Detroit Pistons
The Detroit Pistons are a National Basketball Association team based in the Detroit, Michigan metropolitan area.
Franchise history
The franchise was founded in 1941 in Fort Wayne, Indiana by Fred Zollner, owner of a General Motors subsidiary that manufactured piston parts. It is the oldest existing franchise in the NBA. Led by star forward George Yardley, the Fort Wayne Pistons were a popular franchise and appeared in the NBA Finals in 1954 and 1955, losing both times. In 1957, Zollner moved the team to Detroit, a much larger city that did not have an NBA franchise; the Detroit Gems had folded after one season of existence. The new Detroit Pistons played in Olympia Stadium for their first four seasons, then moved to Cobo Arena. The franchise was a consistent disappointment, struggling on both the court and the box office. In 1974, Zollner sold the team to Bill Davidson, who remains the team's principal owner. Displeased with the team's location in downtown Detroit, Davidson moved it to the suburb of Pontiac in 1978, where it played in the mammoth Silverdome, a structure built for professional football. (The Silverdome was the home of the NFL's Detroit Lions at the time.)
Related Topics:
1941 - Fort Wayne - Indiana - General Motors - Piston - George Yardley - NBA Finals - Olympia Stadium - Cobo Arena - 1974 - Bill Davidson - Pontiac - 1978 - Silverdome - Football - NFL - Detroit Lions
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The franchise's fortunes finally began to turn in 1981, when it drafted point guard Isiah Thomas out of Indiana University. In early 1982, it acquired center Bill Laimbeer and guard Vinnie Johnson. The three, along with later aquisitions Joe Dumars, Rick Mahorn, and Dennis Rodman, formed the core of a team that would rise to the top of the league. With their physical, intense style of play, the Pistons gained the nickname "Bad Boys." Coach Chuck Daly took the team to the NBA Finals three consecutive years (1988-90) and won NBA championships in 1989 and 1990. The team moved into the lavish Palace of Auburn Hills in 1988 and remains there today.
Related Topics:
1981 - Isiah Thomas - Indiana University - 1982 - Bill Laimbeer - Vinnie Johnson - Joe Dumars - Rick Mahorn - Dennis Rodman - Chuck Daly - NBA Finals - 1989 - 1990 - Palace of Auburn Hills - 1988
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The franchise went through a lengthy transitional period as its key players either retired or left. Though Grant Hill emerged as a gifted player, the team was unable to win a playoff series, losing to the Orlando Magic in 1996, the Atlanta Hawks in 1997 and 1999, and the Miami Heat in 2000. In the summer of 2000, Hill indicated his intentions to leave for Orlando, and Dumars—appointed the franchise's president of basketball operations that year—dealt Hill to the Magic in return for a pair of largely unheralded players. One of them, Ben Wallace, would prove to be a cornerstone for the franchise's revamped roster. Under Dumars' leadership, the Pistons have since surrounded Wallace with rising stars Chauncey Billups, Richard "Rip" Hamilton, Rasheed Wallace, and Tayshaun Prince. Coached by Hall of Fame inductee Larry Brown, the Pistons returned to prominence, winning the 2004 NBA championship in dominating fashion over the heavily-favored Los Angeles Lakers. As the franchise returned to the league's élite level, the tepid local support of the 1990s correspondingly increased, and despite playing in the league's largest arena, Pistons home games at the Palace now routinely sell out, thus regularly making the Pistons the league leaders in fan attendance, and the raucous Palace crowd one of the most formidable for opposing teams to play before in the NBA.
Related Topics:
Grant Hill - Orlando Magic - 1996 - Atlanta Hawks - 1997 - 1999 - Miami Heat - 2000 - Ben Wallace - Chauncey Billups - Richard "Rip" Hamilton - Rasheed Wallace - Tayshaun Prince - Hall of Fame - Larry Brown - 2004 - Los Angeles Lakers
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~ Table of Content ~
| ► | Introduction |
| ► | Franchise history |
| ► | 2004-05 season |
| ► | Players of note |
| ► | Franchise Leaders |
| ► | External links |
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