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Spurs Can Close Out Pistons for NBA Title

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Posted 4:27PM on Tuesday 21st June 2005 ( 19 years ago )
SAN ANTONIO (AP) -- The San Antonio Spurs can win their third title since 1999 when they face the Detroit Pistons in Game 6 of the NBA Finals Tuesday night.<br> <br> But if history is any indication, the defending champion Pistons won&#39;t go quietly. They do, however, face long odds. They must win twice in a city where they&#39;ve been beaten 10 straight times since 1997 - in a building where the Spurs are 45-5 this season.<br> <br> Though Detroit coach Larry Brown claimed to be exhausted after a sleepless night contemplating the Game 5 twists that culminated in Robert Horry&#39;s incredible game-winning 3-pointer, he seemed alert and anxious - even a bit excited. He believes Detroit still has a chance to defend its title in highly unlikely circumstances.<br> <br> &#34;You have to look at it as a great opportunity,&#34; Brown said Monday before the team&#39;s flight. &#34;This team has always fought back. It happened to us last year. We had some bumps along the way. I remember Game 5 against New Jersey, losing in triple overtime. I felt the same way I do now. We managed to bounce back and do it again.&#34; <br> <br> Detroit was down 3-2 to the Nets in last year&#39;s Eastern Conference semifinals before winning the final two games. The Pistons also came back from a 3-2 deficit against Miami earlier this month in the Eastern Conference finals. Two years ago, they even rallied from a 3-1 deficit in a series against Orlando.<br> <br> Theories abound on the Pistons&#39; tenacity under pressure. Their unsung seven-man rotation thrives on long odds and a shortage of respect, counting on each other when everybody is counting them out. Their us-against-the-world mentality isn&#39;t unique in pro sports, but it&#39;s taken to an extreme in blue-collar Detroit.<br> <br> And if that&#39;s not enough motivation, the Pistons also could be entering the final days of Brown&#39;s tenure with the club. The coach&#39;s health problems resulting from hip surgery last season could force him to retire - or move to a different job in another organization.<br> <br> &#34;I haven&#39;t even thought about that,&#34; Brown claimed. &#34;My whole thought process is the opportunity that lies ahead. It&#39;s about them, it&#39;s not about me.&#34; <br> <br> After victories in Games 4 and 5, the Pistons could have returned to Texas with a 3-2 series lead. But Horry scored 21 points after the final second of the third quarter in a climactic Game 5 victory, which removed most of the pressure from San Antonio for Game 6.<br> <br> San Antonio clinched the 2003 title at home in Game 6 against the Nets, rallying in the fourth quarter. The Spurs can play comfortably for a clinching win in front of fans smelling a championship.<br> <br> After a week in Michigan, the Spurs were greeted at the airport by an estimated 5,000 fans upon their predawn arrival Monday. Horry obliged the screaming masses with an impromptu 3 a.m. speech.<br> <br> &#34;If you can&#39;t beat &#39;em, join &#39;em. And I joined the Spurs,&#34; shouted Horry, whose career with the Los Angeles Lakers ended after he missed a shot against San Antonio in Game 5 of the 2003 playoffs. A shot that was very similar to his game-winner on Sunday.<br> <br> The Pistons kept to themselves before and after their flight Monday. Rasheed Wallace, whose foolish attempt to double-team Manu Ginobili left Horry wide open for the winner, is the Pistons&#39; emotional leader, and he&#39;s expected to get Detroit ready for Game 6.<br> <br> So is Chauncey Billups, last season&#39;s finals MVP who scored 34 points in Game 5.<br> <br> &#34;I expect we&#39;ll do what we always do,&#34; he said. &#34;We&#39;re going to come out, (and) our backs are definitely against the wall. We&#39;re going into a hostile environment. ... If we can&#39;t have energy down 3-2, facing elimination, we shouldn&#39;t be there.&#34;<br> <br> This will be a defining night for the Pistons, whose title last season was criticized as a fluke of opportunity against the collapsing Lakers. If Detroit could force a seventh game, its reputation will be cemented as a superior team under pressure.<br> <br> &#34;We&#39;ve got a tough task, but we&#39;ve been in tough situations before,&#34; Ben Wallace said. &#34;We&#39;re going to fight till the end. We&#39;re a tough-minded team, and we have some tough guys in the locker room. We&#39;ll bounce back.&#34;<br> <br> © 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

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