DETROIT – Pistons spokesman Mark Barnhill, introducing new coach Dwane Casey, said he tucked his notes for today’s press conference into his jacket pocket. Then, as he pulled them out, he discovered an old Pistons playoff ticket in the same pocket.
“It’s a bit of an omen and a bit of a challenge,” Barnhill said.
The ticket was for the Pistons’ best playoff performance in a decade.
“No pressure,” Casey said.
Actually, really, no pressure.
Detroit lost by only two points in Game 4 of the 2016 first round, getting swept by the Cavaliers in the game Barnhill referred to. The Pistons haven’t won a playoff game in the last 10 years and reached the postseason only twice in that span. A two-point loss was their best result.
They’re starving for only moderate success. The 59 wins and second-round loss that got Casey fired by the Raptors? That’d be a dream season in Detroit. Even just making the playoffs next year would be welcomed.
“Our time is now,” Casey said. "…The talent level on the roster is there.”
It better be.
The Pistons are too close to the luxury-tax line to use most of the mid-level exception. They surrendered their first-round pick in the Blake Griffin trade. They’re left with only the No. 42 pick in the second round.
“Whatever player we get, that would be great. But we don’t need another one,” Pistons owner Tom Gores said. “Like, we’re good. That’s why Dwane is here.”
That and $35 million.
The Pistons presented Casey with a favorable contract, a front-office head he knows (more on that later) and a solid roster. Detroit is probably better off trying to win now, because the alternative would be even trickier to pull off. With so many highly paid players stained by losing, the Pistons can’t easily switch paths and rebuild. Blake Griffin, Andre Drummond and Reggie Jackson are close enough to their primes that the present should be the priority, even if this team maxes at pretty good.
Yet, Detroit’s brass couldn’t help but raise expectations even further.
“We have three very – we have a great roster – but very special players,” Gores said of Griffin, Drummond and Jackson.
That’s an overstatement. Besides, how much noise can Detroit make with the Celtics and 76ers rising the Raptors still hanging around?
“I feel very comfortable that we’ll have a product that will compete with the teams that you just said,” Gores’ advisor, Ed Stefanski, said. “We have to win games, as Tom said. But you don’t usually get to an organization and have three core guys like we have.”
Again, they’re talking about Blake Griffin, Andre Drummond and Reggie Jackson.
Griffin hasn’t made an All-Star team in three years, a drought players rarely escape. Drummond is a borderline All-Star in the East (and a tough fit with Griffin). Jackson has only once even sniffed the All-Star discussion.
Casey also praised those three – and Detroit’s last three first-round picks: Stanley Johnson, Henry Ellenson and Luke Kennard. Johnson particularly drew attention from Casey, whose Raptors got swept by LeBron James’ Cavaliers the last two years and lost the most lopsided six-game series in NBA history to Cleveland the previous year.
“Somebody said, ‘Well, what happened to Toronto in the playoffs? ‘Well, I said, ‘It’s about matchups,’” Casey said. “And Stanley Johnson is the best match up for 23 in Cleveland that there is, physically.”
Maybe Casey, with his strong record of player development, will help Johnson eventually compete at those high levels.
“We’re not developing,” Casey said. “We’re not two or three years away. We want to win right now.”
The Pistons are so confident in their current roster, they haven’t even hired a general manager or equivalent. For now, Stefanski – advisor to the owner with the title of “senior executive” – is running the show. It sounds as if that could continue for a while.
“We could make Ed GM tomorrow,” Gores said. “That’s easy. If you guys want a title, that’s kind of easy.
“That’s not the point. The point is we’re building an organization, not around one person, but around what our vision is.”
Stefanski said, no matter how the front office is assembled, Casey will report to him. And Stefanski will report to Gores.
After giving Stan Van Gundy massive control, the Pistons are dispersing power.
Casey is a good coach, and he’ll help. Stefanski has plenty to prove as a front-office head. Gores is still learning as an owner, a failed experiment (keeping Joe Dumars) and unfulfilling tenure (Van Gundy’s) behind him. The roster is solid, though unexciting, when healthy.
They’re now all in it together, awaiting a chance to deliver. Considering how modest external expectations are, maybe they will.
But as the Pistons overstate their standing, it gets harder to take them seriously.