According to a report on February 22, Pistons celebrity "Roaring Heaven" Rasheed Wallace participated in the show, talked about his old club Pistons, and mentioned several of his opponents, such as James, Kobe, and O'Neal.
Referring to the Pistons' defeat of the Lakers in 2004, he said that one of his favorite aspects was that the Pistons defeated the F4 Lakers with O'Neal, Kobe, Malone and Payton, much to the displeasure of then-NBA president David Stern, because the team Stern wanted to hype was O'Neal and Kobe's Lakers, not a civilian Pistons who had no historical supergiants.
Roaring Tianzun said that Payton, Malone, O'Neal and Kobe were all Hall of Famers, and none of the Pistons players were famous at the time, and Stern didn't want such a flat ** to win the championship, he wanted O'Neal, Kobe, Malone and Payton's Lakers to win the championship.
Roaring Tianzun said that the Pistons want to win the championship more, although Kobe and O'Neal also want to win the championship, but the Pistons are hungrier than the Lakers, because the Lakers have long had three consecutive championships and are aesthetically tired. However, the Lakers lost the championship in 2004 because Kobe Bryant wanted to grab the FMVP, so he shot wildly, but the efficiency was too low. Kobe Bryant wanted to grab the FMVP and cause the Lakers to lose the championship, which was admitted by the Lakers players at the time, and Billups also said that the Pistons' strategy to beat the Lakers was to frantically wrap up O'Neal and let Kobe let go, so that O'Neal would be unhappy without the ball.
Roaring Tianzun also talked about James. James met the Pistons in the 2007 Eastern Conference Finals, and the 22-year-old James scored 48 points, 9 rebounds and 7 assists in the Eastern Conference Finals, scoring 25 points in a row in the final moments, scoring 29 of the Cavaliers' last 30 points, and also had a team-wide quasi-kill. Wallace said that the game was great, that is, James was too accurate, and that game was one of his famous works. At that time, after the game, Kerr, who had not yet coached the Warriors, certified James as the first person in the league.