http://www.detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/ar ... 10362/1127
Rodney Stuckey doesn't rattle easily, if he rattles at all. He doesn't get excited easily, either. Witness this brief interview following the Pistons' practice Friday. Reporter: "So, looks like you are getting your first NBA start." Stuckey: "Guess so, I don't know. Chauncey's not here, so I guess I have to start." Reporter: "Kind of excited?" Stuckey: "Nah, I am just going to go out and play hard. It's good to be starting my first NBA game in front of my family and stuff (his step parents are living in the Los Angeles area), so, I don't know. It's exciting, a little bit." Presumably, the adrenaline will be flowing a little more freely tonight when Stuckey is announced with the starters at Staples Center tonight against the Clippers.
Chauncey Billups flew back to Detroit on Thursday to tend to a personal matter. The Pistons aren't expecting him to make it back in time. "We have to start Stuckey," coach Flip Saunders said. "The only other guy is Lindsey Hunter." Hunter has played in just one game -- for six minutes at San Antonio -- since Dec. 26. He has been battling the flu for a couple of weeks and hasn't even practiced much. So, when it was suggested to Hunter that he might have to play 20 minutes tonight, he reacted in mock horror. "Twenty minutes? Me? Right now?" he said. "No, no. "Like I told them (the coaches), use me sparingly. Stuckey's playing 40 minutes."
Newly acquired Juan Dixon could see some action, but Friday was his first practice with the team and Saunders said he isn't ready to play extended minutes. So, it will be up to Stuckey to carry the load. His production levels have been up and down recently. After scoring in double figures in seven of eight games, he's averaged 4.2 points (6-of-30 shooting) over the last five. "I feel good," he said. "I don't really get down on myself. I've got a lot of years in front of me to worry too much about my rookie year. This is a learning year for me. When I play a bad game, I don't try to think about it too much. I just let it go." Stuckey, whose game is predicated on his ability to drive to the basket, has averaged just 2.8 free-throw attempts in the last five games -- despite enduring a lot of contact at the basket. "That's going to come," he said of the referees' calls. "I just have to keep attacking so the refs know my style of play, so they know I am an aggressive player. "I am just going to keep taking the ball to the basket. When the years come, I will be getting that call."