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What Should LBJ Do Next? 👑

What The Pistons Must Do This Offseason!

Ryan ParksJun 2, 2008

    The Detroit Pistons starting lineup totals up to 46 years pro. They are nearly averaging 10 years pro per position. The Pistons have been to the Eastern Conference Finals six times recently, and have only won the championship once. Rasheed Wallace doesn't play on the block where he belongs. They are slow, are no longer the hungry team they were in 2004, and they constantly settle for jump shots.

    It is about time the Pistons consider rebuilding to keep themselves in the hunt. Miraculously, they don't need to do much. I would love to see Chauncey Billups and Rasheed Wallace finish out their careers in Detroit, but times are changing, and Detroit might need to make a move while their value is still high. Teams like the Boston Celtics have now proved that old players are still needed, and the Pistons need to seize the opportunity.

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    When Chancey Billups went down early in Game 3 against the Orlando Magic, hopefully Detroit realized something. Rodney Stuckey is ready to take over the starting guard position. When Stuckey played they were high-tempo fast-paced, more efficient Piston squad.

    Nothing against Chauncey. He is an amazing player, and with one or two more good years, hopefully he retires a guaranteed Hall of Famer. The Pistons have one gear, playoff. During the season this gear is magnificent, and they end up with a high seed, but when everyone else steps up for the big series, Detroit is left struggling. I would rather see Detroit sack one year going .500 or better, than watch them struggle in the playoff being outhustled and outplayed.

    Chauncey has a lot of stock, and this year's draft is deep. All Stars may possibly be found in the teens of the first round. This is a guard driven time the NBA has come to, and many teams are looking for a great PG.

    For younger teams, someone like Chauncey who has plenty of veteran leadership and can be very consistent looks like a big grab. Deal Billups and possibly Rasheed in a package deal to move up into those teens, if more leverage is needed they should use their first round pick. The Pistons should look to pick up some good role players with this trade. Move Rodney Stuckey to start, and depending on your pick either Jason Maxiell or the new rookie to replace Rasheed Wallace. All Rodney has to do is average around 15 points and run the offense efficiently for this switch to be considered a good payoff.

    Against Boston, Maxiell proved he has the explosiveness to come off the bench but there is no reason he shouldn't get a chance to start. With some work on the block, he could become a very efficient starter, or a magnificent sixth man. If the Pistons find themselves drafting a center, Antonio McDyess can move to to the four spot, and the new center can take his shots as a starter. Otherwise McDyess can stay center and Maxiell or the rookie can battle for the 4 spot.

    Overall, the Pistons have Stuckey averaging 15 points, which he put up a couple games in the playoffs off the bench. At shooting guard, Richard Hamilton putting up possibly 20 or more points. At small forward Tayshaun Prince averaging somewhere in the teens with his solid defense. Power forward and center is a toss up between Maxiell, McDyess, and the new rookie.

    Most points you could get out of those could be 30 total. Predict Prince at 15, and you have 75 points per game average out of your starting lineup. With good bench play, the Pistons wont be far behind their current state. With a year or two of maturity, we could see them as a top seed again.

What Should LBJ Do Next? 👑

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