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The 1989–90 NBA season was the Detroit Pistons' 42nd season in the National Basketball Association, and 33rd season in the city of Detroit. [1] The team played at the Palace of Auburn Hills in suburban Auburn Hills, Michigan .
A ticket for a November 1988 game between the Pistons and the Charlotte Hornets. The 1988–89 NBA season was the Detroit Pistons' 41st season in the NBA and 32nd season in the Detroit metropolitan area. [1] The Pistons moved from the Pontiac Silverdome to the brand-new Palace of Auburn Hills before the start of the season. [1]
The Pistons’ third period of success, with former on-court star Dumars serving as general manager and building a top team from other franchises’ discards, occurred between 2001–02 and 2007–08 when the team won fifty games or more during every season, including a third NBA title in 2003–04 and a franchise record total of wins two ...
The Pistons had one of the most dominant playoff runs in NBA history, finishing 15–2 with their only losses to the Chicago Bulls in the Eastern Conference Finals. This NBA playoffs also holds the record for the most sweeps in an entire NBA playoffs with 9 out of 15 series being decided in just 3 or 4 games.
The Pistons finished the regular season with a record of 64–18, setting new franchise records for both overall and road victories (27). [ 136 ] [ 140 ] [ 141 ] In addition, the team set an NBA record by starting the same lineup in 73 consecutive games from the start of the season.
Detroit Pistons looked like the Washington Generals at times during their NBA record 27th consecutive loss. These 3 plays summed it up perfectly.
2. Joe Dumars vs. Los Angeles Lakers, Game 3, 1989 NBA Finals. After capturing games one and two in Detroit, the Pistons were tasked with repeating the feat in Los Angeles.
Named as one of the Top 10 Teams in NBA History [45] 1987–88: Los Angeles Lakers: 62–20 (.756) 1988: Detroit Pistons: Los Angeles Lakers: 1988: Los Angeles Lakers: 23 82 [46] 1988–89: Detroit Pistons: 63–19 (.768) 1989: Detroit Pistons: Los Angeles Lakers: 1989: Detroit Pistons: 25 82 2 expansion teams joined; named as one of the Top 10 ...