Grizzlies recall Thabeet from NBA D-League

Monday, March 8, 2010 | | 0 comments


MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -- The Memphis Grizzlies recalled rookie center Hasheem Thabeet from the Dakota Wizards of the NBA Development League on Monday after less than two weeks in the minors.

The 7-foot-3 Thabeet was sent to the D-league on Feb. 25. He averaged 13.8 points, 11.2 rebounds and 3.17 blocks in six games with Dakota.

"I was on the bench for a long time," Thabeet said of his lack of playing time before being sent to Dakota. "I got to go out there and play big minutes (with the Wizards), try to work on the stuff the coaches wanted me to do -- rebound the ball, block shots, and be able to score when you get the ball. To stay active overall. I was successful doing that."

Thabeet, the second overall pick last year out of Connecticut, had averaged 2.5 points, 2.9 rebounds and 1.1 blocks in 50 games for the Grizzlies.

The 23-year-old is the highest drafted player to play in the NBA's minor league. The purpose was to give him minutes, provide competition and build his confidence. He did not play in three of Memphis' five games before being sent to Dakota, and had not played more than 10 minutes since seeing 14 minutes of action on Feb. 5 against Houston.

"They gave me a reason why I was going up there," Thabeet said, "so it wasn't as tough as a lot of people were expecting. They explained to me why I was going there, and I was OK with it."

With the Wizards, he started four of six games and had a career-high 19 points Feb. 28 at Fort Wayne and a personal-best 18 rebounds March 5 at Tulsa. The Wizards were 5-1 during his stay.

"He went down and played well," Memphis coach Lionel Hollins said. "He was a huge factor for them. The one game he fouled out, they lost in the end. They're not 5-1, if he's not blocking shots and rebounding the way he was, and even scoring."

The Wizards' schedule contributed to Thabeet's return. Dakota doesn't play again until Sunday.

"That would have been a week for him to do nothing," Hollins said. "It didn't serve any purpose with him not being able to play."

Cavaliers hold James out against Spurs

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CLEVELAND (AP) -- LeBron James insists he's "good." The Cleveland Cavaliers don't want their superstar to play again until he's great.

James sat out his second consecutive game on Monday night against the San Antonio Spurs to rest a tender right ankle he twisted on Friday against Detroit. He missed Saturday's game in Milwaukee and the Cavs, who don't play again until Friday, are being extra cautious.

Cavaliers coach Mike Brown said in addition to having a bum ankle, James has some soreness in his back. However, it's nothing he couldn't play through, Brown said, and if this were the playoffs, James would be on the floor.

James did not take part in the morning's shootaround, opting to lift weights while his teammates went through preparations for the Spurs. As he left the building with a custom-designed Snuggie draped over his left shoulder, James was asked how he felt.

"I'm good," he said.

Earlier, Brown said it would be a game-time decision whether James would play, but it seemed both sides had agreed long before tip-off.

"This is an opportune time for him to get some rest," Brown said. "My gut feeling is that this is the right time for this to happen. He wants to play. He doesn't like sitting."

James was not available to reporters before the Cavs hosted the Spurs.

Cleveland is 0-7 in the past three seasons when James doesn't play.

"We miss a lot when he's not in there," Brown said. "He makes me look like I know how to coach a little bit better."

Brown said Cleveland's postseason seeding is not a factor in any decisions he makes about James, who is averaging 39 minutes per game. The Cavs have a five-game lead over Orlando for the best record in the Eastern Conference, and they hold a three-game advantage over the Los Angeles Lakers for the league's best mark, which would guarantee Cleveland home-court advantage throughout the playoffs.

"If I was concerned about that, then I would've said, 'Tape that bad boy up against Milwaukee,"' Brown said. "He could play if it was a playoff game. With all the bumps and bruises he does have and the minutes he's logged ... I know he wouldn't say this, but his body has to be feeling the effects from playing all those minutes."

The Cavs can't survive long without James, but Brown is confident a few games won't hurt.

"This group is capable of winning games without him," he said.

Cleveland is still without center Shaquille O'Neal (thumb) but the Cavs got back guard Daniel Gibson, who missed four games after the birth of his first child.

Source: nba.com

Top 10 teams show why they're there

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It's that time of year.

Upon the completion of Friday's games, we reached the 3/4 pole of the season. Most teams have just 19 or 20 games remaining, and a glance at the standings sees only two or three teams with a realistic shot of climbing out from lottery position and making the playoffs.

The other 11 or 12 teams can start making plans for a trip to New Jersey on May 18... except for the Knicks, of course, because they don't have their lottery pick, and the Nets, for whom it's only a five-minute drive to Secaucus.

This past week's results are evidence that those teams are starting to pack it in. The bottom ten teams in last Monday's rankings went 6-30 last week, and none of them won more than a single game.

Meanwhile, it's clear that that the best teams in the league are starting to turn it on down the stretch. Last week's top 10 went 30-9 last week. Take away the struggling Lakers, and the other nine teams went 29-6, with none losing more than a single game.

Of course, when all of the good teams are playing well, it becomes difficult to make much headway in the rankings. The Magic, Mavs and Celtics combined to go 12-0 over the last seven days, but they each moved up just one spot.

• Last Week: Center-less Cavs reclaim No. 1 spot

Hero Team of the Week: Orlando (4-0) - The Magic capped off a strong week with a soul-cleansing win over the Lakers.
Zero Team of the Week: Washington (0-3) - The Wizards lost two games to the Bucks by a combined 41 points, and then collapsed at the end of Sunday's game in Boston.

High jumps of the week: Miami (+5), Sacramento (+3), Denver (+2), Milwaukee (+2)
Free falls of the week: New Orleans (-4), Chicago (-3), Seven teams (-2)

East vs. West: The West is 202-160 (0.558) in inter-conference games and was 8-8 this week.

Pace: Possessions per 48 minutes (League Rank)
Off: Points scored per 100 possessions (League Rank)
Def: Points allowed per 100 possessions (League Rank)
The league averages through Sunday are 95.2 possessions (per team) per 48 minutes and 104.3 points scored per 100 possessions.

NBA.com's Power Rankings are just one man's opinion and are released every Monday during the season. If you've got an issue with the rankings, or have a question or comment for John Schuhmann, send him an e-mail. You can also follow him on twitter.


TEAM (LAST WEEK) REC. BREAKDOWN
1 Cleveland (1) 49-15 Pace: 93.4 (25), Off: 109.1 (3), Def: 101.0 (7)
The Cavs' defense has improved (99.2 rating over the last seven games), but without LeBron James, they had nothing offensively in Milwaukee on Saturday. James may sit again Monday against the Spurs, but Cleveland still has a three-game edge over the Lakers.
2 Orlando (3) 44-20 Pace: 94.9 (16), Off: 107.7 (7), Def: 99.7 (3)
After Sunday's win, the Magic are just two games behind L.A. in the standings, which matters because Orlando is looking just as dangerous as they were a year ago. The key of late has been the backcourt, which has helped crank up the offense.
3 Dallas (4) 43-21 Pace: 94.5 (20), Off: 106.7 (10), Def: 103.2 (12)
The Mavs' 11-game winning streak is a little strange. Neither their offense nor defense has been consistent. They scored just 89 points in Charlotte and gave up 116 in Chicago last week. With the Wolves, Nets and Knicks up this week, the streak shall go on.
4 L.A. Lakers (2) 46-18 Pace: 96.0 (9), Off: 105.8 (11), Def: 99.6 (2)
The Lakers have lost three straight for the first time since they acquired Pau Gasol. After his coach called him "weak and sickly" earlier in the week, Gasol responded with 20 points and 11 boards in Orlando on Sunday, but his teammates shot 33 percent.
5 Denver (7) 42-21 Pace: 97.9 (5), Off: 109.1 (2), Def: 104.3 (16)
Kenyon Martin is having his left knee checked out Monday, and the West playoff picture hangs in the balance. It has been pointed out before, but it bears repeating: The Nuggets' defense has been much worse (109.7) in the eight games that Martin has missed.
6 Utah (5) 40-22 Pace: 95.4 (14), Off: 107.0 (8), Def: 102.3 (10)
With Andrei Kirilenko in and out of the lineup, the Jazz allowed their opponents to shoot 50 percent over a stretch of six games, before holding down the listless Clippers on Saturday. Their road-heavy March continues with a four-game trip this week.
7 Oklahoma City (6) 38-24 Pace: 95.5 (13), Off: 104.0 (16), Def: 100.2 (4)
The Thunder got away with a pair sub-par defensive games against the Kings this week, but they got spanked by the Nuggets in between. Two of OKC's worst offensive games have come against Denver, who they would meet if the playoffs started today.
8 Phoenix (9) 40-25 Pace: 98.0 (4), Off: 111.7 (1), Def: 107.7 (25)
The Suns got a huge win over the Nuggets on Monday, but Steve Nash admitted that he's dealing with pain and fatigue. Fortunately, Phoenix has five days off before they host the Lakers on Friday and should also get Leandro Barbosa back from a 21-game absence.
9 Boston (10) 40-21 Pace: 93.8 (22), Off: 104.6 (13), Def: 99.3 (1)
The Celtics have won four straight and their defense has been suffocating over the last three, but they didn't turn on the offensive switch on Sunday until the last six minutes of the game. Now, can they keep the switch on? They've got the Cavs again this Sunday.
10 Atlanta (8) 40-22 Pace: 93.1 (27), Off: 108.7 (4), Def: 104.0 (13)
The Hawks are making their way through of a stretch where they play nothing but bad and mediocre teams. Joe Johnson shot just 11-for-37 over the last two games, while the Hawks allowed their opponents to get to the line 85 times over the last three.

TEAM (LAST WEEK) REC. BREAKDOWN
11 San Antonio (12) 36-24 Pace: 93.8 (23), Off: 106.9 (9), Def: 102.4 (11)
The Spurs' defense is showing some signs of life, but they'll be without Tony Parker (broken hand) for the rest of the regular season. And they've got six games left against the Cavs, Lakers and Magic, plus visits to Atlanta, Boston, Dallas and Denver.
12 Portland (11) 37-28 Pace: 90.2 (30), Off: 107.7 (6), Def: 104.1 (14)
Maybe Brandon Roy hasn't got his rhythm back after all. He has shot just 18-for-55 (33 percent) in the last four games. The good news is that the Blazers' next six games are against bad defensive teams. Overall, their remaining schedule is relatively light.
13 Milwaukee (15) 33-29 Pace: 94.9 (15), Off: 101.6 (23), Def: 100.7 (6)
The league leaders in raw plus-minus since Feb. 1 do not play for the Cavs, Lakers or Magic. They play for the Bucks. Andrew Bogut and the recently-acquired John Salmons are both plus-145 since the start of last month. The Bucks are 13-4 in that stretch.
14 Miami (19) 32-31 Pace: 92.6 (28), Off: 103.9 (17), Def: 101.8 (8)
The roller coaster continues with the Heat winning three straight, including impressive Ws over the Lakers and Hawks. Dwyane Wade averaged 33.3 points and 12.0 assists in the three games. Meetings with the Bobcats and Bulls this week are huge.
15 Toronto (13) 32-29 Pace: 95.7 (11), Off: 108.4 (5), Def: 109.4 (30)
The Raptors were able to beat the Knicks without Chris Bosh, but they couldn't beat the Sixers with him. Not surprisingly, defense was the problem. They've allowed their last six opponents to shoot a combined 51 percent and they visit the Lakers on Tuesday.
16 Memphis (17) 32-31 Pace: 95.6 (12), Off: 104.8 (12), Def: 107.0 (23)
The Grizzlies have now lost eight straight at home and won six straight on the road. It's a strange run, but it's mostly about the competition. The eight home opponents have a current winning percentage of .582, while the six road opponents are at .386.
17 Chicago (14) 31-31 Pace: 95.9 (10), Off: 100.2 (27), Def: 102.1 (9)
The Bulls' defense misses Joakim Noah. They've allowed their opponents to shoot 50 percent and score 116.8 points per 100 possessions as they've dropped four straight. Now they've got a tough two-week stretch coming up, starting Tuesday with the Jazz.
18 Charlotte (18) 30-31 Pace: 93.1 (26), Off: 100.8 (25), Def: 100.5 (5)
If only the Bobcats played the Lakers more often. They're in ninth place, but tied in the loss column with both Miami and Chicago. With 21 games left, they've got two each against the two teams in front of them, starting with Monday's home game against the Heat.
19 Houston (20) 31-31 Pace: 96.1 (8), Off: 103.8 (18), Def: 104.2 (15)
If you've got your eyes on the playoffs, you just can't lose to the Kings and the Pistons in the span of five days. You especially can't shoot 39 percent against Sacramento's 24th ranked defense or let the Pistons' 26th ranked offense shoot 47 percent.
20 New Orleans (16) 31-32 Pace: 94.6 (18), Off: 104.4 (14), Def: 105.9 (18)
Chris Paul is closer to getting back on the court, but with four straight losses, the Hornets' chances at a third straight trip to the postseason are gone. They're 6-11 since losing Paul, with the defense struggling to get stops (112.4 rating over the last seven).

TEAM (LAST WEEK) REC. BREAKDOWN
21 Philadelphia (22) 23-39 Pace: 94.2 (21), Off: 103.1 (20), Def: 106.4 (21)
The Sixers' five-game losing streak came to an unexpected end in Toronto on Sunday, as Thaddeus Young broke out with 32 points. One thing Philly can look to accomplish over the next five weeks is getting Young, who's had a disappointing season, back on track.
22 L.A. Clippers (23) 25-38 Pace: 94.8 (17), Off: 100.9 (24), Def: 105.9 (19)
This week in Clipperland: A nice win over the Jazz, followed by three losses by an average of 22 points. Of course, that win was at home. After Saturday's loss, the Clippers are 1-45 in Utah (including the postseason) since 1990.
23 Washington (21) 21-39 Pace: 94.6 (19), Off: 101.8 (22), Def: 106.3 (20)
With wins over the Magic, Nuggets and Bulls in the last month or so, the Wizards have done a pretty good job of playing spoiler. But Sunday's attempt to put another nail in the Celtics' coffin fell apart in the final minutes. They've got the Hawks and Magic this week.
24 Sacramento (27) 21-42 Pace: 96.9 (6), Off: 102.9 (21), Def: 107.6 (24)
There has been much talk of Stephen Curry making a late run at the Rookie of the Year award, but it's not like Tyreke Evans is slowing down. Still the frontrunner, Evans is averaging 20.1 points and 6.7 assists, while shooting 48 percent since Feb. 1.
25 Detroit (26) 22-41 Pace: 91.3 (29), Off: 100.7 (26), Def: 106.7 (22)
The Pistons will take every precaution with Rodney Stuckey, who passed out on the bench during Friday's loss to the Cavs. Starting in Stuckey's place, Will Bynum recorded the second double-double of his career in Sunday's overtime win over the Rockets.
26 Indiana (24) 20-43 Pace: 100.1 (2), Off: 99.4 (28), Def: 104.5 (17)
The Pacers were somewhat competitive in Phoenix on Saturday, but it was essentially an empty trip out west. They haven't failed to get 10 road wins since the 1988-89 season, but they're stuck on seven with seven more to play, five against winning teams.
27 Golden State (25) 17-45 Pace: 102.5 (1), Off: 103.7 (19), Def: 108.0 (29)
Stephen Curry had his third 30-and-10 game in Atlanta on Friday, but shot just 8-for-23 in his hometown of Charlotte the next night. The Warriors will finish their five-game trip in New Orleans on Monday, looking to get their first road win in more than two months.
28 Minnesota (29) 14-49 Pace: 98.2 (3), Off: 98.6 (29), Def: 107.8 (27)
With Al Jefferson serving a two-game suspension, Kurt Rambis chose to start Ryan Hollins, rather than Kevin Love. Hollins is a -11.4 per 36 minutes this season, while Love is a -2.7. Love picked up his 28th and 29th double-doubles anyway.
29 New Jersey (30) 7-55 Pace: 93.8 (24), Off: 96.4 (30), Def: 107.8 (26)
It couldn't last forever. The Nets' 14-week run at the bottom comes to an end thanks to a 20-point win over the Knicks, which seems appropriate. New Jersey is 31-11 against New York since 2001 and has lost the season series only once in the last 10 seasons.
30 New York (28) 21-41 Pace: 96.2 (7), Off: 104.0 (15), Def: 107.9 (28)
If you're going to lose to the Nets, you might as well set a record. The Knicks' 18 attempts from 3-point range on Saturday were the most in game without a make in NBA history. They were 3-for-34 from downtown in their two losses over the weekend.
source: nba.com

One MVP is great, but multiple winners are a rare bird

Friday, March 5, 2010 | | 0 comments


0305kobedirk608.jpg
Will Kobe Bryant (left) or Dirk Nowitzki join the short list of two-time MVP winners this season?
Andrew D. Bernstein/NBAE via Getty Images

One MVP is great, but multiple winners are a rare bird

A week ago in this space, The Race looked at the impact on MVP candidates when a team has one superstar vs. two or more.

This week, the committee is reviewing NBA history for MVP winners who have two or more such trophies.

Maybe this is the NBA's version of baseball's "first-ballot Hall of Famers" cutoff to differentiate its elite of the elite at Cooperstown. The Race will just lay out some numbers and let you form your own opinions about past MVP winners -- and the three guys on this week's list who have a chance to move up from one-timer status.

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, of course, is the all-time MVP leader with six honors over his remarkable career. Bill Russell and Michael Jordan collected five each and Wilt Chamberlain was honored with four (though he curiously missed in 1961-62 after averaging his Herculean 50.4 ppg). That means four players have accounted for 20 of the 54 MVP awards since the modern version was created in 1955-56.

Three more players -- Larry Bird, Magic Johnson and Moses Malone -- each won three MVP awards. And four guys -- fittingly, three of the greatest power forwards in league history -- won two each: Bob Pettit, Karl Malone, Tim Duncan and playmaker Steve Nash. So that ups the "hogging" stats to 37 trophies spread around to just 11 players.

That leaves 17 one-and-done MVP winners, which is a far greater honor than that characterization makes it sound. The list of names still is a Who's Who and, literally, a timeline fit for Springfield, Mass.: Bob Cousy, Oscar Robertson, Wes Unseld, Willis Reed, Dave Cowens, Bob McAdoo, Bill Walton, Julius Erving, Charles Barkley, Hakeem Olajuwon, David Robinson, Shaquille O'Neal, Allen Iverson, Kevin Garnett, Dirk Nowitzki, Kobe Bryant and LeBron James.

An interesting sub-plot to The Race this season, then, is whether any of the three guys on this week's list -- James, Bryant and Nowitzki -- can boost himself into an even more special club by claiming his second Maurice Podoloff trophy. That would make it 38 out of 55 by just a dozen players. Stay tuned and keep counting.

1. Lebron James, Cavaliers (48-14)
GMPGPPGRPGAPGSPGBPGFG%3P%FT%
6239.029.87.18.61.71.0.504.345.776
Last Week's Rank - 1
Nets fans got about as close to having LeBron James on their side as they're going to get, given the pity James expressed for them after the Cavaliers' easy victory at Izod Center Wednesday. The free agent-to-be New Jersey supposedly is wooing even got booed a couple of times for not being flashy enough on breakaway dunks, which suggests that his 26-point, 14-assist, seven-rebound performances won't be coming in a New Jersey jersey anytime soon.

2. Dwight Howard, Magic (42-20)
GMPGPPGRPGAPGSPGBPGFG%3P%FT%
6235.118.713.11.61.02.8.603---.613
Last Week's Rank - 3
The committee likes continuous improvement at this rarefied level, and that's what Howard has been showing lately. First the Orlando strongman boosted his accuracy at the foul line. This week he made a big adjustment at the other end: After totaling 21 points and eight rebounds in 49 foul-plagued minutes in the Magic's previous two games, Howard didn't commit a single personal foul and racked up 28 points and 12 boards in a laugher over Golden State.

3. Kevin Durant, Thunder (36-24)
GMPGPPGRPGAPGSPGBPGFG%3P%FT%
6039.629.67.52.81.40.9.478.381.884
Last Week's Rank - 2
Uh oh, another streak bites the dust. A few days after Durant's string of 25-point games ended at 29, his streak of scoring 20 or more was snapped at 34 in a rout by Denver Wednesday. He also had a sub-par four boards and zero assists on an all-around off night for the Thunder.

4. Kobe Bryant, Lakers (46-16)
GMPGPPGRPGAPGSPGBPGFG%3P%FT%
5738.827.65.24.81.70.4.460.319.822
Last Week's Rank - 4
Bryant has been money at the line, sinking 29 of 33 freebies over his last three games. But his 39 points on 15-of-28 shooting in Miami -- and an airballed 3-pointer late in overtime -- wasn't enough to prevent the Lakers from losing their fifth in six tries in south Florida or slipping to 9-9 on the road since Dec. 26.

5. Dirk Nowitzki, Mavs (41-21)
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6138.025.27.72.60.91.0.479.360.908
Last Week's Rank - 6
You want to talk free throws (look, we know it's not sexy but they count, right?), we need to talk Nowitzki. This season, the Mavericks' sharpshooter -- who flicks his shots as easily as most of us shoot Nerf balls -- has made 96.4 percent of his foul shots in the fourth quarter and in overtimes. That's just one of the keys to the Mavericks' nine-game winning streak.

6. Carmelo Anthony, Nuggets (40-21)
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4837.828.66.33.41.30.4.457.341.829
Last Week's Rank - 5
Anthony had been running on "E" lately, in terms of his overall energy, but he roused from a personal mini-slump with 30 points, eight rebounds and five assists in the Nuggets' rout of OKC. Denver's small forward scored 23 in the first half, more than the Thunder's MVP candidate Kevin Durant (19) in the whole game. It was Anthony's 24th game of 30 points or more this season, up from 13 last year, but his first in seven games.

7. Deron Williams, Jazz (39-22)
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5537.218.64.110.11.20.2.474.378.785
Last Week's Rank - 9
First Williams racked up 35 points, with 13 assists, in the Jazz's 23-point victory against Houston. Then, after getting 13 and 13 in a loss to the Clippers, he had 27 points, nine assists, two steals and two turnovers in Utah's 116-108 triumph at Phoenix. Not bad for a guy who has been playing with a sore right wrist since January.

8. Chauncey Billups, Nuggets (40-21)
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5233.720.13.06.01.20.1.438.431.904
Last Week's Rank - 7
When Billups scored 21 at Phoenix Monday, it was the fifth time in seven games that he had led Denver in scoring -- no small achievement when you're playing alongside another MVP candidate (Anthony). The veteran point guard is averaging 23.2 points over his past 25 games.

9. Chris Bosh, Raptors (31-28)
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5336.424.511.42.30.61.1.525.372.790
Last Week's Rank - 8
One of those absence-makes-the-heart-grow-fonder weeks for Bosh, who skipped the Raptors' last trip with a sprained ankle. He did practice Wednesday but was listed as day-to-day for Toronto's game against the Knicks Friday. A 2-4 week by his teammates while he's out at least is the sort of thing that can help draw MVP support.

10. Dwyane Wade, Heat (31-31)
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5835.926.24.66.61.81.0.467.293.756
Last Week's Rank - --
A Steve Nash-like night by Wade -- and an un-Steve Nash-like night by Nash -- gets the Miami guard onto this last rung of The Race in place of Phoenix's playmaker. Wade didn't get locked into a scoring duel with Bryant in the Heat's 114-111 overtime victory over the Lakers; instead, he dished a season-best 14 assists. Heck, he didn't even take a shot in the extra five minutes, but he helped get Miami up to .500 (31-31) in its quest for the final East playoff spot. Nash? He had 14 points, 15 assists but (ugh!) seven turnovers in the loss to Utah Thursday.

Struggling Boston takes care of Detroit, thanks to Robinson

Wednesday, March 3, 2010 | | 0 comments


AUBURN HILLS, Mich. -- Nate Robinson scored 14 points in 16 minutes, Rajon Rondo added 15 points and 11 assists, and the Boston Celtics beat the Detroit Pistons 105-100 on Tuesday night.

The Celtics, playing for the first time since a humiliating home loss to the NBA-worst New Jersey Nets on Saturday, got 18 points from Ray Allen.

Jonas Jerebko scored 16 points for Detroit, which lost its fourth straight.

Rasheed Wallace missed a short jumper that could have given the Celtics a 10-point lead early in the third quarter, and his former team quickly rallied to pull within three.

Detroit continued to come back and took a 75-72 lead into the fourth, but the Celtics regained the advantage in the opening minutes of the period.

Robinson hit back-to-back 3-pointers to put Boston up 89-81 with seven minutes left. The Pistons were within 95-90 with 1:13 remaining, but Ben Wallace missed a pair of free throws, then had to be helped off the floor with a right knee injury. Wallace is 2 for 20 from the free throw line in Detroit's last five games.

Tayshaun Prince hit a 3-pointer - Detroit's second in 18 attempts - but the Celtics clinched the game from the line.

NOTES: Paul Pierce returned after missing three games with a sprained thumb, but Kendrick Perkins (flu-like symptoms) missed the game. ... Prince left late in the third quarter after badly twisting his left ankle, but returned midway through the fourth. ... Jerebko, playing on his 23rd birthday, was the Eastern Conference's rookie of the month for February. ... Rondo reached double figures in assists for the seventh straight game, the longest streak by a Celtic since Tiny Archibald did it in seven straight games in 1981-82.