And I don't understand why.
I mean, the Pistons did win 59 games under Flip Saunders and still had a championship-tested nucleus led by "Mr. Big Shot" himself, Chauncey Billups.
In fact, considering the way Boston dominated the Los Angeles Lakers on the boards and abused them with the pick-and-roll on the offensive end in the NBA Finals, it wasn't all that hard to argue that Detroit was the second-best team in the NBA last season.
Dumars wasn't the one making that argument, however.
First, the Louisiana native jettisoned Saunders and went with the unproven Michael Curry as head coach, and then he put virtually all his key pieces on the trade market.
Rumors dogged Billups, enigmatic big men Rasheed Wallace and the unselfish Tayshaun Prince all summer.
Dumars was unable to pull the trigger on anything significant until Monday when he agreed to ship Billups, veteran power forward Antonio McDyess and center Cheikh Samb to the Rocky Mountains for mercurial scoring machine Allen Iverson.
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For a while, Larry Brown was able to rein in Iverson and take advantage of his incredible talents by moving him from the point to the off guard, and surrounding him with defensive-minded role players like Eric Snow, Aaron McKie, George Lynch and Tyrone Hill.
The result was a trip to the NBA Finals in 2001, before injuries - along with Shaquille O'Neal and Kobe Bryant - ended a spectacular run.
Iverson, who will become a free agent in the offseason, will arrive in the Motor City with plenty of defensive-minded players. In fact, Prince and Wallace can be torturous at that end of the floor. But, unlike Snow, Lynch and Hill, the Pistons' big time defenders aren't offensively challenged. Prince and Wallace, especially, need their touches.
Meanwhile, the Pistons already have Richard Hamilton, the game's best player at moving without the ball, at the two spot, meaning Iverson will be forced to take over Billups' role as the quarterback of the team.
A shoot-first guy, Iverson isn't likely to care about getting the ball to his new teammates in spots where they can succeed, something Billups excelled at.
Clearly, Dumars was itching for change, and now he finally has it.
No one deserves a longer rope. Dumars was a two-time NBA champion as a player in Detroit. He was the NBA's executive of the year for the 2002-03 season, the architect of the 2004 NBA Championship club and the pilot of a team that has been to the Eastern Conference Finals six straight years.
So it's not hard to understand why William Davidson, the Pistons' owner, defers to Dumars and gave him the rope.
That said, change for the sake of change rarely works, and Dumars is about to find that out the hard way.
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