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1986–87 Detroit Pistons season

NBA team season


NBA team season

(lost to Celtics 3–4)

The 1986–87 Detroit Pistons season was the Detroit Pistons' 39th season in the NBA and 30th season in the city of Detroit. The team played at the Pontiac Silverdome in suburban Pontiac, Michigan.

The disappointing finish of the previous year caused a roster shake-up as the team dealt Earl Cureton to the Chicago Bulls for Sidney Green, Kent Benson and Kelly Tripucka to the Utah Jazz for Adrian Dantley, and guard John Long to the Seattle SuperSonics for draft picks. The team added John Salley and Dennis Rodman in the 1986 NBA draft to complete the turnover. The moves by GM "Trader Jack" McCloskey paid immediate dividends as the team finished 52–30 (.634), 2nd in the Central Division. The team advanced to the playoffs, defeating the Washington Bullets 3–0 in the first round and then the Atlanta Hawks 4–1 to advance to the Eastern Conference finals against the Boston Celtics.

The tightly contested conference finals went to a 7th game thanks to Celtics star Larry Bird when he made an improbable steal in the closing seconds of Game 5. Leading by 1 point, Pistons star Isiah Thomas waived off a timeout request from Pistons coach Chuck Daly, hurried a lofting inbound pass to center Bill Laimbeer, as Bird stepped in for the steal, passing to teammate Dennis Johnson for the 108–107 Boston win. Long-time Celtic announcer Johnny Most's call of Bird's game-saving steal in the 1987 playoffs at the end of Game 5 in the Eastern Conference finals vs. Detroit was memorable with "Aaaaaaand now there's a steal by Bird, underneath to DEE-Jay, he lays it in...and Boston has a one-point lead right with one second to go... What a play by Bird!...Oh my this place is goin' crazy!" After a Pistons home win in Game 6, the series returned to the Boston Garden for the 7th game with the Celtics holding off Detroit 117–114 for the series victory.

Detroit was led on the season by guard Thomas (20.6 ppg, 10.0 apg, NBA All-Star), center Laimbeer (15.4 ppg, 11.6 rpg, NBA All-Star), and forward Dantley (21.5 ppg).

Draft picks

Main article: 1986 NBA draft

RoundPickPlayerPositionNationalityCollege
111John SalleyPF/CGeorgia Tech
227Dennis RodmanSF/PFSoutheastern Oklahoma State

Roster

  • Chuck Daly
  • Ron Rothstein
  • Dick Versace

Regular season

Season standings

:z – clinched division title :y – clinched division title :x – clinched playoff spot

Game log

Regular season

|- align="center" bgcolor="#ffcccc" | 8 | November 15, 1986 | Boston | L 111–118 | | | | Pontiac Silverdome | 3–5 |- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc" | 18 | December 13, 1986 | L.A. Lakers | W 119–114 | | | | Pontiac Silverdome | 10–8 |- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc" | 31 | January 10, 1987 | Boston | W 118–101 | | | | Pontiac Silverdome | 21–10 |- align="center" |- style="background:#cfc;" |- bgcolor="#bbffbb" |- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc" | 50 | February 19, 1987 | Seattle | W 117–105 | | | | Pontiac Silverdome | 33–17 |- align="center" bgcolor="#ffcccc" | 56 | March 1, 1987 | @ Boston | L 102–112 | | | | Boston Garden | 37–19 |- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc" | 59 | March 8, 1987 | Boston | W 122–119 (OT) | | | | Pontiac Silverdome | 39–20 |- align="center" bgcolor="#ffcccc" | 69 | March 26, 1987 | @ L.A. Lakers | L 111–128 | | | | The Forum | 45–24 |- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc" | 71 | March 29, 1987 | @ Seattle | W 108–107 | | | | Seattle Center Coliseum | 47–24 |- align="center" bgcolor="#ffcccc" | 74 | April 3, 1987 | @ Boston | L 115–119 (OT) | | | | Boston Garden | 48–26

Playoffs

|- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc" | 1 | April 24 | Washington | W 106–92 | Isiah Thomas (34) | Laimbeer, Rodman (10) | Isiah Thomas (9) | Pontiac Silverdome 15,419 | 1–0 |- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc" | 2 | April 26 | Washington | W 128–85 | Adrian Dantley (24) | Bill Laimbeer (9) | Vinnie Johnson (13) | Pontiac Silverdome 14,389 | 2–0 |- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc" | 3 | April 29 | @ Washington | W 97–96 | Dantley, Johnson (21) | Rick Mahorn (12) | Isiah Thomas (10) | Capital Centre 10,831

3–0
- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc"
1
May 3
@ Atlanta
W 112–111
Isiah Thomas (30)
Dennis Rodman (10)
Isiah Thomas (10)
Omni Coliseum
14,361
1–0
- align="center" bgcolor="#ffcccc"
2
May 5
@ Atlanta
L 102–115
Laimbeer, Rodman (20)
Bill Laimbeer (12)
Isiah Thomas (6)
Omni Coliseum
16,522
1–1
- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc"
3
May 8
Atlanta
W 108–99
Isiah Thomas (35)
Dennis Rodman (9)
Isiah Thomas (8)
Pontiac Silverdome
24,544
2–1
- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc"
4
May 10
Atlanta
W 89–88
Isiah Thomas (31)
Rick Mahorn (17)
Joe Dumars (5)
Pontiac Silverdome
17,269
3–1
- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc"
5
May 13
@ Atlanta
W 104–96
Joe Dumars (21)
Rick Mahorn (16)
Isiah Thomas (12)
Omni Coliseum
16,522
4–1
-
- align="center" bgcolor="#ffcccc"
1
May 19, 1987
@ Boston
L 91–104
Isiah Thomas (18)
Rick Mahorn (11)
Isiah Thomas (10)
Boston Garden
14,890
0–1
- align="center" bgcolor="#ffcccc"
2
May 21, 198
@ Boston
L 101–110
Isiah Thomas (36)
Bill Laimbeer (16)
Bill Laimbeer (7)
Boston Garden
14,890
0–2
- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc"
3
May 23, 1987
Boston
W 122–104
Adrian Dantley (25)
Rick Mahorn (12)
Vinnie Johnson (8)
Pontiac Silverdome
23,525
1–2
- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc"
4
May 24, 1987
Boston
W 145–119
Adrian Dantley (32)
Bill Laimbeer (13)
Thomas, Dumars (8)
Pontiac Silverdome
27,387
2–2
- align="center" bgcolor="#ffcccc"
5
May 26, 1987
@ Boston
L 107–108
Adrian Dantley (25)
Bill Laimbeer (14)
Isiah Thomas (11)
Boston Garden
14,890
2–3
- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc"
6
May 28, 1987
Boston
W 113–105
Dantley, Johnson (24)
Rick Mahorn (18)
Isiah Thomas (9)
Pontiac Silverdome
28,383
3–3
- align="center" bgcolor="#ffcccc"
7
May 30, 1987
@ Boston
L 114–117
Joe Dumars (35)
Bill Laimbeer (13)
Isiah Thomas (9)
Boston Garden
14,890
3–4
-

Awards and records

  • Isiah Thomas, All-NBA Second Team

References

References

  1. "1986–87 Detroit Pistons Roster and Stats".
  2. (May 26, 2021). "History on This Day: Larry Bird steals the pass from Isiah Thomas".
  3. Parquet, Professor. (August 18, 2017). "History week: The anatomy of Larry Bird's legendary steal to beat Detroit in 1987 East Finals".
  4. "Top Moments: Larry Bird's steal saves Celtics against Pistons".
Info: Wikipedia Source

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