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12/22/2009 11:14 PM EST
Wallace scores 29, Bobcats beat Pistons 88-76
CHARLOTTE 88, DETROIT 76

By MIKE CRANSTON
AP Sports Writer

CHARLOTTE, N.C.(AP) -- Stephen Jackson showed his competitive
spirit Tuesday night by playing through painful back spasms.

Yet as he winced while gingerly putting on his dress shirt after
his Charlotte Bobcats beat the undermanned Detroit Pistons
88-76, Jackson declared that teammate Gerald Wallace plays just
as hard as him.

"But with more athleticism," Jackson said.

Wallace had 29 points and 12 rebounds in his return after a
concussion scare, continuing perhaps his best season as a pro as
the Bobcats snapped a three-game losing streak.

"Gerald is a monster, man," Jackson said. "I know if I had to
vote for anybody in the All-Star (game), with the year he's
having he definitely needs to be there.

"I love him because of how hard he plays."

His energy was too much for the Pistons, who lost their fifth
straight as they again had 52 points a game in street clothes,
with Richard Hamilton (hamstring), Tayshaun Prince (back) and
Ben Gordon (ankle) sidelined.

Gordon thought on Monday that he was close to returning, but
said his ankle "didn't feel right" after a workout and he missed
his eighth straight game.

Throw in Charlie Villanueva being limited by a sore foot, and
the Pistons had few options after Rodney Stuckey, who scored 20
points.

"I just couldn't move out there really, man," said Villanueva,
who shot 2 for 8. "I couldn't really take off. It's
frustrating."

Wallace missed Sunday's loss to New York after getting elbowed
in the face a night earlier. The Bobcats don't think he
sustained what would be his fifth concussion as a pro, and he
passed a series of tests over the past two days to get cleared
to return.

The 6-foot-7 Wallace, second only to Orlando's Dwight Howard in
rebounds per game, saw no drop-off there and had a big game from
3-point range.

Wallace shot 4 of 6 on 3s, including a 23-footer early in the
second half to put Charlotte up 60-39. The Pistons got no closer
than 12 points the rest of the way and Charlotte finished 9 of
18 from long range ahead of a three-day break.

"It makes Christmas a whole lot better right now," Wallace said.

Jackson added 13 points, eight rebounds and four assists two
nights after leaving the Knicks loss in the third quarter. He
joked at shootaround that he was going to "take some Advil and
play" and was clearly in pain. Running into a screen in the
third quarter made it worse.

"He's courageous, man," Wallace said. "I've had back spasms and
I don't know how he did it. ... I wouldn't have been able to do
it."

Each time Jackson came out he got a heat pad wrapped around his
lower back. He had to be helped by a trainer to sit down in the
second quarter and sat on a large exercise ball in the third.
But it didn't seem to slow him on the floor

Jackson's driving layup and his feed to Nazr Mohammed for a dunk
keyed an 18-5 run to start the second quarter that put Charlotte
ahead 41-24. Wallace had 19 points at halftime and the Bobcats
led 52-36, spoiling Pistons coach John Kuester's return to North
Carolina.

Kuester spent time before tip-off chatting with his former boss,
Charlotte coach Larry Brown, and talking up his old school. But
Kuester, an assistant under Brown on Detroit's 2004 NBA
championship team, had an overmatched roster.

Chucky Atkins, Jonas Jerebko and Jason Maxiell were in the
starting lineup for the Pistons, who got most of their offense
from the emerging Stuckey.

He hit nine of 20 shots, but Will Bynum (12 points) was the only
other player in double figures for Detroit, which had won four
straight in Charlotte.

"It's not fun losing, and it does play on you a little bit,"
Kuester said. "But these guys are going to bounce back."

The Bobcats were without guard Flip Murray, who has a sprained
right ankle, then lost struggling center Tyson Chandler to a
sprained left foot in the third quarter.

Ex-Piston Mohammed filled in well in the middle with 12 points
and nine rebounds. But the night belonged to Wallace.

"He's shooting the ball better. He gives you effort," Brown
said. "He doesn't seek shots. He takes what's there. He was
phenomenal."

NOTES: An X-ray on Chandler ruled out a fractured foot. "I'm
sure it'll feel better soon," he said. ... Brown was talking to
reporters after shootaround when Hamilton walked by. "Greatest
coach of all-time right there," Hamilton said. ... Brown on all
the Pistons' injuries: "I look at it as a good thing. They're
developing the young guys and when they come back they're going
to be off and running."

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