Pistons prevail in uneventful rematch

? Rasheed Wallace sauntered off the court and into the exit tunnel, pausing long enough to peel off his headband and hand it to a young fan.

“Just a kid that asked for a headband, wasn’t nothing more than that,” Wallace said.

It was, however, a lot more than an empty gesture.

On an afternoon when many expected the worst in the first meeting between Indiana and Detroit since their Nov. 19 brawl, peace prevailed — as did the Pistons.

Nobody charged into the stands, nobody tossed any beer, nobody threw punches or chairs. Instead, the most significant thing anyone hoisted was a three-pointer by Wallace with 90 seconds left that ended the Pacers’ final hopes in Detroit’s 98-93 victory Saturday.

“It was just a regular game, everybody playing the way they play,” Pistons center Ben Wallace said. “It wasn’t like we were out there intimidated, not wanting to touch anybody because it might start a fight. We were out there to play basketball, and that’s the way it should be.”

The game went off with barely a harsh word exchanged by the teams, whose previous meeting degenerated into one of the worst melees in the history of U.S. professional sports.

A tarp covered most of the exit tunnel, but it was unnecessary. The sellout crowd behaved, and the small contingent of fans who yelled at the Pistons as they walked off the court wanted nothing more than a hand slap or a headband.

“I think it was overhyped,” said Reggie Miller, who led Indiana with 24 points. “We knew it was going to be a grind-it-out game for 48 minutes. They did all the little things, and that made the difference.

The only positive for Indiana was the return of Jermaine O’Neal, whose brawl-related suspension was reduced by an arbitrator from 25 games to 15. O’Neal had 21 points, seven rebounds and five blocks.

Detroit center Ben Wallace drives to the basket against Indiana's Jermaine O'Neal. The Pistons won, 98-93, Saturday in Indianapolis.

Richard Hamilton scored 25 points, Chauncey Billups made four three-pointers and scored 20, Tayshaun Prince added 18 and Rasheed Wallace had 16 for the Pistons, who have been having their own problems since the brawl.

The win moved the defending NBA champ just one game over .500 (13-12) in a season that has been defined by the Nov. 19 game against Indiana.

“People realize that was an unfortunate incident and will never happen again, and now we can get back to playing basketball,” Pistons coach Larry Brown said.

“Closure” was a word being tossed around the Pistons’ locker room after they played one of their better all-around games this season against the opponent they knocked out of the Eastern Conference finals.

“We needed this in the worst way,” Billups said.

Many of the Indiana fans were decked out in blue and gold Santa caps, and they booed Ben Wallace — whose shove of Pacers forward Ron Artest set off the sequence of events that led to players fighting with fans in the stands and on the court — even more than they booed Rasheed Wallace, who unleashed a string of expletives at the Indiana fans during last season’s playoffs.

Artest remains suspended for the rest of the season. Teammate Stephen Jackson still must serve 14 games of a 30-game penalty.

“Everybody’s happy this game is over. Now we can move on,” O’Neal said.