Pistons snap 13-game skid
Charlie Villanueva and the Detroit Pistons went exactly a month
between victories.
"Oh, man," Villanueva said. "It felt like forever."
His 23 points and nine rebounds helped Detroit end a 13-game
losing streak by beating the downtrodden and distracted Washington
Wizards 99-90 Tuesday night.
To the Pistons, it did not matter one bit that their first
win since beating Golden State on Dec. 12 came against the Wizards,
a club whose best player, three-time All-Star Gilbert Arenas, was
suspended indefinitely by the NBA amid a guns investigation.
And a club whose coach, Flip Saunders, and several players
have had to speak to authorities in recent days about that case. A
club missing forward Andray Blatche, suspended for Tuesday's game
for what Saunders indicated was complaining about getting enough
plays drawn up for him.
"Somebody had to win tonight - and we just wanted it to be
us," said Richard Hamilton, who scored 19 points for Detroit. "We
knew when we came in tonight, we could only worry about us."
Rodney Stuckey also scored 19 and added a career high-tying
11 assists for Detroit, which lost by 33 points at Chicago on
Monday night. A defeat against Washington would have tied the
longest single-season losing streak in franchise history.
Antawn Jamison led the Wizards with 31 points and 10
rebounds, while Randy Foye - who took over at point guard for
Arenas - had 20 points and 10 assists. But Washington shot only 4
for 21 and scored a season-worst 11 points in the second quarter.
"We talked about it. We didn't want to be the team they
beat," said Washington's Nick Young, 2 for 9 for the game with
eight points, starting at shooting guard for the injured Mike
Miller. "But both teams were short-handed, and both teams had
something to prove tonight."
An announced crowd of only 13,544 showed up to watch these
struggling teams. The Pistons are now 12-25, and Washington is
12-24; in the Eastern Conference, only the NBA-worst New Jersey
Nets have fewer victories.
Detroit can chalk up its difficulties, in part anyway, to
injuries: Key players Hamilton, Tayshaun Prince and Ben Gordon have
all missed time. While Hamilton is back in the lineup, Prince and
Gordon were out Tuesday.
The Wizards? Well, yes, they were without Miller because his
bothersome right calf flared up again, but injuries are the least
of their worries, what with everything else going on.
Nearly all traces of Arenas have been purged from
Washington's arena, including a banner that used to hang outside.
Three players missed Tuesday morning's shootaround because they
were being questioned in the Arenas gun investigation.
Javaris Crittenton, a teammate involved in the spat that led
to Arenas' taking his guns out of his locker, has been excused from
attending practices or games until there is a resolution to the
legal issues.
"It's been a little chaotic around here for the most part the
last couple days," said Caron Butler, who had only 10 points and
two rebounds against Detroit. "That's something that you don't want
to have to keep revisiting. As a player, you want to focus on
basketball and basketball only."
NOTES: The Pistons lost 14 games in a row in the 1979-80 and
1993-94 seasons. ... Saunders on disciplining Blatche: "You hope
that they understand why. It's like dealing with your kids. You
have to do things. As I tried to explain when I talked to Andray:
'It's not against you. It's against what you did. How you acted. So
it's nothing against you.' I don't hold grudges over those type of
things." ... Miller was out for about six weeks before returning to
action Friday, then playing again Sunday, when he aggravated his
calf. ... Prince missed a second consecutive game with a sore left
knee, and Gordon was out after straining his right groin in
Monday's loss. Will Bynum missed a seventh straight game with a
sprained left ankle.