first time and he also made his final appearance for Boca Juniors just before his 37th birthday in 1997.

In between, he won league titles with Boca in 1981 and twice with Napoli in 1987 and 1990.

His crowning glory, though, was leading Argentina to World Cup victory in Mexico in 1986.

Maradona also flirted with disgrace and even death in a drugs fuelled later career in which he served two long suspensions for doping and a decade in retirement in which he battled to cure his habit.

Maradona had his critics but their voice was drowned by the idolatry of the crowds for the country’s most popular figure since Eva Peron… and like Evita, he delivered, brilliantly, memorably, controversially.

Not everyone has liked his lavish, celebrity lifestyle, his friends, many of them hangers-on, his over-the-top wedding to girl-next-door sweetheart Claudia Villafane and his drug addiction, but Argentines overlooked all of this because with Maradona, Argentina were always tipped to win.

The World Cup in South Africa did not turn out well for Maradona but with him Argentine fans will always dream of better things to come.

PHOTO: Former Argentina’s national soccer team coach Diego Maradona falls on the pitch during a charity match for Fernando Caceres in Buenos Aires October 16, 2010. REUTERS/Enrique Marcarian

Left field

B-more Blogman: Take it Easy

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Sorry Dude but I like the Eagles. The message is simple and it’s one I wish some fans would subscribe to.

The Bye could not have come at a better time.

When Blogman is not providing his slanted take on all things Sports he has to care for a beautiful wife and three kids. My son said it best today, “Hooray the Ravens have off for Halloween. That’s means they can go trick or treating.”

 The kid is Six so his priorities are right where they should be.

But I’m sure even if the Ravens aren’t grabbing as many Reese’s cups that they can hold in their gym bags they must be happy to be off this Sunday too. It’s been a strong start to the season regardless of what the masses say on talk radio. All these people must be dressing as Cam Cameron or Ozzie Newsome this All Hallow’s Eve because the questions continue to fly about what kind of the job is staff is doing and that they could do it better.

Child, please. (Excuse me for saying it)

The Baltimore Ravens are 5-2  and right in the mix with some other good teams in the AFC race with about half the seasons games still left on the docket. I guess I still get amazed at how people only want to bring up the negative even in a season where Baltimore is flying high and appears poised to make the playoffs. So if you are one of those people that just can’t help but point out all the flaws the Ravens have let me help you look to good.

Here are just a few treats to stash away in your goody bag.

1) Edward Earl Reed Jr. is back.

The purple and black ballhawk has returned to resume his role as the Freddy Kruger of the NFL giving nightmares to all opposing quarterbacks. Put simply the man is just a special player with a knack for the ball. The defense was 4-2 without Reed and have now won once with him. He appears fresh and he is going to give the Ravens the extra dimension they need for the second half of the year as they face the likes of Drew Brees, Matt Ryan, and Ben Roethlisberger.

2) The Colts May Not Make the Playoffs

Last season’s AFC representative looks to be in a dogfight just getting out of their own division this year with the Titans bullying their way to a 5-2 mark while the Colts are set to face the Texans (also 4-2) tomorrow. Of course when Houston faced off against Indy for the season opener this year everyone learned the name Arian Foster.

The Colts will always be a tough team as long as Peyton is under center but they’ve had a ton of injuries (most recently Dallas Clark) and they just may not have enough to get to the playoffs. Let’s hope so because the Colts have had the Ravens number for years. They never seem to match up well with them. But if all goes to plan they may not have to.

3) Home Sweet Home

The Ravens have Five Home Games left and so far they are 3-0 within the confines of M & T. After a tough early schedule and being able to grab Road wins at the Jets and Steelers it’s nice to know that they can settle in at home and get the support they need to push past the Saints marching in around December, The Steelers return in a Prime Time encounter, and the Bengals finish up the season right after the New Year. Still plenty of tests left but it’s better to do it in Charm City.

4) Joe Flacco has been fantastic since Week Two

Another nugget that has been flying under the radar is how well Joe Flacco has played since the Cincinnati debacle. Flacco has the second highest QB rating (105.0) since Week Two which is second best in the NFL. He’s completed 67% of his passes and thrown 9 touchdowns against 1 interception.

That’s not only promising, it’s downright scary.

Flacco is taking the strides that people expected now and while some choose to focus on Fabian Washington disappearing act I instead choose to marvel at Flacco’s ability to lead the offense to 37 points in a game.

And keep that haircut while you’re at it. We’ll need some more Jersey Joe magic in the second half.

So I hope that made the doubters feel at least a little better though maybe I’ll get someone out there who wants to rain of my off-week.

I’m not worried.

For now I’ll just grab a few refreshments, watch a horror movie and get some rest.

The second act should be just as entertaining as the first.


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Predictions: Packers vs. Jets

LaDainian TomlinsonSteffen: Okay, Green Bay Packers fans, enjoy these last few moments of euphoria. The Packers defeated Brett Favre and the Minnesota Vikings last week. They did it. Let that soak in a little bit more… …and now back to reality. The reality is the Packers are about to face one of the best teams in [...]




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Game Preview: Chicago Bulls will need more offense against what has been a high-scoring Detroit attack so far

Here we go, game thread number two for you guys. If you’re around and have some thoughts during tonight’s game, this space is yours.

Game Info: Detroit Pistons (0-2) at Chicago Bulls (0-1), 8 p.m. on Fox Sports Detroit

Probable starters: DET – Rodney Stuckey, Rip Hamilton, Tayshaun Prince, Austin Daye, Ben Wallace; CHI – Derrick Rose, Keith Bogans, Luol Deng, Taj Gibson, Joakim Noah

Three things to watch:

1. I’m not saying the Pistons have more talent by any stretch, but Chicago, like Oklahoma City, is another good team that Detroit can do some things against defensively. The Bulls have no perimeter shooting other than bench player Kyle Korver, and he played just 15 minutes in their opener. That means when he’s not in the game, the Pistons perimeter defenders can cheat into the lane and sag off of Rose, Bogans and Deng from outside to help either on Rose drives or to help when Gibson, an improving post-up player who will be a tough matchup for Detroit, has the ball in the post. The Bulls shot just 43 percent in their first game, including 14 percent from three-point range. Their defense has improved, but they could struggle to score until Carlos Boozer returns. Rose scored 28 in the team’s opener, but needed 31 shots to do it. The Pistons would definitely take a similar points-to-shots ratio tonight.

2. Rose’s defense is shaky and Stuckey is coming off of arguably his best game ever as a Piston. Rose gave up 28 points on 8-of-15 shooting to Russell Westbrook in the Bulls’ first game. Expect Stuckey to build on his good first two games.

3. The Pistons have a huge bench advantage. That’s nothing new — they do boast more firepower on their bench than most teams, albeit expensive firepower. But the Bulls’ key reserves in their opener were Korver, Ronnie Brewer, Brian Scalabrine and C.J. Watson. Not much to like in that group, other than Korver’s three-point stroke and Brewer’s defense. The Pistons’ bench has scored 46 and 47 points respectively in two games this season. If they get that kind of bench production again, they’ll win this game. Chicago just doesn’t have the offense to keep pace with that.

Pregame reading:

  • John Salley violates bro code with Scott Hastings on Deadspin
  • Fox News Latino talks to Charlie V about the influence of Hispanic hoopers.
  • The Big Lead has video of Rodney Stuckey’s sick crossover of Daequan Cook last night. I hope Daequan is OK after that.
  • Danny Bonheim gives some thoughts on last night’s loss at Need4Sheed
  • Brian Packey points out the Pistons had some poor possessions in the fourth before the final few minutes that cost them

Pregame reading if you want to be really annoyed:

I’ve had my issues with Monsieur Caputo in the past. (And I don’t think I’m the only one). There is plenty to criticize the Pistons about. To criticize John Kuester for not playing young guys based on Greg Monroe’s DNP-CDs is really dumb though.

“And Monroe hasn’t played at all this season. No excuse for it. The seventh overall pick in the draft? Brutal thought process.”

Pat, come on. He shot 40 percent in the preseason as a BIG MAN. He turned it over like twice a game. I want Monroe to play and succeed as much as anyone, but he’s just not good enough right now. I think he’ll get better practicing every day, watching the way that professional guys like Ben Wallace and Jason Maxiell play defense. If he’s getting 15 or so minutes a game by the end of the season, that’s a win to me. Also, did you not notice that young guys Austin Daye and Rodney Stuckey, who are viewed, whether we agree or not, as young franchise cornerstones, are both starting and playing quite a bit? That doesn’t qualify as “not playing young guys.” Kuester is playing young guys who have shown they are ready, and as much as I like Monroe and hope he’s really good, he hasn’t shown he’s ready just yet.

And I’m pretty sure Caputo referred to him as ‘Craig’ Monroe in the video.

On to the next one though. Terry Foster had this to say in his latest:

“The man that could’ve been a key piece for a Pistons franchise turnaround showed up at The Palace Friday night, and definitely looked like savior.

He was kind and respectful off the court, and a stone cold killer on it.”

Wow. Sounds great. Who is this mystery man?

Kevin Durant never had plans to come and play in Detroit, before he re-signed last summer with the Thunder, but is definitely the kind of player the Pistons need to earn wins in the standings, respect in the league, and enthusiasm among the fanbase.

To recap, the Pistons savior is a guy they never had a chance to draft, trade for or sign as a free agent? Perfect!

I can’t wait for the season to be a few weeks old so the guys who only write about the Pistons twice a year will finally be gone.

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Did Nani Cheat With His Controversial Goal Against Spurs? (Video)

On Saturday, Manchester United’s Nani scored a goal against Tottenham Hotspur which was extremely controversial and will be the topic of many conversations over the next few days. Looking at it again and again, the goal was a result of poor sportsmanship by Nani and a mix-up in communication between Spurs goalkeeper Heurehlo Gomes and the referee and assistant referee.

The incident happened after Nani made a run inside the Tottenham box late in the second half. There was minimal contact on Nani but he continued to run into the box and then dived to the ground and handled the ball. At this point, it appeared that Gomes believed that a free kick had been awarded to Spurs, so as he prepared to take it and waited for his players to get into permission, Nani ran near the ball and poked it past Gomes into the net. Nani celebrated in front of the Stretford End as Clattenburg ran over to his assistant to discuss the incident. After a brief discussion, the goal was awarded to Manchester United. And the Tottenham players went berserk, surrounding the referee and assistant referee in complete disbelief that the goal had been given.

The goal was legitimate but a cheap one. Nani shouldn’t have dived in the box in the first place. And second, a free kick should have been given for Nani’s hand ball. Then Gomes made the mistake of misunderstanding what call the referee had made. To make matters worse, Nani was unsportsmanlike to kick the ball into the net. Sure, the ball was live but it was a cheap goal made even cheaper after his ridiculous dive in the box and hand ball just seconds earlier.

Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson blamed the incident on Gomes by saying,

“You can look at the referee and look at the linesmen and blame them, but the goalkeeper should know better. He’s an experienced goalkeeper. I thought he made a mess of it. The referee played on because the goalkeeper took possession of the ball. He then went to take a free-kick thinking it was a foul. He made an error.”

And, not surprisingly, Tottenham manager Harry Redknapp saw it the other way around:

“It was handball. He put his hand on the ball and dragged it down. He should have been booked. The referee didn’t see him handball it, that’s why he’s allowed play to go on. The assistant referee has seen it, that’s why he’s flagged. He’s handled the ball. If he’s handled the ball he should be booked and it’s a free-kick. Gomes puts the ball down to take a free-kick. It’s obvious. Why would he stand there and leave the ball there after he saw him handball it?”

What do you think? Did Nani cheat? Should he have exercised better sportsmanship? Should the goal have stood? Who was right, Ferguson or Redknapp? Share your opinion in the comments section below.

Related posts:

  1. Liam Brady’s Swerving Goal for Arsenal Against Spurs, 1978: Video
  2. England Cheated Of Blatant Goal Against Germany: Video
  3. Nani’s Twists and Turns Against Bolton: Video



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