hhlogonewZZ2.jpg (3833 bytes)hhlogopegZZ.jpg (3308 bytes)2004 Pistons Champs Photos
Order  1-800-870-1102
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Photos

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All photos are officially licensed 8x10's.
They feature the official NBA Finals Logo and include Holograms. A great addition to any Pistons fan's collection.
Photos can be purchased seperately or in sets.

For Further Info Call 1-800-870-1102
2004 Detroit Pistons 10 Piece Photo Set
Item #04NBASET10 $42.00
Set includes 10 NBA Champs Photos plus
1 Free Bonus photo

Pistons Champions Composite
#04NBA1


 



The Palace At Auburn Hills
Celebration after win.
#04NBA2
 

Chauncey Billups with MVP
& Champs Trophies  #04NBA3
 

Ben Wallace With Trophy
#04NBA4
 

Tayshaun Prince With Trophy
#04NBA5

 

Corliss Williamson
Celebrates #04NBA6

 

Rasheed Wallace
Game Action #04NBA7

 

Richard Hamilton
High Five
#04NBA7


 

Rasheed Wallace Kissing Trophy
#04NBA9

 

Ben Wallace - Painting Final X
#04NBA10
 

Free Bonus Photo


Ben Wallace & Darko Milicic
#04NBA331

 

 

Pistons become NBA champions

Ben Wallace notched 18 points and 22 rebounds to help the Detroit Pistons crush the Los Angeles Lakers 100-87 today to claim the NBA championship and end one of the great dynasties in the competition's history.

Showing attacking flair to go along with their trademark gritty defense, the Pistons completed one of the biggest upsets in the NBA finals to lift their first title since 1990 with a startling dissection of the heavily-favored Lakers.

With three titles in the last four years and a roster stocked with All-Stars and future Hall of Famers, the swashbuckling Lakers arrived at the finals expecting to add to the franchise's glorious legacy.

But the Pistons, who rely on teamwork over glitz and glamor, utterly dominated the Lakers to win the best-of-seven finals 4-1 and return the title to the Eastern Conference for the first time since 1998.

The Detroit victory earned their Hall of Fame coach Larry Brown the first NBA title in his 21-year career while denying his LA counterpart Phil Jackson a record 10th championship ring.

It also gave Detroit's reclusive billionaire owner Bill Davidson his second championship in as many weeks, adding the Larry O'Brien trophy to the Stanley Cup his Tampa Bay Lightning picked up last Monday.

"This is a great night and the guys did a tremendous job," said the 81-year-old Davidson over the deafening cheers.

While it was the Pistons's crippling defence that carried them to the title, it was the team's offensive guard Chauncey Billups who walked away with Most Valuable Player honors.