When you think of “Big Trades” or conference-shifting transactions in the history of the NBA, a handful come to mind. The recent Luka Dončić for a bag of pretzels and a pair of floor seats next to Jack Black, is certainly up there. There have been deadline acquisitions that propelled teams to NBA titles. There have probably been just as many trades that prevented a team from competing for an NBA title, which we will never know. The Pistons aren’t usually a team in the market for a star player at the deadline, but we’ll take a look back at a few historic and horrific trades the Pistons have made over the years.
The Most Significant Trades In Pistons History
Rasheed To The Rescue
Arguably, one of the most significant trades in Pistons history was the trade for Rasheed Wallace . Wallace was part of a three-way deal that sent guards Chucky Atkins and Lindsey Hunter to Boston and guard Bob Sura , center Željko Rebrača, and Celtics forward Chris Mills to Atlanta. Sheed was quite literally the missing piece to the puzzle. He complimented everything that the team did well. Wallace was a star player without star player baggage, even if a bit rough around the edges. Rarely does a trade like this bring home a world title. In this case, it was as sweet as Rasheeds’ jump shot, nothing but the bottom of the net. He stepped into the starting five and the rest is History.
Bye Bye Mr. Big Shot
Although it generated a ton of buzz when it was announced, the fallout from the trade put the Pistons in a funk even Motown music couldn’t shake out of them. Allen Iverson was well past his prime and already creating problems in Denver. Detroit thought it might catch lightning in a bottle by trading for the disgruntled star. But the players they traded for him were the real heartbreakers. Most notably Chauncey Billups , who had brought a championship to Detroit and helped bring back some of the Bad Boys’ era aura. The minute he left town, you could feel that energy go with him. If that didn’t sting enough, they also gave away a still serviceable Antonio McDyess . Another team-first guy with a locker room presence. All of this for a guy who came to Detroit because things weren’t going his way in Denver.
Bill Laimb-who?
In early 1982, 15 minutes before the trade deadline, the Pistons traded Phil Hubbard , Paul Mokeski along with their first- and second-round picks to the Cavaliers for Kenny Carr , who was averaging 15 points and 10 rebounds a night at the time. Also coming to Detroit was a bench-riding, beer-drinking, Young bruiser named Bill Laimbeer . Laimbeer was just waiting to be unleashed and play with a group of guys who were as tough and competitive as he was. Even if you were unimpressed with his on-court tactics, there was no doubting his competitiveness. Above all, he may be the most Loyal player to ever put on a Pistons legend. That’s an incredible honor. He also came back to coach the WNBA’s Detroit Shock and won a couple of titles. Cementing this coaching legacy in women’s basketball, of all things, for the 6’10 tough guy.
Franchise Player for Future Cornerstone
Every Pistons fan can remember when the face of the franchise, Grant Hill , agreed to a sign-and-trade deal with the Orlando Magic for 7 years and $93 million, while Detroit received Chucky Atkins and Ben Wallace in return. Orlando was gearing up for its own run, or so they thought. While Hill was plagued by injuries, managing just 47 games over three seasons. Ben Wallace was quietly and humbly becoming the cornerstone of a future era of dominance. His style of play brought back memories of old Pistons players, and the team started to match his intensity with like-minded players. He gave the franchise the boost they needed to get back over the hump. While nobody likes to see what happened to Grant Hill, it was one of those things that can’t be explained. Ben Wallace’s career was very close to never coming true.
Joe D. Strikes again
In yet another stroke of luck, what would become the last piece to the three-headed monster. Joe Dumars saw something in Richard Hamilton that nobody else really saw. Much like the Pistons did in Dumars’ many years earlier. Again, it was not without risk. Trading away a very good player and leading scorer in Jerry Stackhouse , who did it all for the Pistons. Brian Cardinal was sent to Washington as well, with the Pistons taking back Hubert Davis and Bobby Simmons . Fans could not fathom that they traded away their best player for a skinny little shooting guard from UConn. In a very short period, Hamilton, Billups, and Ben Wallace transformed their careers into what should be Hall of Fame-worthy. The team is still regarded as one of the last truly great teams that was built through savvy transactions. You’d be hard-pressed to see another team built in that structure.
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