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SportsJune 15, 2004

AUBURN HILLS, Mich. -- Oh, great Zen Master, what now? How do you turn dysfunction into function? How do you unbreak what is so obviously broken? Can this marriage be saved? Is hope not lost? "Well, right now I don't think there's a challenge that's as imminent as this perhaps since the '95 season when we had to restructure and remake the Chicago Bulls," Lakers coach Phil Jackson said as his Los Angeles Lakers, trailing the Detroit Pistons 3-1 in the NBA Finals, prepared for Game 5...

By Chris Sheridan, The Associated Press

AUBURN HILLS, Mich. -- Oh, great Zen Master, what now?

How do you turn dysfunction into function? How do you unbreak what is so obviously broken? Can this marriage be saved? Is hope not lost?

"Well, right now I don't think there's a challenge that's as imminent as this perhaps since the '95 season when we had to restructure and remake the Chicago Bulls," Lakers coach Phil Jackson said as his Los Angeles Lakers, trailing the Detroit Pistons 3-1 in the NBA Finals, prepared for Game 5.

Those preparations did not include practice. Jackson gave the Lakers a day off aside from their fly-by at The Palace to publicly address the dueling possibilities of having their season ending Tuesday night in Detroit or continuing in Los Angeles where they'd attempt a comeback that would be unprecedented in NBA finals history.

"Understand that history is not necessarily on their side either," Kobe Bryant said. "There's both sides of the coin."

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Indeed, no home team has ever won the middle three games in the finals since the NBA switched to a 2-3-2 format in 1985.

But no team devoid of superstars has won a championship since 1979, and the Pistons might just buck that trend. A 7-1 underdog when the series began, Detroit was installed as a 3-point favorite to finish off the Lakers in Game 5 and bring the title back to the Eastern Conference for the first time since 1998.

Coaches often say that no game is as difficult as a close-out game. Desperation changes the equation for the team that's trailing, and overconfidence from the team that's winning can backfire.

In many ways, the Lakers are like a wounded animal begging to be put out of its misery, and the task confronting the Pistons is to finish the kill swiftly and deny Los Angeles even a glimmer of hope.

"It feels good, but it's really nothing to celebrate right now," Detroit's Chauncey Billups said. "This thing is far from over, and we understand that."

If not for Bryant's heroic 3-pointer to force overtime in Game 2, the series would already be over.

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