Archive for the 'Injuries' Category

Chauncey Billups is (finally) ready to play

Chauncey Billups will be on the court for the start of the Eastern Conference Finals, whenever that may be. From Joanne Gerstner of the Detroit News:

Billups, who has missed nearly three playoff games with a strained right hamstring, said Thursday he’s ready to play again.

Billups practiced almost up to capacity with the team.

“It’s just good to be out there,” Billups said. “My full-out sprint is not where I want it to be, but it’s not like I’m that fast anyways.”

If the Celtics win on the road in Cleveland (I know, I know, but it could happen) on Friday, the ECF could start on Sunday. If the Celtics and Cavs play seven games, the ECF won’t start until Tuesday.

Dumars: Billups will “try to give it a go tonight”

DBB reader Q-Dog emailed me a little bit ago to inform me that Joe Dumars was a guest on Chad Ford’s NBA Dish podcast on ESPN today:

I just finished listening to ESPN’s “NBA Dish” podcast. Joe Dumars was the featured guest and Chad Ford asked him about Chauncey. He said, “…he went pretty good today, moving pretty good. I think he’s going to try to give it a go tonight. That’s what it looks like. He looked really good today in shootaround.”

I liked what I heard from Joe, very good conversation about the team, the league and even some politics. (and past heated debates between he and Bill Laimbeer)

Dumars is a semi-frequent guest on Ford’s podcast, and as I’ve said before, it’s obvious the two have a good rapport, as Dumars seems more comfortable talking to Ford than he does in most other interviews. Here’s the mp3 of the podcast or listen below:

Update on Chauncey’s hamstring

Chris McCosky has an update on Chauncey Billups’ hamstring: “Speaking of Billups, he continues to make good progress with the hammy. He will test it again in the morning. The Pistons are listing him as questionable. It’s down to whether or not Billups feels comfortable and confident to play on it. The Pistons won’t sit him out just to be cautious. If he’s ready, he’s playing.”

Billups and Kander’s quality time

Flip Saunders claims he’s thinking about using Amir Johnson in Game 4. From A. Sherrod Blakely:

Pistons coach Flip Saunders talked some about Rashard Lewis who has given them fits throughout this series. Lewis’ play is one of the reasons why Jarvis Hayes is out of the rotation, and replaced by Walter Herrmann. Saunders said he’s also giving some thought to putting Amir Johnson on Lewis tomorrow night.

“Just because of his (Johnson’s) quickness and his length and his ability to defend people out on the floor, but also if he gets beat off the dribble, he can make it up and contest at the rim,” Saunders said.

A.S.B. also has the latest Chauncey Billups update in the same article; not much has changed, though it seems Chauncey and Arnie Kander are getting to know each other quite well:

“I’m feeling a little better,” Billups said. “Y’all probably have a better chance of asking my roommate Arnie.”

As in Arnie Kander, the team’s strength and conditioning coach. Billups was up to about 1 a.m. this morning doing stuff with Kander, with treatments resuming about eight hours later.

“He doesn’t need a room,” Kander said. “He’s been in my room. We were up to 1 in the morning and started back at 9 this morning.”

No matter what Saunders says, I’m quite confident we’ll see a dinged up Billups before a perfectly healthy Johnson, which is actually pretty sad.

Arnie Kander heals Chauncey and delivers babies

Chauncey Billups was still sore at practice this morning but the training staff doesn’t seem too concerned. From A. Sherrod Blakely:

“I’ve seen about 2,000 hamstrings,” said Arnie Kander, Detroit’s strength and conditioning coach. “I look at this as being nothing more than what we’ve seen in the past. Because of the slowness of the movement; because of the nature of what occurred, him being able to pull out of it and the fact that he feels this morning the same as he did last night … that’s a great sign. Usually the next morning, you feel worse.”

Also, as a testament to Arnie’s amazing healing touch, he also found time to give Krista Jahnke advice on her pregnancy:

I asked him jokingly on Wednesday whether he can give me an advice to have a pain-free labor (I’m seven and a half months pregnant).

He didn’t skip a beat, saying, “Sure,” and launching into a quick rundown of stuff that was over my head. He mentioned “healers” and said something about how it’s all about “moving energy.” He said his wife had two nearly pain-free labors without any medication.

If he can do that, what’s a strained hamstring?

The man is a wizard, I tell you.

McDyess may stay on the bench

It sounds like the Pistons will stick with Sunday’s rotation featuring Jason Maxiell in the starting lineup and Antonio McDyess coming off the bench. From A. Sherrod Blakely:

After Sunday’s win, McDyess said he would not have a problem coming off the bench. In fact, he sounded as if it’s a role he would welcome.

“Coming off the bench is what I’m comfortable doing,” McDyess said.

“Starting? It’s just a routine thing. I feel like now, I get in there … when I start, I feel like a robot sometimes. But when I come off the bench, I feel I’ve got to step up and make something happen.”

Because Detroit’s starting five consists of so many scorers, McDyess often winds up being the forgotten man.

“He’s kind of invisible out there,” Saunders said. “But when he comes off the bench, because of some of the people he’s coming (in) with, they look to him a little bit more.”

I’m torn; on the one hand, McDyess did get into a nice rhythm on Sunday, shooting 5-8 from the field to finish with 10 points and six boards in 20 minutes, but it came at the expense of Maxiell, who was the invisible guy with just four points and five boards in 32 minutes. That said, Maxiell tends to be inconsistent from game to game coming off the bench anyway, so it’s probably a wash.

Plus, even after starting the entire season, McDyess still tends to defer when playing with the other four starters, so keeping him aggressive is a good thing. (As would be giving the likes of Arron Afflalo, Jarvis Hayes and Amir Johnson more than a combined three minutes, but I digress …) This also allows Max to match-up with athletic rookie Thaddeus Young, which he’s better suited to do.

On a side note, remember how all of us were wondering what exactly happened during halftime on Sunday? McDyess confirmed that he spoke up, which is rare for him. From Mitch Albom in the Free Press:

“It wasn’t a speech,” he said Monday, almost embarrassed. “It was basically the truth. I just told them it looked like we were the team that was the seventh seed and they looked like the two seed. I just let them know we were way better than this. … Why are we playing like we’re scared? We didn’t play all this way and go this long to give it up right now.

“I guess everyone kind of heard me.”

[…] “Normally, I don’t speak at all,” he admitted. “I let all the captains and everyone say something. But I felt it was time for someone to say something. … I mean, the last couple of games we came in the locker room and didn’t say nothing to each other at all. Just sat down and didn’t say a word.”

After surgery, McDyess questionable for Game 4

From Keith Langlois of Pistons.com:

McDyess broke his nose midway through the third quarter of Friday’s nightmarish Game 3 loss at Wachovia Center and returned to Detroit where he underwent successful surgery Saturday at Royal Oak Beaumont Hospital as performed by Dr. Gene Rontal. McDyess’ status for Game 4 is listed as questionable.

If McDyess is unable to go, the Pistons likely would replace him in the starting lineup with third-year forward Jason Maxiell. They would still have plenty of depth available to them with Theo Ratliff and Amir Johnson coming off the bench, as well as Walter Herrmann, who has been on the inactive list through the first three games of the first-round series.

[…] McDyess has been matched up defensively to start games against Philadelphia rookie Thaddeus Young, who has gotten off to fast offensive starts in all three games. Young has scored 10, 11 and 10 points in the first three games of the series. Long and athletic, Young might be a better physical matchup for Johnson, though it’s unlikely the Pistons would thrust (sic — trust?) the inexperienced Johnson enough to start him.

I’d love to see it happen, but I don’t think it will, and sadly for all the wrong reasons. Starting Amir Johnson would be admitting that DNP-ing him in Game 1 and sitting him until the game was well out of hand in Game 3 was a mistake, and coaches rarely do that until they’re facing an elimination game. To be honest, I haven’t seen a coach so reluctant to give a guy a chance since Rick Carlisle finally relented and put Tayshaun Prince on Tracy McGrady in 2003.

But unlike McGrady, Young isn’t one of the league’s truly extraordinary talents — he’s one of the very small handful of players in this league who’s actually younger than Amir Johnson. Why in the world would you keep throwing veterans who are 10-15 years older than Young and continue to be surprised when the Pistons look slow? If McDyess can’t play, I’m all for matching up Maxiell with Reggie Evans and Johnson with Young; who actually gets the start or plays more minutes is irrelevant.

Update: The “wait a minute, maybe the Pistons should play Amir” meme is catching on. A. Sherrod Blakely weighs in and got a quote from Amir:

Saunders said if McDyess doesn’t play, he would be replaced by Jason Maxiell, Theo Ratliff or possibly Amir Johnson.

Of the three, Johnson might be the most intriguing possibility.

With Philadelphia going with a smaller lineup that includes Thaddeus Young at power forward — he’s really a long small forward — Johnson might be a better match up for Detroit.

“We are kind of the same with our quickness,” Johnson said. “I just have to stay ready and wait to be called on. And when I get a chance to play, don’t make mistakes and just try and help the team win.”

Cross your fingers, but Chauncey’s banged up

From Dana Gauruder’s blog for the Oakland Press:

The last thing the Pistons need after losing Game 1 is an injury to one of their regulars. That’s why it was alarming to see Chauncey Billups walking slowly and flexing his right knee after practice. According to Billups and Flip Saunders, it was just some minor soreness. Billups attributed it to a tough practice while walking to his car after leaving the practice facility, though he was held out of a practice last week because of soreness. “I’m all right,” he said several times. Saunders didn’t act concerned, either. “Chauncey’s always in a situation where he gets hit a little bit but he’s OK,” he said.

It’s probably nothing, but every Detroit paper mentioned it.

Pistons tighten ship with players-only meeting

Dana Gauruder of the Oakland Press doesn’t post much on his blog, but it’s usually interesting stuff when he does. Such as today:

Curious ongoings before the Pistons’ shootaround in Toronto this morning.

The media was banned from going into the locker room for a few minutes while the Pistons held a team meeting. Afterward, they were vague about what was going on.

I didn’t appear to be anything major, like a rift between Flip Saunders and the players or in-fighting among the team. It was more of re-focusing, if you will. Apparently, some players had been coasting or blowing off stretchng exercises, weight-room work, etc.

Richard Hamilton and Juan Dixon both suffered injuries in recent days - Hamilton a sore hip, Dixon a strained calf. Dixon hasn’t been around long enough for anyone to get mad at him, so Rip was probably one, if not the main, target.

The last thing the Pistons want is for people to coast into the playoffs and lose their sharpness when they need it most.

“Just something that needed to be said,” Tayshaun Prince said. “Trying to gear up for these last 12 games or so, just to kind of finish off the right way.”

A. Sherrod Blakely also made mention of the team meeting, though without connecting the dots to Rip:

Players were relatively mum on the meeting’s specifics, but there were two general themes that seemed to be points of discussion.

1) Conditioning — lately, the Pistons have been bothered by a few nagging injuries, in part because the players don’t necessarily follow through as well as they should on the pre-game and shoot-around conditioning drills led by Kander. There was a noticeable improvement in their focus during those drills this morning, which may very well be tied into the team meeting.

2) Playoff preparation — A couple different players mentioned how it’s time for them to start to not just think about the playoffs, but start developing the kind of habits needed to ensure they don’t suffer yet another early playoff exit.

Chris McCosky basically has the same in his blog, but adds that part of the meeting was led by Arnie Kander:

Strange shoot-around this morning. The Pistons booted everybody — coaches, ballboys, equipment guys and even the media relations man Cletus Lewis — out of the locker room and had a players only meeting. They rarely do that, especially when things are running smoothly, as they are right now.

Part of the meeting was conducted by Arnie Kander, the Pistons strength and conditioning guru. He, apparently, just got on the players about maintaining all the pre- and post-game (and practice) stretching and weight room work. With the playoffs on the horizon, this is not the time to slack off.

For a veteran team like the Pistons, you’d expect this type of self-policing now and then. Makes you wonder, though, if the team feels Rip Hamilton’s current hip ailment could have been prevented — both he and Juan Dixon are doubtful once again for tonight’s game.

This is the time of year that the Pistons should be easing into top gear while preparing for the playoffs, not making adjustments on the fly by entering the stretch run without their leading scorer. But still, it’s better they had this conversation today than a few weeks from now.

Rasheed may sit tonight

Krista Jahnke reports that Rasheed Wallace sat out of this morning’s shoot-around in favor of getting treatment — or as Theo Ratliff would say, having Arnie Kander lay his hands on him. Whether the miracle worker gets Wallace in good enough shape to play tonight is still unknown, but Jahnke suggests the Pistons might hold him out in favor of seeing what Theo Ratliff has in the tank, which sounds like a good plan to me. I mean, it’s just the Knicks, right?

Also, this was kind of funny:

Pistons rookie Arron Afflalo missed the bus to the Garden because the departure time had changed and he didn’t get the memo. He had to cab over on his own. Team security guru Jerry Hendon waited by the elevators for Afflalo to appear. When he did, he told him solemnly, “Coach said he doesn’t want you to come in. He said to just go back to the hotel.”

Afflalo looked totally deflated. He asked, “Really, coach Saunders said that?”

“Yup,’ Jerry said, pulling him back toward the elevator. “He said just go on back.”

A few seconds passed before Jerry finally cracked up, letting Afflalo know it was all a joke.

It was quite funny, especially considering Afflalo is the last person you’d expect to get in trouble for missing a bus. He’s typically the first one in the arena on game days and is one of the team’s hardest workers.