"Detroit sports fans should be reading 'Out of Bounds' pretty much every day" -- Rob Visconti, a.k.a. The Bleacher Guy
You can find out a lot while standing "Out of Bounds".
Opinions, observations, opines, obliqueness, oratories, and sarcastic humor (haven't found a word for sarcastic humor that starts with "o"), all about sports, with a decidedly Motor City flare. All that's missing from this blog are a bowl of pretzels and a cold one. Although, if you're buying....
"Detroit sports fans should be reading 'Out of Bounds' pretty much every day" -- Rob Visconti, a.k.a. The Bleacher Guy
You can find out a lot while standing "Out of Bounds".
Opinions, observations, opines, obliqueness, oratories, and sarcastic humor (haven't found a word for sarcastic humor that starts with "o"), all about sports, with a decidedly Motor City flare. All that's missing from this blog are a bowl of pretzels and a cold one. Although, if you're buying....
Tuesday, March 27, 2007
Sheed's Miracle Shot Crushes The Nuggets
All that and more, and what I saw last night ranks right up there.
The Pistons were down three points with 1.5 seconds remaining. And they didn't have the ball. And the ball was being inbounded in their half of the court.
And they ended up winning the game.
Of course, I'm leaving out the main reason why: Rasheed Wallace's 60+ foot heave that smacked off the glass backboard and straight into the twine as time expired. But first the Pistons had to steal the inbounds pass, and thanks to Tayshaun Prince, they did that -- albeit probably due to a rather lazy effort by the Nuggets, who rightly figured they had this one in the left hand column.
That same situation could be played out a thousand times and I don't know that you'd see what happened last night at the Palace more than once, if at all.
Overtime was almost anti-climactic, but the Pistons prevailed, 113-109.
If Wallace's heroics had occurred in a playoff game, it would be talked about for years. Kind of like Chauncey Billups' half-court prayer to extend Game 5 of the 2004 Eastern Finals against the Nets. The Pistons lost that one, though.
Being an old fart, after Wallace's shot, I immediately thought about Jerry West's half-courter to tie the Knicks in an NBA Finals game. No three-pointer back then, or else West's shot would have been a game-winner.
But what made Wallace's shot so amazing wasn't just the shot itself. It was the circumstances. Teams with three-point leads AND the ball, and inbounding in their opponent's half of the court, aren't supposed to lose. Ever. Yet the Nuggets did.
The win was important for the Pistons, but the loss was even more important for the Nuggets. They haven't clinched a playoff berth yet, and every win is precious for them at this point.
I thought Denver coach George Karl's reaction, caught on replay by the FSD cameras, was priceless. Kind of like, "What am I supposed to say after THAT?"
Another old fart alert: after the Saints' Tom Dempsey beat the Lions with a 63-yard field goal at the final gun in 1970, Lions coach Joe Schmidt said, "Well, what can you say after something like that? You take a left turn and head home."
I don't think Karl would disagree that he couldn't have said it better himself.
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