http://www.nba.com/pistons/news/ATLDET_ ... recap.htmlTAKE FIVE: A five-point dissection of the Pistons’ third straight loss. 1. COSTLY LOSS - The blueprint for beating Atlanta is about as straightforward as it gets: Keep the Hawks’ athletic young frontcourt of Al Horford, Josh Smith and Marvin Williams off the offensive glass; don’t let Mike Bibby alone at the 3-point line; and make Joe Johnson become a volume shooter to get his 20 points. Those things might be difficult to achieve, but they’re pretty simple to comprehend. The Pistons succeeded across the board about as well as they could have hoped in their final game before hitting the All-Star break Wednesday night – and lost anyway. The X-factor for Atlanta – make that the X, Y and Z factors – was Flip Murray. The ex-Piston came off of Atlanta’s bench to light them up for 23 points, 14 in the second half. Johnson got away from them late, scoring 10 of his 27 in the fourth quarter, and Atlanta won a game that could have huge playoff implications. “We go into the game and say Joe Johnson, Mike Bibby and Josh Smith were the three keys,” Michael Curry said as the Pistons lost their third straight game. “I thought we did an excellent job on Bibby (five points, 1 of 5) and an excellent job on Josh (10 points, seven rebounds). Joe had a good game. Flip Murray, 23 points – that’s a killer.” The Hawks are now three games ahead of the Pistons in the loss column and hold a 2-0 edge in the season series between the two as they fight for the No. 4 playoff seed in the East behind runaway leaders Boston, Cleveland and Orlando. Adding injury to the insult of another home loss, Rasheed Wallace asked out of the game with 4:18 left in the third quarter and never returned, bothered by tendinitis in his knee. The Pistons, who were 10 games over .500 at 22-12 about a month ago, have lost 12 of their last 17 games.
TEAM COLORS : 2. White Hot - If Flip Murray had done that a little more often in his almost two seasons with the Pistons, well … he’d still be a Piston. Murray scored Atlanta’s last 10 points of the third quarter on just four possessions, taking Amir Johnson to the basket when he caught him in a mismatch to score a layup, getting loose again for another layup with no help coming, and then closing the quarter with consecutive three-point trips at Arron Afflalo’s expense, knocking down a jump shot over him while drawing a foul and then nailing a triple. “I just came out and tried to be aggressive, tried to give us a spark off the bench,” Murray said. “There were a lot of mismatches, a lot of switching, and I had a lot of big guys on me, so I just tried to penetrate the defense and get to the hole for easy baskets.” 3. BLUE COLLAR - For a guy who missed Tuesday’s loss at Chicago with the flu and wasn’t sure if he could play Wednesday until about 90 minutes before tipoff, Allen Iverson left everything but his pregame meal on the floor. He left that on the sideline. “I was still just real lightheaded,” Iverson said after the game. “That was my problem out there tonight. I was just dizzy at times. I actually threw up at a timeout. I was struggling. I was just real weak.” That must have come as a revelation to the Hawks, who played a game-high 40 minutes and scored a game-high 28 points, including a 3 of 6 night from the 3-point line. Iverson also provided one of the Pistons’ real hustle plays of the night when he dived to the floor to beat the sauntering Murray to a loose ball in Atlanta’s end, flinging it ahead to Rip Hamilton for a layup.
4. RED FLAG - The Pistons still rank among the top third of teams in points allowed (94.2, fifth) and field-goal percentage defense (seventh), but their defense has sprung a leak over the last week, allowing 111.7 a game over the last three coming into Atlanta. Even though the Hawks fell one point short of triple digits, they went on a tear late in the second and early in the third quarters – scoring on 11 straight possessions – in a game where both teams appeared to have heavy legs after playing Tuesday night. Fueled by Murray, Atlanta finished the third quarter with 14 points squeezed out of its last six possessions. “We have to talk and communicate, especially on the defensive end,” Tayshaun Prince said. “In the past, we were better at communicating and our half-court defense was better. Now we’re struggling in that area. Hopefully, the break will help us.” THE LAST CALL : A little perspective on the final game before the All-Star break. 5. WELCOME BREAK - Right about now, the only thing better than a four-day break for the Pistons would be a four-week break. Curry, Iverson and Prince admitted it was coming at a good time, and not just because the Pistons have played four games in the past five nights and put heavy wear on the legs of their oldest players, Wallace and Antonio McDyess especially. Perhaps even more than the physical toll, the first 51 games have exacted an even heavier psychological toll on a veteran team that’s no stranger to challenges but is accustomed to getting overwhelmingly positive results when they push back. “Physically, some guys really need a break,” Curry said. “And it’s probably been as challenging mentally as (any stretch) they’ve had, at least while they’ve been here. That’s how good they’ve had it since they’ve been here. “But, believe me, to get to that point to where your team is competing in the Eastern Conference finals every year, somebody had to go through some heartbreaks to get to that point. It’s unfortunate we’re having to go through that again to get back up there, but that’s all part of trying to win and be an elite team in this league.”