http://www.detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/ar ... 90337/1127
Different night, completely different challenge for the Pistons.After a long run of playing mostly traditional half-court-oriented teams, the Pistons will get to test their powers tonight against the dreaded small-ball style of Indiana. "Without Jermaine O'Neal, Indiana has changed their style," coach Flip Saunders said Monday. "They put five perimeter players out there and play very open.
They play like Phoenix and Golden State, just very open." Once upon a time, the Pistons struggled mightily with small-ball teams. They never seemed sure how to attack them -- punish them with their size or downsize their own lineup. Those days are mostly gone. "I think we have a pretty good handle on it now," Tayshaun Prince said. "We have to slow it down, put (the tempo) in our favor as far as putting the ball inside and playing inside-out. Every once in awhile we get caught up playing how those guys play; sometimes it backfires and sometimes it doesn't. But in crucial situations, with the game on the line, we have had success against smaller teams."
The Pacers, who have dropped three straight, lost O'Neal to a sore left knee. Without him, they are playing Troy Murphy at center, with 6-foot-9 forwards Danny Granger and Mike Dunleavy. The Pistons should be able to pick their mismatch on the offensive end. The worry will be how they defend the quicker forwards. "We have to make them defend us in the half-court," Saunders said. "We still like to stay big, but with Amir (Johnson) emerging as our fourth big man, he's a guy who maybe can play against those guys because of his quickness and athleticism." Saunders said he would resort to a smaller lineup only if necessary and said that going to a zone might be the preferable option to downsizing.The Pistons beat the Pacers twice already with O'Neal. They have beaten the small-ball Warriors twice, the small-ball Grizzlies twice and the small-ball Hawks three times. They have yet to play the Suns.