AUBURN HILLS, Mich. (AP)—Allen Iverson’s season is over.
The Detroit Pistons said Friday the All-Star guard will miss the rest of the season—and the playoffs if they make it—because of a sore back.
“After talking with Allen and our medical staff, we feel that resting Allen for the remainder of the season is the best course of action at this time,” Pistons president of basketball operations Joe Dumars said in a statement released by the team. “While he has played in our last three games, he is still feeling some discomfort and getting him physically ready to compete at the level he is accustomed to playing this late in the season does not seem possible at this point.”
Iverson missed 16 games from Feb. 27 to March 28. He returned for the past three games and averaged 7.7 points and 2.7 assists in nearly 19 minutes. He complained about his role as a reserve, saying he would rather retire than come off the bench next season.
Leon Rose, Iverson’s agent, insisted Iverson’s health was the only factor in the decision.
“There’s nothing else going on,” Rose said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press.
The Pistons began Friday as the seventh-seeded team in the Eastern Conference. They lead Chicago by a half-game and Charlotte by two with less than two weeks left in the regular season.
Detroit plays Saturday in Philadelphia, where Iverson was the league’s MVP. The 76ers traded him two years ago to Denver and the Nuggets then dealt him to the Pistons for Chauncey Billups in November.
While Iverson’s arrival started a slump that lasted much of the season, Billups immediately made a huge impact on Denver, which has become one of the top teams in the Western Conference.
Iverson averaged 17.4 points, 4.9 assists and 3.1 rebounds for the Pistons, who struggled to integrate him and his preference to control the basketball on offense.
While he did not contribute much on the court, his $20-plus million contract that expires after this season gives Detroit a lot of salary cap space to potentially make major moves this summer and next.
Iverson said the right things when he was introduced as a Piston, but didn’t always do the right thing.
“One thing is for sure, I’m going to do whatever the coach wants me to do,” Iverson said at a packed news conference on the day Dumars presented him with a Detroit jersey.
Less than a month later, however, Iverson was the only player who didn’t show up for a practice coach Michael Curry wanted to have on Thanksgiving and was fined.
The native of Hampton, Va. has averaged 27.1 points and 6.2 points in his career since Philadelphia drafted him out of Georgetown with the first pick in the 1996 draft. He was league MVP in 2001, when he lifted the Sixers to the NBA finals, and was an All-Star this season for the ninth time.
Welp...that foo better make sure his agent works his ass off this summer. He'd be better off had he not ranted off like a little kid about his minutes being low and bringing up retirement but that's him and he wants play. If his back is that bad then it does kind of makes sense but he went about it the wrong way.The Piston's weren't a good fit for him and he wasn't for them. The Pistons have played one way for too long and are pretty much set in their ways. I was also thinking this, he doesn't have to play another game this season or in the playoffs if they make it and he still gets his 20 mill regardless. That shit must be nice!
YNS, I hear what you're saying, and I agree, that 20 Mil has got to be nice. But with him complaining (out loud) about coming off the bench, he's not doing anything but decreasing his value. He basically told every coach, player, and owner that he isn't willing to be a team player if he's asked to come off the bench because his pride won't allow him to. If I'm not mistaken, I believe he said that he wanted one more long-term contract before he gave it up. He sealed the deal with those comments. Yeah, he still has a lot of years left in him, but he has to be smart about things.