The Detroit Pistons are bringing back bully ball. Pure, physical, unabashed, smash-mouth hoops. And they know it.
Pistons fans are certainly familiar with this type of physical team.
The 1980s Detroit Pistons were famous for their “Jordan Rules,” in which they would constantly hit His Airness. They did it so much that they popularized the moniker “Bad Boys.” That physical toughness was a big reason Detroit won back-to-back championships in 1989 and 1990.
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Fast-forward to the early 2000s, and the second iteration of the Bad Boys Pistons was born. While everyone remembers the dark side of that aggression in the “Malice at the Palace,” those Pistons, led by Chauncey Billups, technical-foul legend Rasheed Wallace, NBA Defensive Player of the Year Ben Wallace and feisty wings Rip Hamilton and Tayshaun Prince, embodied that same physical style.
There’s a throughline between those two past Pistons teams — and this third version of the Bad Boys Pistons, which currently sit atop the Eastern Conference. It would only be fitting if, like Pistons teams of the past, Cade Cunningham and crew push their way to a championship this season with their staunch defense.
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Ninety-one percent of NBA champions since 1980 have had a top-10 defense. More to the point: Each season the Pistons have won a championship, they’ve had a top-3 defense. This season’s Pistons team is following suit. They’re using their physical style, led by Jalen Duren, Ausar Thompson and Isaiah Stewart, to rank second-best in the NBA in defense.
This franchise has continuously found unique ways to reach the mountaintop. The Pistons in the 1980s needed Joe Dumars to step up, Vinnie Johnson to be “The Microwave” and Dennis Rodman to become “The Worm.” The 2004 Pistons won the championship with no player on the roster averaging more than 20 points, which is an astounding accomplishment. What will this rendition discover about itself?
The one thing that reverberates through the city of Detroit, and its basketball teams, is toughness.