<div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post">MILWAUKEE -- Don't expect Rasheed Wallace to be storming into the Pistons' huddle and demanding that plays be run for him tonight in Game 4. Yes, it is obvious that he has a huge advantage over Bucks rookie Andrew Bogut, which many feel he should be exploiting for more points than his 17.3 average through three games. "We can definitely go to Sheed any time we want," Richard Hamilton said. "When he's on and he's playing, there's no one that can stop him." Wallace scored 11 points in the first six minutes Saturday in Game 3. On one play he made two fakes that sent Bogut sprawling to the ground, then calming banked in a short jumper. But after he made four of his first five shots, he took just six the rest of the game. "We should have rode Sheed the whole game," Ben Wallace said. Rasheed Wallace doesn't necessarily agree. "It doesn't matter," he said. "I am not a greedy player. I just work in the flow of our offense. That's how I've always been. I am not out there trying to put up numerous amounts of shots. I just play in the flow of the system." The system got out of whack in Game 3. "Usually when a play is working, we like to go back to it until teams find a way to stop it," coach Flip Saunders said. "But we got a couple of fast-break opportunities and butchered them. We made a concerted effort at one point to get Rip going and we sort of played out of character a little bit. "There's no question that when you have a guy like Sheed, and he has it going, you have to maximize that hot hand as long as he's got it going." The Pistons fell behind and tried to catch up too quickly Saturday. They took 28 three-pointers and only scored 20 in the lane. "Sheed is a mismatch," Chauncey Billups said. "He got it going from the three-point line, but we would like to get him going in the post a little more. They can't guard him. We have to go to him."</div> Source