http://www.nba.com/pistons/news/DETCHI_ ... recap.htmlTAKE FIVE : A five-point dissection of near point-guard perfection : 1. Distraught in Detroit – Rasheed Wallace caught and shot a 3-pointer from the corner with Joakim Noah’s hand in his face. The shot didn’t touch rim. He had hit that kind of turnaround, H-O-R-S-E shot before, but not this time. Ben Gordon caught and shot a 3-pointer from the corner – and drained it, with Rodney Stuckey’s hand and everything else barreling into him, knocking both players into the Pistons bench. Gordon’s go-ahead four-point play with 16.7 seconds left capped a stunning comeback for the Bulls. And Wallace’s rushed misfire with 30 seconds left – followed by two Detroit turnovers, bobbled catches both – sealed one of the Pistons’ most disappointing losses of the season. “It hurts,” said Rip Hamilton, struggling for words, his head in his hands for minutes after the locker room opened to media. “It’s kind of silly. I thought we played well, for most of the game. We defended, shared the ball and playing together and then… pssh, losing the lead is something we just can’t do.” The Pistons could do no wrong in the third quarter – especially Wallace, who scored 15 of his 20 points in a magnificent stretch of basketball, helping the Pistons extend a 51-50 halftime lead into a 14-point advantage heading into the fourth quarter. Wallace’s hot shooting was contagious as the Pistons scored 34 points in the third on 64 percent field-goal shooting – all without All-Star Allen Iverson, who missed the game with flu-like symptoms and remained at the team’s hotel. Arron Afflalo started in Iverson’s place, leaving Hamilton to once again come off the bench to shoot the lights out. Hamilton scored 12 of his game-high 30 in the second quarter. The victory appeared to be in hand after the third. The Pistons were leading by eight with three minutes left and still up 102-99 at the 1:00 mark. “It’s really hard to point out right now because it hurts so much,” said Hamilton, when asked to explain the collapse. “We got to see how it happened. They made a run and that’s it.” Rodney Stuckey and Tayshaun Prince had 16 points and five assists each. Gordon scored a team-high 24 for Chicago, and point guard Derrick Rose scored nine of his 23 in the fourth.
TEAM COLORS : 2. White Hot – Wallace shot just three times in the first half, for two points. But against second-year center Noah and third-year forward Tyrus Thomas to start the third quarter, Wallace wasn’t about to let his mismatch go to waste in the third. He hit his first two jumpers from about 10 feet, and after his second 3-pointer, the Pistons began setting up Wallace on isolation plays. He made two free throws, followed by two more 15-foot jumpers. He made his first six shots of the quarter, his only miss on a last-possession 3-pointer – which was tipped in by McDyess (on his second try) at the buzzer to give Detroit an 85-71 lead.Perhaps that sense of being in the zone compelled Wallace to attempt his ill-fated triple in the final minute. He corralled the ball in the corner after Noah tipped Stuckey’s entry pass. There were still 14 seconds on the shot clock, and a score on that possession would have made it a two-possession game. “When Sheed shot it, that bad shot down the stretch, [he] shot it too early on the shot clock, so unfortunately we’ve got to be better than that, especially down the stretch,” Pistons coach Michael Curry said. 3. BLUE COLLAR – Johnny “Red” Kerr did not play Tuesday, but for many fans at the United Center, he will figure largely in their memories of the night. Kerr, who once held the NBA record for consecutive games played at 844 and later became the Bulls first head coach, has been the George Blaha of Chicago, serving as a Bulls broadcaster for 34 seasons. In an extended halftime ceremony that included Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen as speakers and a video message of congratulations from President Barack Obama, Kerr received the Bunn Lifetime Achievement Award from Jerry Colangelo. Longtime Pistons scout and Detroit sports icon, the late Will Robinson, received the Bunn Award in 1992. It is the most prestigious award bestowed by the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame outside of enshrinement.
4. RED FLAG – It’s fitting the Bulls went ahead on Gordon’s four-point play – it was the result of an offensive rebound after Wallace blocked a Derrick Rose layup. The Bulls had just three second-chance points in the first half, but were able to weather the Pistons’ flurry of jumpers in the third quarter by scoring four times on five offensive rebounds. Chicago’s tenacity was even more pronounced during the fourth-quarter comeback, as several offensive rebounds did not net the points they could have. All told, the Bulls had a 16-2 advantage in second-chance points after halftime. “When we missed shots, we didn’t come up with rebounds. Unless I saw something different, I saw possession after possession down the stretch where we didn’t come up with the rebound,” Curry said. “The 3-pointer that Gordon hit with the foul on Stuckey, we got a block on it and didn’t come up with the rebound.” THE LAST CALL : A little perspective on Detroit’s turnovers: 5. – After Gordon’s four-point play, the Pistons had two more possessions. Both ended in unforced turnovers. Rip Hamilton drove to the rim and dished across the paint to Antonio McDyess, who was not expecting the pass, which went off his fingers out of bounds. Wallace then bobbled an in-bounds pass from Afflalo after two Chicago free throws. For a team regarded as one of the least turnover-prone in the league – in fact, they averaged a league-low 12.1 turnovers entering Tuesday’s game – recent sloppiness has hurt them. “The last past week we’ve turned the ball over more. And we’ve just to do a better job. And then it’s when we’ve been making our turnovers that has been a big key,” Curry said. “We’ve been making them in stretches early, a lot of them early in the first half were unforced, and then we made a couple down the stretch.” Four of Detroit’s six turnovers in the first quarter happened before the ball crossed midcourt, leading to quick scoring chances for Chicago. Employing modest full-court pressure, the Bulls scored 10 of their 30 first-quarter points off the miscues.