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True Blue Pistons

About Keith Langlois
Award-winning journalist Keith Langlois, most recently lead sports columnist at The Oakland Press, joined Pistons.com as the web site editor on October 2, 2006. Langlois, who brings over 27 years of professional sports journalism experience to Palace Sports & Entertainment, serves as Pistons.com's official beat writer and covers the team on a daily basis.

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Posted Wednesday, July 28, 2010
Second Act
Pistons fans saw way more of Jonas Jerebko than they ever expected during his rookie season and loved all of it, sales of those delightfully silly horned Swedish helmets underscoring how unexpectedly popular the NBA’s first native Swede became.

They got extended looks at Austin Daye, too, and even frequent glimpses of DaJuan Summers as injuries hammered the Pistons from wire to wire.

They might not see as much of any of them next season, which can only be good news on the health and depth fronts.

That creates conditions ripe for frustration, disappointment and discouragement setting in for the three second-year players. It’s one thing to occupy spots on the inactive list or play only in garbage time as rookies, but when you’ve gotten a taste and come back to a potentially lesser role in your second season … well, it’s a situation that bears monitoring all around.

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Posted Monday, July 26, 2010
Flying Colors
It wasn’t NBA competition, but Charlie Villanueva’s first test of his summer makeover – the 2010 Centrobasket competition hosted by his Dominican Republic team – gives the Pistons another encouraging sign for the season ahead.

Villanueva, 13 pounds lighter and applying the lessons learned from weeks of work under Pistons strength coach Arnie Kander, led the Dominican to a 4-0 record in pool play and a semifinal win before losing to Puerto Rico in the gold medal game. Charlie V was second in scoring (20.6 points per game) for the tournament and an all-tournament selection, and when the Dominican really needed him to score, he turned it on in the title game and put up 36 points and 11 boards as the undermanned Dominicans lost 89-80 to Puerto Rico.

“I was the only NBA guy going against Carlos Arroyo, J.J. Barea, Renaldo Balkman and Peter Ramos, who played in the NBA back in the day,” Villanueva said Monday after another workout with Kander on a day a handful of teammates – including Tayshaun Prince, Ben Gordon and Greg Monroe – buzzed about the practice facility.

Kander is working with Villanueva this summer to improve his running stride and give him a more explosive first step.

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Posted Friday, July 23, 2010
Waiting Game
When LeBron James decided to take his talents to South Beach – words that could haunt him into retirement and almost certainly will forever preclude happy returns to his native Ohio – the knee-jerk reaction was that he had started a trend. Henceforth, superstars would conspire to join forces and the NBA would be reduced to two or three superteams and 27 faceless franchises.

The rumblings took form when Chris Paul supposedly toasted Carmelo Anthony at his wedding by suggesting they join forces with Amare Stoudemire in New York at their first opportunity.

And then Paul, or so it appears, decided to speed up the timetable and loudly suggest to New Orleans management that it avoid getting jilted a la Cleveland and trade him now for a tangible return.

Welcome to New Orleans, Monty Williams and Dell Demps.

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Posted Wednesday, July 21, 2010
Breathing Easy
The Pistons had five players who suited up in Summer League who figure to occupy spots on their regular-season roster, barring their inclusion in trades. So there was no shortage of storylines over their 11 days in the desert. But Greg Monroe was the most compelling, especially when the second and third games on the Pistons’ schedule happened to come against Golden State and Sacramento – the teams that picked directly ahead of the Pistons and passed on Monroe.

Every Summer League story should come with the obligatory “take what you see in Summer League with several grains of salt” warning. Donte Greene scored 40 points in his Summer League debut two years ago and is still showing up for Summer League with Sacramento, struggling to land a role as he heads into his third season.

But that didn’t stop a rush to judgment when the Pistons played Sacramento and Cousins had 14 points and 10 rebounds as the Kings won while Monroe put up seven and seven. The snapshot at that moment was that Cousins was the front-runner for Rookie of the Year and Monroe was relegated to a pedestrian career – or at least to an unremarkable rookie season.

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Posted Monday, July 19, 2010
Opportunity Knocks
There’s a notion the summer is slipping away from the Pistons. No mystery why that notion has taken root. Teams with cap space grabbed all the early headlines as LeBron James, Chris Bosh, Dwyane Wade, Amare Stoudemire and Carlos Boozer cast their lots. Teams affected by those traumatic departures reacted by moving swiftly to fill gaping holes.

For all the noise generated so far this summer, it’s been concentrated among a relatively small pool of NBA teams. None of that activity has involved the Pistons, which makes fans of a team coming off a 27-win season anxious, angry or discouraged.

But pick through the details and a clear impression emerges: Many teams still have much more work to do in order to field a team that doesn’t have obvious flaws. That goes for teams from all strata – title hopefuls to fringe playoff teams to lottery tenants.

And that goes double for the East, where the Pistons are one of the very few teams who could line up today and not have depth issues or worse at any position. Translation: There is still plenty of time and many possibilities out there for Joe Dumars to find a trade partner who has something intriguing to offer.

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Posted Friday, July 16, 2010
Rock Solid
It might be coincidence as much as a part of their Louisiana DNA, but Greg Monroe calls to mind Joe Dumars in that neither is much for calling attention to himself. In an age where even middling high school recruits call press conferences that fit the scheduling convenience of cable networks, Monroe simply told Georgetown he was coming and that was that.

He visited, it felt right and Monroe – ranked at various times as the No. 1 prospect in the high school class of 2008 – told John Thompson III that he wanted to join up. Courted by virtually every nationally prominent program, Monroe narrowed his list to five. After taking his first visit to nearby LSU, Monroe next visited Georgetown.

And that’s as far as he took it. Scheduled visits to powerhouses Duke, UConn and Texas were canceled.

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Posted Tuesday, July 13, 2010
Watching, Waiting
Joe Dumars was three hours late for our meeting Tuesday in Las Vegas, which is par for the course in mid-July for an NBA dealmaker. Nothing is imminent but a few things that would qualify as the significant trade he hopes to pull off have come close. Some of those proposals remain alive, simmering while both sides see if there’s anything better on the horizon.

All along, this summer was going to be driven by free agency. There’s been a fairly amazing amount of flesh-swapping since Dwyane Wade, Chris Bosh and LeBron James fell into Pat Riley’s lap last week, almost all of it spinoffs from those decisions – teams that didn’t land a premier free agent using their cap space to make deals, teams that lost free agents using trade exceptions gained by negotiating sign-and-trade deals for their exiting stars, teams looking to dump salary and finding partners in those teams with either cap space or trade exceptions.

The Pistons certainly don’t fall into the first two categories and aren’t eager to fall into the third. Joe D won’t rule out trading a player for some combination of cap relief or draft picks, but it’s not his first choice. If it were, he had a deal proposed to him in that three-hour window on Wednesday that would have achieved such an objective.

“Sometimes, there’s a time to be patient,” he said. “For us right now, instead of making a move just to say we made a move, I’m going to be patient and make sure whatever we do is the right move for us. If it’s not the right move, if we don’t think it’s somebody that can come in and help us or if we don’t get a trade proposal we think is really good for us, we’re going to be patient. We’re not going to do anything off the cuff just to say we made a move. It’s not going to happen.”

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Posted Monday, July 12, 2010
Summer Slumber
The Pistons will be delighted if what happened in Las Vegas on Monday stays in Las Vegas when they bolt town later this week.

As invaluable as Jonas Jerebko proved to be for the Pistons during his rookie season, he’s apparently indispensable to their 2010 Summer League lineup. With Jerebko sitting one out, the Pistons were heavy-legged and error-prone in losing to a Sacramento Kings team playing its first Summer League game while the Pistons were grinding through their third game in four days.

It was the Summer League equivalent of the regular season’s dog days and the Pistons got bit, falling behind by nine points after one quarter, by 17 at halftime and eventually losing 97-68.

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Posted Monday, July 12, 2010
High Flyer
Football courses through the veins of most kids who grow up in the South and are blessed with the gifts to make a living out of playing games. If Terrico White had grown up anywhere else in the South but Memphis, chances are he’d be quarterbacking in the SEC or, perhaps, firing fastballs somewhere in the minor leagues.

But in the basketball hotbed of the mid-South, White eventually chose to focus on basketball and merely dabble in other sports where he showed every bit the potential to graduate to the professional level as basketball eventually provided him.

“I started playing basketball and baseball when I was 3,” he said after Sunday’s practice in Las Vegas, where the Pistons prepared for their third game of Summer League, Monday against Sacramento. “Then I started playing football when I was 8 or 9. After that, I started playing all three year round.”

White has been hailed as perhaps the best athlete in the June NBA draft for his 40-inch vertical jump, his three-quarter-court sprint time and his ridiculously low 3.7 percent body fat. But the second-round pick, who is getting a long look at point guard in Las Vegas and showing the poise and ballhandling to make it a realistic fit, takes the “best athlete” label to another level when his multisport exploits are considered.

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Posted Sunday, July 11, 2010
All Daye
A year ago when the Pistons played Golden State in Summer League, Austin Daye saw what he could become. Anthony Randolph of the Warriors, then entering his second season, put on a clinic of inside-outside scoring, scorching the Pistons for 21 loud points and 10 rebounds in three quarters to hand Daye and the Pistons their first loss of the 2009 Las Vegas schedule.

Daye was the dazzler a year later, scoring 20 points to highlight a stuffed statistical line, and he might have added 10 more points with a little better luck and more typical foul shooting. Daye got inside many times for easy looks only to have shots roll off the rim. Still, he was the game’s dominant offensive player as the Pistons overcame a sluggish start and a nine-point deficit to crush Golden State 89-69 and run their Las Vegas record to 2-0.

Daye knocked down two 3-point shots, scored off post moves and put the ball on the floor to get inside with great effect while adding five rebounds, four assists and three blocked shots.

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Posted Saturday, July 10, 2010
Furious Finish
NBA teams don’t obsess over wins and losses in Summer League, focusing on the big picture of player development by putting them in stressful situations to gauge their reactions. Until it gets to the fourth quarter of a tight game, at least. Then competitive instincts take over and it might as well be a winner-take-all playground game where heart usually trumps all.

The Pistons got a good glimpse of heart, at least, in an 89-84 Summer League opening win over the Los Angeles Lakers that saw them come back from 11 down in the fourth quarter and close the game on a 20-4 run sparked by second-year forwards Austin Daye, Jonas Jerebko and DaJuan Summers and punctuated by rookies Terrico White and Greg Monroe.

Nobody exemplified it more than Jerebko, who struggled with his shot and tough defensive assignments against bigger and more physical players yet found a way, the same trait he exhibited in rising from the 39th pick of the 2009 draft to indispensable part as a rookie.

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Posted Thursday, July 8, 2010
Passing Fancy
Greg Monroe sees the court so fully and passes the ball so instinctively, you figure there has to be one of those stories behind him: small kid hits late growth spurt and takes all his experience as a point guard with him into the post.

Nope.

“I have never been a guard,” he said in his deep baritone after Thursday’s final practice before the Pistons open Summer League play on Friday. “Never been a point guard, never been any type of guard. I’ve always been a big man.”

But in three days of practice with the Pistons in Las Vegas, Monroe has wowed everyone with his ability to spot open teammates in any number of ways. With his back to the basket in the post, hitting cutters behind him. In transition, where he seems perfectly comfortable handling the ball in the middle of the floor. And off the boards, when he fired a perfectly placed outlet pass to a streaking DaJuan Summers three-quarters of the floor away for a dunk on Thursday.

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Posted Thursday, July 8, 2010
Stepping Up
Like any properly run body, the Pistons are planning for an orderly transition of leadership. Whether it happens sooner or later, the seeds for such a transition are being sown in the arid desert valley of Las Vegas, where Rodney Stuckey has taken up residence to foster chemistry and last year’s three rookies are stepping up to broader responsibilities.

“That’s what I’m going to have to do,” Stuckey said. “That’s what I want to do, so I’m going to be doing it a lot more. You guys will be hearing me a lot more on the court, telling people where to go. It’s going to be a lot different next year. I’ve just got to be that guy. It’s going to happen. You guys will see.”

Stuckey has donned his workout gear and been semi-participating in practices as the Pistons prepare for their Friday NBA Summer League opener, but he’s also been acting as a quasi-coach, helping run drills and reinforcing the messages being delivered by the coaching staff. Assistant Pat Sullivan is running practices and will coach the team’s five games in Las Vegas with John Kuester and assistant Darrell Walker observing and chiming in when they see fit, but they haven’t had to say much so far.

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Posted Tuesday, July 6, 2010
Seller’s Market
It’s as predictable as the swallows returning to San Juan Capistrano every year, even though the swallows this year took up residence 50 miles away at a swanky country club. (Smart swallows.) NBA free agency dawns and the first few days are filled with contract offers that elicit howls of derision for the idiot GMs – or at least the deriders would have you believe – tossing money around like drunken sailors.

A few ex-Pistons, Darko Milicic ($20 million, four years) and Amir Johnson ($34 million, five years) got jaw-dropping contracts. Milwaukee, the epitome of an NBA small-market team saddled with an arena and lease arrangement that makes financial survival a grind, spent $72 million on Drew Gooden and John Salmons.

“Overspending in free agency” is a redundancy. It’s true in the NBA, just as it is in the NFL, NHL and baseball. In the NBA, teams rarely have cap space to go shopping for free agents above the mid-level exception threshold. It’s the time they’re able to add talent without sacrificing talent – and there’s a premium to be paid for the privilege: overspending.

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Posted Thursday, July 1, 2010
Full Plate
With five players dotting their Summer League roster that the Pistons expect to be with them for the 2010-11 NBA season, including at least two and possibly four who have a shot at earning spots in the rotation, Joe Dumars will have more commanding his attention than most of his peers when the league descends on Las Vegas next week.

Here are the three situations that most closely bear watching...

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Posted Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Team Work
The Pistons’ Summer League roster puts them in a fairly unique position that gives the coaching staff a chance to hammer the themes John Kuester espouses about teamwork and sharing the basketball early and often.

Many teams head to Summer League with no more than one or two players who figure to crack their NBA roster in the season ahead and set up the rest of their Las Vegas roster, and their game plans, to accommodate those players.

But the Pistons’ entire starting five will consist of players they fully expect to be on their 2010-11 NBA roster, so the same principles they will apply in October and beyond will be in effect starting next Tuesday when Pat Sullivan, who’ll run the team while Kuester observes along with Joe Dumars and his staff, gathers them for their first practice.

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