Settle down, there, MOM...
Granted, it was a bit
unexpected, but what the hell.
Post-mortem, as I see it:
The Spurs did what they had to do. They moved the ball very well, and played solid D. No particular player stood out, though Horry made the biggest shots again. Ginobili's drives put the dagger in the corpse. Props to the Spurs for an excellent effort.
As for the Pistons... they played OK on D. About a "B" defensive game overall. Good enough D to win.
But the biggest factor was Larry Brown's thoroughly unbelievable bonehead susbstitution at the end of the 3d, taking out both Sheed and McDyess (who played a very solid game), and playing
4 guards, who were thoroughly overmatched by the Spurs' offense, which sent the Pistons reeling, and handed the Spurs the momentum for good.
Before that dumbass move, it was the Pistons' kind of game: nothing was coming easy for either team. Something like 52-47 with 3:00 left in the 3d. Playing the 4 guards wore them out, took the Pistons out of their defensive game, and got the Spurs going and had the Pistons playing from behind in a tough building.
And Sheed didn't foul out, and nobody else ended up with more than 4 fouls, when all was said and done. Mc Dyess played every bit as well as Sheed, anyway. I almost wonder if Brown was on the take.
The Pistons played decent offense until the Brown screwup. After that they didn't move the ball, nor exploit Sheed's ability to shoot over Duncan almost at will.
Next year? In the East, look for Indiana to re-emerge if Artest doesn't ass-fvck their season again and they stay healthy. The Heat will have a good shot, with Mourning taking over Shaq's role to some extent. The Pistons... dunno.... their starters are still not too old, and their stock is down a bit, so I doubt any of them will be going anywhere, but something's missing. They should
definitely start working Darko, and see what he can do. He's now kinda like their other "castoffs" were before the Pistons got them.
In the West, of course the Spurs will be there, barring significant injuries. I can't see anybody else in the West competing with the Spurs or being able to handle Eatern Conference physicality and D, though there will be a pack of others cometing hard for the chance to get sacrificed to the Spurs.
Interesting final series. All in all, I thought the Pistons were the more capable of the 2 teams, but could not overcome the Spurs' home advantage and their own coach's foul trouble hangup, which borders on psychiatric. And the Heat was the most capable team of all, but could not take out the Pistons with Wade (the true playoff MVP) at about 50-70%.
Still, whatever the case, the Spurs won fair and square. Once again, props to the Spurs for a great
team effort, and I expect they'll be here again next year. That's the way basketball's supposed to be played.