Something tells me this isn't a good idea...
ORLANDO, Fla. -- His team backed into a 3-1 corner in the Eastern Conference semifinals, Orlando Magic guard Jameer Nelson guaranteed a Magic victory when the series returns to Detroit on Tuesday.
"We're
going to make some adjustments and we're going to win this game,"
Nelson said after Orlando's 90-89 loss on Saturday. "I'm not being
arrogant or cocky or anything like that. I think [Saturday] we let it
slip out of our hands. Game 2 we let it slip out of our hands. We're
going to win this game in Detroit."
Nelson
That's a tall order for a Magic team
that couldn't even the series at home despite a 15-point, third-quarter
lead against a Pistons team that had All-Star point guard Chauncey Billups sitting on the bench in a sport coat. Even so, Orlando remains optimistic.
"Devastating
is the fourth loss in a series. It's a bad loss but it's not
devastating," Magic coach Stan Van Gundy said. "The series goes on."
Not for much longer if the Magic can't get Dwight Howard
on track. After becoming the first player since Wilt Chamberlain to
record three 20-point, 20-rebound games in a series during the first
round against Toronto, the Magic's 22-year-old All-Star has struggled.
He had just eight points Saturday -- all but two of them in the first
quarter -- with Detroit's veteran front line tugging persistently on
Superman's cape.
"He couldn't get in there and get the easy buckets that he wanted," said Pistons center Rasheed Wallace, who along with Antonio McDyess and Jason Maxiell
have banged Howard around all series. "We definitely saw that. That is
what we want -- we want a physical game. That's right up our alley."
Howard
was 3-of-12 from the field and shot just two free throws, making both.
He had 12 rebounds, but even that was below his league-leading average
of 14 during the regular season.
"They were very physical with him, and how the game is called is a huge thing," Van Gundy said."
Howard
admitted he was frustrated that the Magic were forced into Detroit's
half-court game. They couldn't get out in transition, which was the key
to their 111-point effort in a Game 3 victory, and he couldn't get the
ball in position to score.
"We've got to play our game -- that's
the only way to beat these guys," Howard said. "We can't get stuck into
playing the way they play basketball."
The Magic's challenge is
not impossible. Detroit did it to them in 2003, winning three straight
to wipe out a 3-1 deficit and advance to the second round. That was the
beginning of a nine-game playoff losing streak against the Pistons that
the Magic finally broke in Game 3.
Needing only one win in the
next three games to move on to the next round, it's not clear whether
the Pistons will try to rush back Billups. The team was aggressively
treating the hamstring he strained Thursday, but coach Flip Saunders
said Billups was still too sore to play Saturday. Saunders said it
didn't matter "whether it was a Game 7 of the NBA Finals or it's Game 4
against Orlando."
"His leg's just not ready and he can't do anything to be really effective," Saunders said.
He wouldn't guess when Billups would be ready again.