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Pistons vs Hornets preview: Potential first round matchup

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DETROIT, MICHIGAN - FEBRUARY 06: Daniss Jenkins #24 of the Detroit Pistons celebrates against the New York Knicks during the third quarter at Little Caesars Arena on February 06, 2026 in Detroit, Michigan. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Nic Antaya/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Detroit Pistons travel to the Bible Belt to take on the hottest team in the NBA. The Charlotte Hornets are winners of nine in a row, and they’ve been more than an exciting young core. They’re figuring it out.

The Pistons wear you out with defensive pressure and intensity, while the Charlotte Hornets zoom up and down the floor with an elite offense. With Charlotte’s recent surge and the Chicago Bulls and Milwaukee Bucks slipping, Pistons-Hornets is a legit potential first-round matchup. Sign me up for that.

Game Vitals​


When: 7:00 p.m. ET

Where: Spectrum Center, Charlotte, North Carolina

How: FanDuel Sports Network Detroit

Odds: Pistons -3

Analysis​


The Pistons have been the best team in the East all year, but Charlotte dominated January. The Hornets had a league high 11 wins, the best net rating (11.5), the best offensive rating (121.1), and the fifth best defensive rating (109.6). That’s not a cute team; that’s a group one has to take seriously.

LaMelo Ball, Brandon Miller, and Kon Knueppel are the team’s foundation. Ball is known for why’d-he-shoot-that shots and lackadaisical defense, but he’s running the show on this winner. Those insane one-legged shot attempts are there, but he’s contributing to winning basketball.

Miller has the potential to be a perennial top 20 scorer. He’s smooth overall and can be vicious when attacking the basket. Knueppel is the easy rookie of the year front-runner in most seasons. His efficiency and shotmaking as a rookie aren’t normal. The way he attacks off the bounce and defends on the other end shouldn’t go under the radar. Knueppel is a complete player with limited holes.

Those are the three this thing in Charlotte starts with. Compare that to three of Detroit’s young core, and you’ll see Detroit still has the upper hand.

Cade Cunningham and Jalen Duren (probable) are both All-Stars. Ausar Thompson will more than likely get some league honors under his belt after this season. Those three are as good as it gets as an under-25 trio. Add Ron Holland (out, personal) to the mix, and that’s a fantastic four that front offices would kill to have at their disposal.

Duren is a man amongst boys, but he needs to be ready to go in a matchup against Moussa Diabaté. Per Basketball-Reference, Diabaté is second in the league with a 17 percent offensive rebound percentage. Duren is actually third at 15 percent. Diabaté isn’t the rebounder Duren is overall, but he’s an energy bunny who doesn’t quit on the O glass. He’s the cherry on top of this Hornets roster. Charlotte is 15-8 when he starts this season.

Daniss Jenkins isn’t quite Detroit’s cherry on top, but he’s one of the X-factors who can swing a game. Jenkins is arguably the best two-way player story the league has seen. Congrats to him on getting a new contract. Detroit is going to need his shotmaking, creation for others, and his grit as we inch closer to the postseason.

How can you not love his post-game comments after the Knicks game? That massive chip on his shoulder fits right into Detroit’s contagious culture.

"Most of these dudes who got drafted,

What was the difference between me & them?

"Going undrafted's insanity to me

"Burns inside me every day.

They gonna have to see me

Every time we match up"

– Iona/St. John's Daniss Jenkins (team-high 18 vs 4 Knicks drafted over him) pic.twitter.com/KLEYRwaPYe

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) February 7, 2026

Every game moving forward is another opportunity for Kevin Heurter to get more comfortable in his new environment. Tonight wouldn’t be a bad time for him to find his spark because the Hornets let it fly!

Charlotte shoots the fourth most 3s in the association, and they make the 3rd most. Volume plus efficiency is the name of the game for the Hornets. We know that’s not Detroit’s forte, but they strangle teams defensively. This is the best Pistons defense since their early 2000’s run that featured the best modern-day defense.

If Detroit stays put at No. 1 in the East, I think this is a likely playoff matchup. The Hornets are the 10th seed and would need to win two play-in games on the road to secure the eighth seed if the postseason started today.

I’d favor Charlotte over any team in the East play-in. Orlando, Miami, and Atlanta aren’t as consistent as Charlotte. Orlando has more top-end talent, but the Hornets are on a string, and the roster has bought in.

If it is Pistons-Hornets in the first round, then Detroit wouldn’t have any “easy” matchups. The Hornets have shown they won’t be a cakewalk in any one-off game. The nature of the playoffs can change that when schemes get more tailored to the opponent, but Detroit taking Charlotte out of what they do would be a testament to their great team defense.

Lineups​


Detroit Pistons (38-13)

Cade Cunningham, Duncan Robinson, Ausar Thompson, Tobias Harris, Jalen Duren

Charlotte Hornets (25-28)

LaMelo Ball, Brandon Miller, Kon Knueppel, Miles Bridges, Moussa Diabaté

Question of the day​


What’s been your favorite game of the year so far?

Source: https://www.detroitbadboys.com/detr...hornets-preview-potential-first-round-matchup
 
Jalen Duren, Isaiah Stewart among four ejected in big Hornets-Pistons brawl

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CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA - FEBRUARY 09: Moussa Diabate #14 of the Charlotte Hornets fights Jalen Duren #0 of the Detroit Pistons during the second half of a basketball game at Spectrum Center on February 09, 2026 in Charlotte, North Carolina. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by David Jensen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

I have learned in more than four decades on this planet that some people simply do not like it when you touch their face. Moussa Diabate appears to be one of them. Four players were ejected, several punches were thrown, and players had to be held back in a huge brawl at the Spectrum Center in a game that eventually saw the Detroit Pistons prevail over the Charlotte Hornets 110-104.

It started with a physical foul Diabete delivered to Jalen Duren, which Duren took exception to. The two players went back and forth, eventually going forehead to forehead. Duren then palmed Diabate’s face to shove him away. Diabate did not like that. Hated it even. He instantly went nuclear and charged at Duren at full force. He swung wildly as players and staff members struggled to keep him back.

BENCHES CLEAR IN PISTONS-HORNETS 😲

Moussa Diabate, Miles Bridges, Jalen Duren and Isaiah Stewart were all ejected following the altercation during Pistons-Hornets. pic.twitter.com/VeNSi6vEBR

— ESPN (@espn) February 10, 2026

In the ensuing chaos, Duren was being shoved back toward Detroit’s bench, and Hornets forward Miles Bridges took the opportunity to throw a few closed fists in Duren’s direction. Duren responded in kind. If you’re wondering where Isaiah Stewart was in all this, you know he wasn’t far behind.

Despite having two fully wrapped knees covered in ice, Stewart charged off Detroit’s bench and went right at Bridges. This created an entirely new epicenter of the scuffle, even as a slew of Hornets coaches and security were working to physically restrain Diabate from getting off of a makeshift seat.

Luckily, things did not escalate any further, and just one of the wayward fists landed, with Bridges landing a glancing blow to Duren. But it still led to an ejection for Duren, Stewart, Diabate, and Bridges. It will also likely include suspensions from the league, and I’m sure the worst is coming for Stewart, who not only has a reputation but also threw a fist or two and left the bench to get involved.

With two-way big man Tolu Smith playing with the G League, that meant Paul Reed was forced to suit up for the final 19 minutes of action as Detroit’s only big man. He delivered with a huge performance, which you can read about in the game recap.

Despite the crowd being absolutely ready to explode, the Pistons were able to take a bit more control of the game post-brawl, and with a chance at victory slipping away, Hornets coach Charles Lee decided he wanted to join his players in the locker room.

Grant Williams lacked a bit of spatial awareness and charged into a stationary Paul Reed as Charlotte was bringing the ball up the floor. Williams was whistled for the offensive foul, and Lee decided to take the opportunity to charge at the refs in disbelief. He was assessed two technicals and ejected immediately. I’m sure he was upset at the play, as it was a bit ticky-tack for a game that had been so physical up to that point. But I have to believe he was doing everything he could to rally his players and find a way not to let this one slip away.

It didn’t work because, well, Detroit has been here a time or two before. Hard-fought, intense games where everyone is mad at the refs are kind of the Pistons’ bread and butter.

The Pistons next play Wednesday at Toronto before heading into the All-Star break. I imagine it will be an extra-long break for Stewart, and we will see if Duren dodges a suspension. I think they will give him one game, even though his behavior was not nearly as egregious as the other three players who were ejected.

Source: https://www.detroitbadboys.com/detr...ong-four-ejected-in-big-hornets-pistons-brawl
 
Pistons at Hornets final score: Things get physical in 110-104 win

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CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA - FEBRUARY 09: Moussa Diabate #14 of the Charlotte Hornets fights Jalen Duren #0 of the Detroit Pistons during the second half of a basketball game at Spectrum Center on February 09, 2026 in Charlotte, North Carolina. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by David Jensen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Pistons looked like they were continuing their elite play from the New York Knicks game early into this one as they started off on a 16-9 run, led by a quick six points from Ausar Thompson. Charlotte would respond with a 22-13 run behind the three-point shooting and quick triggers of LaMelo Ball, Kon Knueppel, and Brandon Miller.

It’s clear that head coach Charles Lee has given his team the green light to let it fly from deep. It makes sense as to why they’re 12-3 in their previous 15 games when this team is connecting on its three-pointers like they did throughout the first half. They would shoot 6-for-10 from behind the arc in the first quarter, including a halfcourt heave at the buzzer to take a 33-29 Hornets lead heading into the second. Even though Detroit forced seven Charlotte turnovers, they would shoot 0-for-6 from deep.

Detroit struggled to find offense outside of the paint, but MVP candidate Cade Cunningham was able to carry the load. He was hitting his midrange shots, getting to the rim, finding open teammates, and was the only Detroit player to hit a three until he found Tobias wide open in the corner at the six-minute mark in the second.

The Pistons turned up the defense before the end of the half as they were able to close out with a 14-2 run to take a 61-57 halftime lead. The story was still the same – Charlotte continued their hot shooting from deep while Detroit forced nine turnovers and held a 32-10 points in the paint advantage. The Pistons only made two of their 13 three-point attempts, but the Hornets were 12-for-25. Future MVP Cade Cunningham led the way with 19 points, five rebounds, and six assists.

That’s when all hell broke loose.

Jalen Duren drove to the rim and was fouled by Moussa Diabate. The two confronted each other with a headbutt, a push, and some swings into the air. Diabate almost got to Duren a second time, but JD was swung on by Miles Bridges shortly after at halfcourt. Isaiah Stewart saw and confronted Bridges until both teams were able to be separated afterwards.

PISTONS VS. HORNETS FIGHT. 🍿🍿🍿

pic.twitter.com/clY6otVAsb

— Hoop Central (@TheHoopCentral) February 10, 2026

Here are two other looks at the second altercation between Bridges, Duren, and Stewart:

Best angle of Beef Stew vs. Bridges.

Watch Duncan Robinson for comedic effect. pic.twitter.com/9OjSDpzvLe

— Rob Perez (@WorldWideWob) February 10, 2026
THAT’S BEEF STEW’S MUSIC pic.twitter.com/TeFrSWAWHT

— Rob Perez (@WorldWideWob) February 10, 2026

All four players were ejected after review. I would expect suspensions coming from the league for both Duren and Stew as well.

After everyone’s adrenaline wore off, including my own, Paul Reed was inserted onto the floor as the only center left in the game and instantly hit a corner three. Cade Cunningham picked right back up where he left off with impressive shot-making at all three levels and led Detroit to a double-digit lead at end the third quarter up 88-78.

As soon as JB Bickerstaff subbed Cunningham out at the eight-minute mark, Brandon Miller hit a movement three to bring Detroit’s lead to six. Yet, even without Jalen Duren and Isaiah Stewart, fellow Dawg Pound members Ausar Thompson and Paul Reed brought the energy in their absence. Check out this Bball Paul poster:

PAUL IS HOOPIN' https://t.co/pbJt79Kxwp pic.twitter.com/cMIl7mXDv1

— Detroit Pistons (@DetroitPistons) February 10, 2026

Charlotte couldn’t get their three-pointers to fall late, and with the Hornets preventing Cade Cunningham from getting the ball, the Pistons went to Ol’ Reliable Tobias Harris late for his patented post jump shot over a smaller guard to put Detroit up six with 40 seconds left. Cade would knock down the final free throw and the Pistons would finish it out to beat the Hornets 110-104.

Cunningham was the star of the show finishing with 33 points, nine rebounds, and seven assists. He was able to get to his spots whenever he wanted and Charlotte struggled to guard him even without both big men. Duncan Robinson added 18 points and four assists while Tobias Harris had 11 points and five rebounds.

Paul Reed was the unsung hero of this Detroit victory. He didn’t play until after the ejections of Jalen Duren and Isaiah Stewart, but he played in 18 of the game’s final 19 minutes. He scored 12 points on five shots while adding three rebounds, one assist, two steals, and two blocks. He is without a doubt the best third-string center in the league.

Charlotte’s Big Three of Ball, Knueppel, and Miller all scored 20 or more points and combined for 64 total. Each had double-digit shot attempts from deep and all three made at least four threes.

Head coach JB Bickerstaff reiterated postgame that it was not Detroit players who initiated the conflict in tonight’s game and that they were acting in self-defense. He described the relationship between Duren and Stewart as “brothers” and felt as if they were defending themselves after they were swung on.

This sure would be an interesting seven-game series if these two teams were to meet in the playoffs. Detroit plays next on Wednesday in Toronto before the long All-Star Weekend.

Go Stones.

Source: https://www.detroitbadboys.com/detr...inal-score-things-get-physical-in-110-104-win
 
Pistons vs. Raptors Discussion: Game Time, TV, Odds, and More

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TORONTO, CANADA - APRIL 4: Ausar Thompson #9 of the Detroit Pistons drives to the net against Immanuel Quickley #5 of the Toronto Raptors during the first half of their NBA game at Scotiabank Arena on April 4, 2025 in Toronto, Canada. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Cole Burston/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Let’s see what you can do, Tolu Smith. The Detroit Pistons will be relying on their two-way center to play plenty of minutes tonight against the Toronto Raptors as the Pistons will be playing their first game without Jalen Duren or Isaiah Stewart. Both were suspended for their actions during a brawl with the Charlotte Hornets on Monday night. The Pistons will also be missing Ron Holland, who is still out for personal reasons. This is Detroit’s last game before the All-Star break, and you’d like to see them end the unofficial first half on a high note. But not only are they playing short-handed, but they are also playing a dangerous Toronto Raptors team.

Toronto has won three of four games, granted that was against the Jazz, Bulls, and Pacers. But they always seem to be feisty against the Pistons. I want a nice, quiet game that can ease us into the break. Is that too much to ask?

Game Vitals​


When: 7:30 p.m. ET
Where: Scotiabank Arena, Toronto, Ontario
Watch: Fan Duel Sports Network Detroit
Odds: Pistons +1

Projected Lineups​

Detroit Pistons: (39-13)


Cade Cunningham, Duncan Robinson, Ausar Thompson, Tobias Harris, Paul Reed

Toronto Raptors (32-22)


Immanuel Quickley, Brandon Ingram, RJ Barrett, Scottie Barnes, Jakob Poeltl

Source: https://www.detroitbadboys.com/detr...raptors-discussion-game-time-tv-odds-and-more
 
Pistons vs. Raptors final score: Detroit smothers Toronto for dominant win

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TORONTO, CANADA - FEBRUARY 11: Paul Reed #7 of the Detroit Pistons drives to the basket during the game against the Toronto Raptors on February 11, 2026 at the Scotiabank Arena in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Vaughn Ridley/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

When you have Paul Reed, anything is possible. When you have Paul Reed and a Cade Cunningham who is hitting his threes, the Detroit Pistons are nearly unstoppable. Add those ingredients to an absolutely locked-in, suffocating team defense, and Detroit is invincible. The Pistons had everything going in a 113-95 road win over the Raptors.

Detroit entered tonight without three of its top eight players, with its top two big men in Jalen Duren and Isaiah Stewart suspended and Ron Holland out for personal reasons. It did not matter. It just allowed Paul Reed to shine.

Reed went 7-of-7 from the floor in the first quarter for 15 points. He hit a three, he cut into the lane for dunks, he used fancy footwork to knife his way to the rim, and he blocked shots. He did it all. He finished the night with 22 points, five rebounds, four blocks, three steals, and three assists. It was a vintage B-Ball Paul performance.

He wasn’t the only player to shine for the Pistons, though. Cade Cunnigham looked like he wanted to show the world why he was one of the leading vote-getters for the All-Star team with an absolutely dominant performance. He scored 28 points, hit four threes, added nine assists, and seven rebounds. He also played zero minutes in the fourth quarter because the Pistons had the game well in hand.

Detroit built up a 14-point lead in the second quarter, and aside from a couple quick spurts from Toronto that it was able to respond to, that is where the game hovered for the majority. Detroit’s team defense was absolutely on point tonight, and only got stronger as the night went along. The Pistons held Toronto to 43 second-half points en route to ballooning its lead to as high as 23 before letting the reserves get plenty of garbage-time action.

Tobias Harris added a 12-point, 12-rebound double-double as the veteran took on more of the rebounding load in the absence of his two big men. Things were going so well for the Pistons that Kevin Huerter even hit a 3-pointer for his new team. It was his first with the club. Hopefully it was the first of many to come.

The Raptors were able to stay competitive early with some hot 3-point shooting, but eventually cooled off and faded away. They finished 10-of-32 from deep on the night. They were led by 18 points from Immanuel Quickley and 17 points from Scottie Barnes.

The Pistons enter the All-Star break 40-13 and are tied with the Oklahoma City Thunder for the fewest losses in the NBA. When the final buzzer sounded they had a six-game lead in the East and prepare for a fun All-Star weekend that will feature both Cunningham and Duren.

It’s been a hell of a season so far, and this doesn’t strike me as a team that is going to let up anytime soon.

Source: https://www.detroitbadboys.com/detr...ore-detroit-smothers-toronto-for-dominant-win
 
Submit your questions for The Pindown: A Detroit Pistons Podcast

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Send in your questions now for this week’s episode of The Pindown: A Detroit Pistons Podcast to discuss everything Pistons. Submit your question to the comments section here or on X/Twitter to @TheRealWesD3 and/or @blakesilverman.

Join us live on Saturday afternoon for the show where we’ll recap this week’s games as we head into the All-Star break. Forty whole wins before the break, how are we feeling? What did you make of the suspensions to Isaiah Stewart and Jalen Duren? Too harsh or just right? What are you looking for from Cade Cunningham and Duren during All-Star festivities?

Plus, The Pindown has a phone line where you can leave a message and hear your voice on the show. Call (313) 355-2717 and leave us a voicemail with your question. Please try to keep the message around 45 seconds or less so we can fit everyone into the show.

The podcast will be uploaded to all audio platforms the following morning.

The Pindown: A Detroit Pistons Podcast Vitals:


When: Saturday February 14 at 2 p.m. ET

Where: Detroit Bad Boys YouTube Channel

How to submit questions:


  • Detroit Bad Boys Website: Comment section of the weekly Pindown episode articles.
  • Call (313) 355-2717 and leave us a voicemail with your question. Please try to keep the message to 45 seconds or less.
  • Twitter: @detroitbadboys, @blakesilverman or @therealwesd3
  • YouTube: Chat section of The Pindown live recording — Subscribe here

As always, leave any questions or topics you want to be discussed in the comment section below.

Source: https://www.detroitbadboys.com/detr...ons-for-the-pindown-a-detroit-pistons-podcast
 
3-Man Fastbreak: Fight Night in Charlotte

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CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA - FEBRUARY 09: Jalen Duren #0 of the Detroit Pistons controls the ball during the first half of a basketball game against the Charlotte Hornets at Spectrum Center on February 09, 2026 in Charlotte, North Carolina. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by David Jensen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Detroit Pistons head into the All-Star break with a bang – literally and figuratively – after its chaotic 110–104 win over the Hornets Monday night in Charlotte. The East’s top team now closes the first half on Wednesday in Toronto, shorthanded in the frontcourt, including one player who was set to participate in All-Star festivities in Inglewood before everything was put on hold.

The skirmish in Charlotte puts a blemish on what has otherwise been a revelation of a season for Detroit. At this point, the only option is to move forward – and be thankful this didn’t happen closer to the postseason, where looming suspensions could have had far greater consequences.


1. The new Bad Boys are good for the league​


The NBA landscape has changed dramatically since the Pistons’ most infamous brawl against Indiana 22 years ago. Back then, scuffles were more common and rarely drew significant public backlash – until the Malice in the Palace reshaped how basketball altercations were viewed. Since then, the league has rightly installed guardrails to prevent anything close to that from happening again.

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Still, there’s something undeniably human about being drawn to tension boiling over. Boxing once dominated American sports culture for a reason, and while today’s NBA is far less physical overall – in part due to stricter penalties – that edge may be creeping back.

For one of the league’s best teams to also be one of its most physically imposing is ultimately good for the NBA’s product. Detroit plays a bruising style, yet hardly anyone would call them dirty. They frustrate teams mostly because they beat them – possession by possession, rebound by rebound. It used to be: if the Pistons couldn’t win the game, they’d at least win the fight. Now, they’re doing both – and seemingly building rivalries along the way.

2. Huerter’s impact​


With the deadline behind them, the Pistons essentially flipped Jaden Ivey for sharpshooter Kevin Huerter – exactly the type of move I expected from Trajan Langdon. It preserved chemistry while theoretically addressing a roster need.

Through three games, Huerter has averaged nine minutes while being eased into Detroit’s already deep rotation. A career 37% three-point shooter, his 2026 numbers dipped a bit this season, but the Pistons are betting that a change of scenery and improved offensive environment can rejuvenate the eight-year veteran. Beyond shooting, he brings strong instincts as a connective offensive piece.

Defensively, Huerter has averaged over a steal per game three times in his career and holds opponents to 33.7% shooting on defended threes. That fits cleanly with a bench unit built on pressure and activity.

Unless you were firmly in the “Ivey as Cade’s long-term running mate” camp – a tougher sell down the stretch – it’s hard to criticize the move. If it makes Detroit even marginally better without sacrificing major assets or disrupting chemistry, it’s a win.


3. Cade’s shooting inconsistencies​


I’ve tried to hold off on this topic because Cunningham remains the engine behind Detroit’s success. But it’s hard to ignore a recent stretch where his jumper has just looked flat. Maybe some of the struggles stem from a recent wrist injury, but the dips in shooting seem to become more visible against better teams.

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He’s never been an elite shooter, but his overall game depends on being at least a credible threat from deep. In January, he shot 31% from three on roughly five attempts per game. In February through five games, that number dipped to 27% on similar volume. In high-profile matchups where defenses load up on him, his rhythm as a shooter has clearly suffered – which becomes a mild concern entering playoff basketball.

Last postseason against New York, Cunningham shot just 17.9% from three, yet still impacted games as a defender and creator. But as competition stiffens coming out of the break, his shooting will be something to monitor. If Cade becomes even a league-average shooter from outside, it changes the ceiling of this team entirely.



Source: https://www.detroitbadboys.com/general/49424/3-man-fastbreak-fight-night-in-charlotte
 
Pistons vs. Raptors preview: Last game before the All Star Break

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The Pistons may be a little short-handed tonight as they play their final game before the All Star Break and weirdly their first game against the Toronto Raptors this season. If you missed Monday’s game and the hoopla that happened after it, both Jalen Duren and Isaiah Stewart were ejected for fighting along with Moussa Diabate and Miles Bridges from the Hornets. At the time of writing, the NBA is yet to announce suspensions for the players involved, but I am going to assume we know before tonight’s game.

The timing of potential suspensions for Duren and Stewart could not come at a worse time, as the Pistons enter arguably their toughest stretch of the season starting tonight against the Raptors and continuing after the All Star Break.

If you have not been paying much attention to the Raptors since this is the first time the Pistons have played them, they enter this game 5th in the Eastern Conference, but only 2 games back from the Knicks in 3rd. So, this game could have some bearing on the standings at the end of the season depending on how things go for each team after the All Star Break.

Game Vitals​


Where: Scotiabank Arena in Toronto, ON
When: Wednesday, February 11 at 7:30 pm EST
Watch: Fan Duel Sports Network Detroit
Odds: Pistons (-1.5)

Analysis​


It is very strange that the Pistons are playing the Raptors for the first time this season and we are almost halfway through February. They are the only Eastern Conference team the Pistons have not played yet.

As of now, the only player officially out for the Pistons is Ron Holland, who is once again out for Personal Reasons. I am going to assume that Isaiah Stewart and Jalen Duren do not play in this game as I would suspect the NBA announces suspensions for them at some point today. The NBA very well could wait until after the All Star festivities to announce suspensions, but given the optics of the fight that just happened on Monday, it would be weird to have both playing.

I feel like the reason the Pistons are still favored in this game is because the NBA has not technically announced the aforementioned suspensions.

If there is one positive for the Pistons, the Raptors don’t really overwhelm you with size in the frontcourt, so the potential loss of Duren and Stewart is manageable. Paul Reed is more than capable of filling in, as he showed on Monday, and newly signed 2-way player Isaac Jones could possibly get some playing time backing him up.

The more likely scenario is that the Pistons just play small and have Tobias Harris play some minutes at the 5 since Jakob Poeltl could be out with a back injury. He is currently a game-time decision.

The Raptors play a very similar brand of ball as the Detroit Pistons do. They are not quite as good defensively, but they try to turn defense into offense and do not shoot a ton of shots behind the arc. The Raptors have more players capable of hitting an outside shot, but a lot of their offense comes from the midrange and inside.

There are not a ton of teams in the league that play like the Raptors and Pistons, so it will be interesting to see how the Pistons handle a team that plays a very similar style as them.

Like the Pistons, the Raptors have two All Stars, but unlike the Pistons, they will both be available tonight. Scottie Barnes has become one of the better two-way players in the NBA. His offensive numbers won’t blow you away, but he does a little bit of everything while being able to guard the best wing or frontcourt player of the opposing team every night.

When the Raptors acquired Brandon Ingram at the trade deadline last year, there were concerns about his fit with their core but also just his ability to stay healthy. So far, he has eased both concerns as him and Barnes are a dynamic wing pairing and he has played 52 games this season. The question with Ingram was never his talent, it was always his health, so it is great to see him playing well and staying healthy.

With Ron Holland out, the Pistons could have some issues slowing down both of them, but it’s not like the Pistons don’t have other wing defenders they can throw at them. But, without two of their better rim defenders in Duren and Stewart, the Raptors might have an easier time scoring inside, although Paul Reed is no slouch on defense.

It isn’t just the Barnes and Ingram show for the Raptors, as they also have RJ Barrett and Immanuel Quickley, who are both more than capable of getting hot offensively. If any player from the Raptors is going to get hot from beyond the arc and ruin your night it is Quickley.

This game was already going to be a challenge for the Pistons, as it is a road game against one of the better teams in the Eastern Conference. Now that they Pistons are likely going to be down 3 rotation players, the task is even more difficult. But, the Pistons have defied all odds this season and have been able to win games while missing multiple rotation players countless times, so I wouldn’t put it past them to win this game.

Lineups​


Detroit Pistons: (39-13): Cade Cunningham, Duncan Robinson, Ausar Thompson, Tobias Harris, Paul Reed

Toronto Raptors (32-22): Immanuel Quickley, Brandon Ingram, RJ Barrett, Scottie Barnes, Jakob Poeltl

Question of the Day​


How long do you think Jalen Duren and Isaiah Stewart get suspended?

Source: https://www.detroitbadboys.com/detr...s-preview-last-game-before-the-all-star-break
 
NBA officially suspends Stewart, Duren after brawl against Hornets

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CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA - FEBRUARY 09: Miles Bridges #0 of the Charlotte Hornets fights Isaiah Stewart #28 of the Detroit Pistons during the second half of a basketball game at Spectrum Center on February 09, 2026 in Charlotte, North Carolina. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by David Jensen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The NBA has announced suspensions to four players related to the extended melee between the Detroit Pistons and Charlotte Hornets on Monday. Pistons big men Isaiah Stewart and Jalen Duren received a seven-game suspension and a two-game suspension, respectively. Hornets players Miles Bridges and Moussa Diabate are suspended for four games apiece.

The suspensions were announced by James Jones, head of basketball operations for the league.

Stewart received the longest suspension because he left the bench to get involved in the altercation, eventually laying hands on Bridges, and because he has a history of league discipline, termed “his repeated history of unsportstman like acts” by the NBA in the release. The suspension means Stewart will not play enough games to be in contention for All-Defense honors.

Presumably, Diabate and Bridges were next in line because Diabate escalated a confrontation with Duren beyond the boiling point and had to be restrained multiple times while trying to get to Duren. Bridges, meanwhile, seemed to be the only person to land a thrown punch and proactively went after Duren after not being involved in the original dust-up. Duren “initiated the altercation,” the league says, presumably when he put his hands on Diabate’s face to shove him away after they went head-to-head following a hard foul, so he gets the least of it but does not walk out of the situation unscathed.

You can read all about how the ball began and escalated in our story from Monday.

The two-game suspension should not in any way prevent Duren from participating in All-Star weekend as a reserve for Sunday’s game.

Both Pistons players will miss tonight’s matchup against the Toronto Raptors, and the Pistons have recalled two-way big man Tolu Smith to help provide some center depth. Duren will also miss a big rematch against the New York Knicks on Feb. 19. Stewart will miss those games as well as matchups against the Bulls, Spurs, Thunder, Cavs, and Magic.

In other words, this is coming at one of the most difficult stretches of Detroit’s schedule.

What’s your reaction to the level of punishment for all involved? Sound off in the comments.

Source: https://www.detroitbadboys.com/pist...nds-stewart-duren-after-brawl-against-hornets
 
The Pindown: All-Star BBall Paul Reed

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It’s All-Star Weekend! But, more importantly, Paul Reed just had Jakob Poeltl in a blender. Wes and Blake jump in to break down everything we’ve seen in Piston-land as we head into the All-Star break. How will the fallout from the Hornets brawl impact Isaiah Stewart’s award eligibility? What was up with Jalen Duren apparently backing out of the Dunk contest? And why is Paul Reed not an All-Star starter? Ok, maybe not that last one. But they do spend some time breaking down that amazing performance in Toronto and why Reed still will be the best third-string center in the NBA the rest of the way. They discuss the All-Star game format and what the NBA can or can’t do to fix it, why 60 wins isn’t that far off for this team and if anything is still possible with Malik Beasley.

We’ve got you covered for all this and more in this week’s episode!

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Source: https://www.detroitbadboys.com/detroit-pistons-podcasts/49456/the-pindown-all-star-bball-paul-reed
 
10 Things about the Detroit Pistons

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CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA - FEBRUARY 09: Cade Cunningham #2 of the Detroit Pistons walks down the court during the first half of a basketball game against the Charlotte Hornets at Spectrum Center on February 09, 2026 in Charlotte, North Carolina. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by David Jensen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Detroit Pistons have the best record in the league through the All-Star break, and there is a lot to like. In this Zach Lowe “10 Things” inspired piece, we’ll go over 10 things about the team that could represent the Eastern Conference in the NBA Finals.

Finish em’ Cade​


Cade has always been streaky at the rim. He’d make a triple-contested scoop lay, then miss a one-on-one lay attempt against a not-so-big player. That’s why he’s hovered around 56% finishing at the rim throughout his career. The angles he took or the decision to go up against multiple players tanked his rim field goal percentage in the past.

The Pistons MVP candidate has been more stable at the rim this season, shooting a career high 65% (58th %tile amongst point guards). His versatility in getting to the rim keeps defenses honest. Drives, transition takes, curls, hand-offs, and post-ups are all play types that allow Cade to get his finishes off. His shot-creating has led to finishes and jump shots, and the film is filthy.

Cade is a big guard, and he’s abusing smalls like always. He is an ambidextrous finisher who can sprinkle in tough, skilled layups or power through your chest with strength-based layups.

This finishing uptick will aid the Pistons halfcourt offense quite a bit. They will need every bit of finishing come playoff time. If their offense can remain average or just above it, that dogged defense can carry Detroit to early 2000s heights.

Duncan Robinson is more than a shooter


Duncan Robinson helps the halfcourt offense in many ways. The spacing he provides is second to none. How he weaponizes his shot is the bigger story.

Running Robinson off the 3-point line means you want the 6-foot-7 wing who’s a great finisher to get a lane to the basket. Robinson’s rim volume is low compared to his position, but he gets there plenty for his sharpshooter archetype. He’s not the unconscious get-it-up-at-all costs shooter Detroit has had in the past, but Robinson is an impactful driver, screener, and a plus passer.

Those three skills work in unison in dribble hand-off actions. Robinson takes advantage of defenses glued to his hip. After he runs off screens with shoulder-to-shoulder precision, the defense is at his mercy. Robinson can fire from deep, drive all the way to the cup, where he finishes 74 percent, or deliver pinpoint passes.

Duncan Robinson dishing out free eats to bigmen this season in Detroit pic.twitter.com/SFEiVdluCX

🌴🇺🇸🇨🇴🌴 (@Birdey954theWin) February 13, 2026

Bigs eat off Robinson’s gravity and movement. He makes defenses pay for playing him like he’s only a shooter. Wings eat off his gravity, too. Robinson is going to be a crucial piece in the postseason. Detroit needs him to play like the 2023 playoffs version of himself, not whatever these last few years have been.

How good can Jalen Duren be?​


Jalen Duren is one of the bigs who eats the most while playing next to Robinson. Detroit is +10.1 when those two share the floor. That’s a theme for Duren. He has a positive two-man Net Rating with every player on the roster.

Duren’s getting assistance from all over, but nobody makes him. Duren is super impactful in his own right. From competing as a defender to his individual growth as a self-creator, the sky is literally the limit for him.

Young bigs who are poor defenders usually stay that way for a long time, but Duren has shaken off that narrative. Bball-Index’s rim protection grade, which factors in rim deterrence, activity, and disruption in on-ball and help rim defensive situations, grades Duren an A. His value is 10 points better than it was last year.

Duren still has meat on the bone as an offensive player. He’s creating for himself more and more. Duren has self-created 194 field goal attempts compared to 162 last year (PBP Stats). He’s always been a decent passer, and he’s taking boards off the glass and pushing the break more this year.

Not here to say he’ll ever be a point center, but he’s shown some of those skills that those who are that archetype have. With Cade excelling coming off curls and Iverson cuts, maybe Duren can be a hub at his peak.

Peak Duren is so far from now as he’s only 22. This All-Star breakout is encouraging, and his future is limitless. He’s always been an elite lob catcher, that hasn’t changed. But now there’s more than one guy on the squad who constantly wants to throw it up to JD.

Tricky passer​

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Those are the types of dimes Daniss Jenkins drops when sharing the floor with Duren.

Jenkins is willing to try any pass, and his handle makes life easier for him. Jenkins keeps his dribble alive while running through the paint. This gets defenders off balance, and Jenkins is throwing pinpoint accurate passes before they can blink.

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This “nashing” move is a staple in Jenkins game. The fact that he’s a threat to score gets defenses to react favorably. If he were just nashing always to pass and never score, defenders wouldn’t help off their man because they know he’s not a threat to get a bucket. You can’t do that with Jenkins.

He’s eager to throw lobs, and it’s clear bigs loves playing with guards that spoonfeed guaranteed two points. Whether it’s off-hand passes to the corner man or right-on-target dump-offs in PnR play types, Jenkins is going to find the open man.

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The alley oop to Isaiah Stewart involved Jenkins using a Shammgod move to create space before giving Stew an easy one. That goes back to his handle. Detroit has two strong ball handlers.

Jenkins has several tricks up his sleeve in addition to taking care of the ball. Jenkins’ 11.8 TO percentage is a solid mark for someone who handles the ball as often as he does. Jenkins isn’t careless with the rock and is willing to try any pass. Chances make champions.

Insane depth​


Jenkins has helped establish the next man up culture in Detroit. The Pistons have won with their All-Stars out of the lineup, and JB Bickerstaff is getting the most from his guys. The Pistons’ turnaround isn’t getting enough shouts.

While tanking and All-Star Weekend fixes dominate headlines, remember the actual game. Remember that Detroit won 14 games a few years ago and now has the best record as we start the back end of the season. This isn’t normal, and Bickerstaff and the deep roster are news.

The Pistons were underdogs in the matchup with the Toronto Raptors before the break. Odd makers or the public thought it made sense that Detroit would struggle without Duren and Stew. There’s sound logic in that thought process.

Paul Reed had other thoughts, though. He was the best big on the floor in Detroit’s dominant win against the playoff-bound Raptors — not the first time he’s been impactful this year. Reed has stepped up all season when needed. He stays ready. Reed plays every game like it’s his last and is looking to shake up every game with endless effort and thunderous slams.

Javonte Green was an afterthought signing, but he’s contributing to the insane depth Detroit has — he’s a handsy nuisance and another candidate to put anyone on a poster.

Jenkins has developed into a late-game closer right before our eyes. Marcus Sasser can make big shots. Caris LeVert provides solid play on his best days. Everywhere you look, Detroit has a player who can step in when needed. We’re yet to see what Kevin Huerter can provide as well. There are options.

The Pistons are 8th in bench points. Their backups have been game changers in the regular season. Ron Holland is a part of the rabid bench attack, but unlike the rest of these names, he was expected to do so. Holland’s second year has been positive so far, and his hustle remains his game-changing trait.

Hustlers don’t stop​


Holland, alongside Green, check in every game as must-see firecrackers. If nothing else, something is going to happen when those two touch the floor. Holland is susceptible to missing a steal, falling face-first into the hardwood, and recovering to get his hands on the ball in seemingly one motion. That’s the type of motor he has — Holland’s STL percentage remains in the 98th percentile amongst forwards.

Those brilliant hands allow him to turn defense into offense. Detroit is one of the best teams scoring in transition off steals, and Holland has a hand in that.

Green zig zags on the floor, tagging everyone in sight. Offensively, Green is always on poster watch and has made timely 3s. He is shooting 36 percent from deep, but it feels even better. Green has active hands — he is top 20 in deflections and has not played 1,000 minutes this season. Only he and the Miami Heat’s Dru Smith are in that club. Green doesn’t need a significant amount of minutes to show his value.

These two Tazmaynian devils will bring energy and pop on the Pistons’ postseason run. A lot of their value is defensively slanted. The Pistons have more defensive monsters who should be locks for league honors.

All-Defense​


Ausar Thompson and Isaiah Stewart bring effort and best-at-what-they-do technique defensively. Ausar is the best perimeter defender in basketball. If you told me “pick one player to defend a random superstar,” I’m going with Ausar every time. You’re comfortable with him guarding smalls, big wings, forwards, and the occasional switch on a big is in his repertoire.

Surprisingly to some, Ausar hounds point guards better than those other positions. That’s insane considering his height, but his lateral quickness and instincts are second to none.

Ausar is the best Pistons defender in the passing lanes. He’s third in deflections league-wide, and his film has some “what was that?” in there.

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There’s no way anybody thought Ausar would get back into this play. The way he patiently baits Memphis is beautiful. He blew that thing up and turned offense to defense. That’s a Deion Sanders-level lurk job, and he’s just as good on the ball as he is playing the lanes.

The league honored Ausar with Eastern Conference Defensive Player of the Month in January. If that’s a sign of things to come, the third-year play-destroyer should be in line for his first All-Defense first team selection.

Chet Holmgren, Victor Wembanyama (65-game rule), Scottie Barnes, Rudy Gobert, and Bam Adebayo are in the mix for first-team, but Stew should be too if these awards are a snapshot of the season.

The story of this season wouldn’t be whole if Stew were left off both All-Defense teams. Ausar is the Pistons’ most versatile and destructive defender, but Stew is the anchor for the best(?) defense in the NBA.

Lowest opponent FG% allowed on shots at the rim this szn (min. 200 FGA defended):

42.7 – Isaiah Stewart
.
46.6 – Chet Holmgren
.
52.6 – Evan Mobley
53.5 – Rudy Gobert
53.9 – Luke Kornet
54.5 – Jaren Jackson Jr.
55.1 – Alex Sarr
55.1 – Derrick White
55.3 – Jay Huff
55.3 – Wemby pic.twitter.com/wFmpANDMgb

— The Lead (@TheLeadSM) February 16, 2026

Nothing is allowed with Stew at the cup. Opponents shoot 42 percent at the basket when he’s there. That’s just a comical number. Nobody else is near that. He defends fewer shots at the rim compared to today’s rim protectors because he is a backup, but there aren’t many better per-minute rim protectors. And at 6-foot-8, one could make the argument that Stew is the best pound-for-pound rim protector.

Everyone else in that conversation is longer than Stew, even though he has a freakish 7-foot-4ish wingspan. His timing, anticipation, and intimidation factor put him in these conversations.

Stew gets challenged at the rim, but the result will never stop him from continuing to man the paint. If he gets postered, he shrugs it off and defends his yard over and over again.

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Shaedon Sharpe is known for his Looney Tunes bounce, but that means nothing to Stew. He challenged both of these back-to-back Kodak moment dunk attempts and lived with the outcome both times (that block was clean). You’re going to have to be an insane leaper to catch Stew as Sharpe did on his second attempt.

Stew has easily been a top-10 defender this year. He is the anchor of Detroit, which thrives off its defense, and his contagious attitude is in the fabric of this franchise. The 65-game rule could keep Stew awardless this year, but that’s just not a reflection on how this season went.

The Oklahoma City Thunder had Jalen Williams and Lu Dort make defensive teams last year as the best team defense, and Detroit should have two this year as well.

Is it 2004?​


Sure, the Thunder are still the No. 1 D in hoops, but the early portion of the season is doing some lifting there. Since November 19th, the Pistons have the No. 1 ranked defense with garbage time filtered out.

The Thunder have dealt with injuries. Naysayers will say that’s why Detroit has passed the defending champs in defensive efficiency in that time frame, but Detroit’s personnel is on par with a healthy Thunder team.

Ausar is the best perimeter defender of the bunch, full stop. Cason Wallace, Alex Caruso, and Dort are more than a strong perimeter trio in fairness, though. Williams or Caruso are the most versatile defenders on either team, but OKC’s clear-cut advantages stop there.

Holmgren over Stew as a defender? Not an outrageous take, but Stew is right there. Holmgren’s advantage is length and the ability to stay out of foul trouble. Duren vs Hartenstein is pretty even in terms of what their team’s ask of them. Duren’s effort and consistency on that end are noticeable. We’ve mentioned all the junk yard dogs Detroit has at its disposal, like Holland and Green, but Deuce doesn’t get enough love for his defense.

Cade has turned into a legit good defender. He’s a problem when sitting in his defensive stance, and he’s a plus weakside help defender. The All-Star game is only an exhibition, but Cade’s all-around and two-way game was on full display in that setting. The offensive burden is heavy, but that hasn’t stopped him from locking in on defense.

Robinson is the only huntable defender the Pistons play a lot (Isaiah Joe and Aaron Wiggins aren’t world beaters either). He’ll never be a great on-ball defender, but he does communicate and rotate off the ball. Detroit’s defense is better with him off the floor, but he doesn’t sink the ship. Robinson will be hunted in the postseason, but a team on a string like Detroit could overcome his individual isolation struggles.

Throw it to Unc​


Tobias Harris’ post-up game should be a bail-out option for Detroit in the postseason. He’s always posted up plenty in his career, but he’s posting like a league-leading man this year.

Harris posts up less frequently than bigs like Nikola Jokić, Ivica Zubac, and Joel Embiid, but he’s outperforming two of them when he is on the block. Harris’ 1.18 points per possession on post-ups is better than anyone who posts up as frequently as he does, besides Jokić (1.21) and Kristaps Porzingis (1.23).

tobias.jpg

That shot will be a reliable option for the Pistons halfcourt offense. Harris hasn’t always thrived with expectations throughout his career, but he’s the third or fourth option here. Solid defense and bail-out shotmaking are what Detroit needs from Unc to reach the Finals. He has it in there.

State of the East​


To reach the Finals, Detroit’s lack of shooting or a go-to secondary scorer must be mitigated. The Thunder indeed won the title last year without shooting the leather off the ball, so shooting mitigation is possible, but Jalen Williams did have a 40-piece in the Finals, and he’s a dependable second option for the most part.

Cade would need to be at an MVP level shotmaking-wise, and somebody else has to come along for the ride. Whether that be Duren, a shooter flaming on, or the group as a collective, there needs to be a dynamic second option that puts pressure on the defense.

Another obstacle in Detroit’s Finals aspirations is the field. The New York Knicks are rolling, winning 8 of their last 10 games. Jalen Brunson is who he is. That’s a tough cover for anyone, but Ausar made him work last year, even though all the casual fans remember is the ending. Their Jose Alvarado addition adds some feistiness to a passive Knicks squad. They’re the biggest threat.

The Cleveland Cavaliers could be serious contenders, too. We’re yet to see the James Harden + Evan Mobley connection, but Harden has helped Jarett Allen thrive so far. The Pistons have the double bigs to match Cleveland and the perimeter defenders to make Donovan Mitchell and Harden sweat.

The Boston Celtics are probably lower on the contender tier compared to these teams. Jaylen Brown has been spectacular, and they added more shooting with Nikola Vučević at the deadline, but they don’t have their horses. Without Tatum (maybe he returns), I envision a world where JB isn’t the most efficient No. 1 option in a playoff setting. Detroit could take advantage of his eventual cold nights and grind Boston down. Toronto and Philly are there, but the Pistons are better.

Detroit could very well be better than every team in the East and go on a real run for the first time since the Goin to Work era. There’s a lot to like about the team with the best record in the NBA as we enter the post-All-Star break portion of the year.

Stats as of 2/18/2026 via Basketball Reference, Bball-Index, Cleaning The Glass, PBP Stats, PivotFade, and NBA.com

Source: https://www.detroitbadboys.com/detroit-pistons-analysis/49467/10-things-about-the-detroit-pistons
 
Pistons at Knicks final score: Cade Cunningham owns New York

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Feb 19, 2026; New York, New York, USA; Detroit Pistons guard Cade Cunningham (2) reacts after a dunk during the second half against the New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images | Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

Pistons basketball is back – and Cade Cunningham is here to make an MVP run.

With Jalen Duren and Isaiah Stewart serving their suspensions from last week’s Charlotte game, Paul Reed and Tolu Smith were responsible for the 48 minutes at center.

Detroit started this one off looking they hadn’t played in more than a week while New York got out to a quick 9-2 run before the first JB Bickerstaff timeout. However, it didn’t take long until the owner of Madison Square Garden, James Dolan Cade Cunningham, decided it was time to put on a show. He had 14 of Detroit’s first 23 points and his only mishap was throwing a lob to Tolu Smith that only Jalen Duren could catch. The Pistons would take a 28-26 lead at the end of the first.

The second quarter featured two pretty assists early (and a dunk wedgie!) – one from Cade Cunningham through traffic to find Paul Reed for a dunk and the other from Ausar Thompson who put a two-handed rope into Tobias Harris’ chest for a knockdown corner three. Cade continued to get to his spots, finishing with eight more points in the final three minutes of the half. Detroit took a 58-48 lead at halftime behind 24 points from Cunningham.

New York clawed back and made it a 62-60 game until back-to-back Duncan Robinson threes made it 68-60. That’s when Cade turned his MVP mode on.

He had a sequence of eight straight points – bodied OG Anunoby for a layup, a midrange over OG, a poster on the entire Knicks team, and ended it with a heat check midrange. The only reason it didn’t continue was because he found Ron Holland for a wide open three. By the time it was the end of the quarter, Cade had 35 points and Detroit held a 90-79 lead.

Cunningham returned in the fourth and instantly found Javonte Green on the fastbreak with a two-handed bounce pass to give Woo an and-one dunk – it would give Cade his 10th assist of the night. Nobody on New York could guard Cunningham. At one point, they even tried recently acquired Jeremy Sochan and Cade absolutely cooked him with a stepback three for his 40th point.

To add to his MVP performance, he had three more assists before the final buzzer, including a lob to Daniss Jenkins and a needle-threader to Paul Reed on the roll. Detroit would finish with a 126-111 dominant victory over the New York Knicks.

I’m not exaggerating – this might’ve been the best basketball I’ve ever seen Cade Cunningham play. He finished with 42 points, eight rebounds, and 13 assists. He shot 17-for-34 from the field and 5-for-11 from deep. He always shows up when Detroit plays the Knicks, and with missing both key big men, Cade knew he had to put the team on his back and he delivered. It was a complete two-way performance as he scored at all three levels while also adding three stocks.

As good as Cade was, Paul Reed also deserves to be recognized tonight. He started in place of Jalen Duren and played 30 minutes. He finished with 18 points, seven rebounds, two assists, one steal, and three blocks while shooting 7-for-9 from the field. Thank goodness for Bball Paul and his ability to be steadily consistent with inconsistent minutes.

I cannot recommend enough that you watch this beautiful performance on YouTube.

Give Cade the MVP trophy – tonight.

Go Stones.

Source: https://www.detroitbadboys.com/detr...cks-final-score-cade-cunningham-owns-new-york
 
Submit your questions for The Pindown: A Detroit Pistons Podcast

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Send in your questions now for this week’s episode of The Pindown: A Detroit Pistons Podcast to discuss everything Pistons. Submit your question to the comments section here or on X/Twitter to @TheRealWesD3 and/or @blakesilverman.

Join us live on Saturday afternoon for the show where we’ll recap the Pistons’ triumphant return from the All-Star break. How optimistic are you feeling after Cade Cunningham’s big night against the Knicks? What does Jalen Duren’s return mean for the next chunk of games? And, how about that All-Star Game?

Plus, The Pindown has a phone line where you can leave a message and hear your voice on the show. Call (313) 355-2717 and leave us a voicemail with your question. Please try to keep the message around 45 seconds or less so we can fit everyone into the show.

The podcast will be uploaded to all audio platforms the following morning.

The Pindown: A Detroit Pistons Podcast Vitals:


When: Saturday February 21 at 2 p.m. ET

Where: Detroit Bad Boys YouTube Channel

How to submit questions:


  • Detroit Bad Boys Website: Comment section of the weekly Pindown episode articles.
  • Call (313) 355-2717 and leave us a voicemail with your question. Please try to keep the message to 45 seconds or less.
  • Twitter: @detroitbadboys, @blakesilverman or @therealwesd3
  • YouTube: Chat section of The Pindown live recording — Subscribe here

As always, leave any questions or topics you want to be discussed in the comment section below.

Source: https://www.detroitbadboys.com/detr...ons-for-the-pindown-a-detroit-pistons-podcast
 
Pistons vs. Knicks Discussion: Game Time, TV, Odds, and More

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DETROIT, MI - FEBRUARY 6: Cade Cunningham #2 of the Detroit Pistons looks to pass the ball during the game against the New York Knicks on February 6, 2026 at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit, Michigan. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Chris Schwegler/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Basketball is back. And in case you forgot, the Detroit Pistons enter the unofficial second half of the season with the NBA’s best record. What you might have also forgotten is that the Pistons will be facing the New York Knicks tonight without their top two big men, Jalen Duren and Isaiah Stewart. Both are suspended because of on-court altercations against the Charlotte Hornets before the All-Star break. Duren will be serving suspension game two of two. Beef Stew will be sidelined for this game and five additional games. The Knicks should be getting back OG Anunoby tonight, and will be looking for a bit of revenge after the Pistons popped them wins of 38 and 31 points in their past two matchups.

Game Vitals​


When: 7:30 p.m. ET
Where: Madison Square Garden, New York, New York
Watch: Prime Video
Odds: Pistons +3.5

Projected Lineups​

Detroit Pistons (40-13)​


Cade Cunningham, Duncan Robinson, Ausar Thompson, Tobias Harris, Paul Reed

New York Knicks (35-20)​


Jalen Brunson, Josh Hart, Mikal Bridges, OG Anunoby, Karl-Anthony Towns

Source: https://www.detroitbadboys.com/detr...-knicks-discussion-game-time-tv-odds-and-more
 
Pistons vs. Bulls Discussion: Game Time, TV, Odds, and More

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DETROIT, MICHIGAN - JANUARY 07: Paul Reed #7 of the Detroit Pistons tries to drive around Matas Buzelis #14 of the Chicago Bulls during the first half at Little Caesars Arena on January 07, 2026 in Detroit, Michigan. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Jalen Duren is back, but Jaden Ivey is not. The Detroit Pistons face the Chicago Bulls tonight, and they will see the return of their All-Star big man after serving a two-game suspension for an on-court altercation. Ivey, meanwhile, is out tonight due to knee soreness. It’s a bummer not to see Ivey suit up and play 30-plus minutes, but it is no easy road coming back from a major knee injury. I hope we can see the old, explosive Ivey again soon.

The Pistons are on quite a roll, and star point guard Cade Cunningham is finally getting some legitimate MVP buzz. All it takes is for his 3-pointer to start falling and one stellar showing on the grand stage of Madison Square Garden. Cunningham scored 42 points and hit five 3-pointers in a 126-111 win over the Knicks. It would be fabulous if he didn’t follow that up with a stinker against the Bulls, who have lost 10 of their last 11 games.

Game Vitals​


When: 8 p.m. ET
Where: United Center, Chicago, Illinois
Watch: FanDuel Sports Network Detroit
Odds: Pistons -10.5

Projected Lineups​

Detroit Pistons (41-13)​


Cade Cunningham, Duncan Robinson, Ausar Thompson, Tobias Harris, Jalen Duren

Chicago Bulls (24-32)​


Josh Giddey, Anfernee Simons, Isaac Okoro, Matas Buzelis, Jalen Smith

Source: https://www.detroitbadboys.com/detr...s-bulls-discussion-game-time-tv-odds-and-more
 
The Pindown I The East Runs Through Detroit

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The East goes through Detroit. That’s all that needs to be said as Wes and Blake record this show right after the Pistons steamrolled the New York Knicks for the third time this season. And this time, the Knicks were healthy, the Pistons were not. Blake and Wes take a quick moment to applaud the NBA All-Star game’s new format before diving in to that shorthanded beatdown. Was this Cade’s best game of his career? Oh, and should he be truly in the conversation to win MVP this year? What about another stellar defensive performance from Ausar Thompson? How valuable will he be as a defensive weapon in the playoffs? The guys break this all down, then they look ahead. Who is the Pistons’ biggest playoff threat? Will Ron Holland maintain his rotation spot this year in the playoffs? And just how unique is this Piston identity that JB Bickerstaff alludes to?

We’ve got you covered for all this and more in this week’s episode!

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Want to hear your voice on the Pindown? Call ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠(313) 355-2717⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ and leave your question as a voicemail! The guys will play your message and answer your question on that week’s episode! All we ask is that you keep your questions to under 45 seconds.

Source: https://www.detroitbadboys.com/detr...1/the-pindown-i-the-east-runs-through-detroit
 
Pistons vs. Spurs final score: Detroit’s missing ingredients exposed in loss to title contender

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DETROIT, MI - FEBRUARY 23: Victor Wembanyama #1 of the San Antonio Spurs goes up for the rebound during the game against the Detroit Pistons on February 23, 2026 at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit, Michigan. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Chris Schwegler/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Detroit Pistons built their game plan around containing Victor Wembanyama, but the reason the San Antonio Spurs are one of the best teams in the league is that it isn’t all about Wemby. The Spurs had everything working in a 114-103 win over the Pistons in front of a raucous and then quite dejected crowd at Little Caesars Arena.

The bottom line is the Spurs surrounded Wembanyama with shooters and ball handlers, and those players moved the ball and hit their shots. The Pistons have a lack of shooting and ball handling around Cade Cunningham, and it was on full display on a night when Cade struggled, and San Antonio’s elite defense was able to control the paint in the second half.

Wembanyama was just 6-of-16 from the floor, and Cunningham was limited to 5-of-26. They both found ways to be impactful through passing, rebounding, and shot blocking (three for Cunningham and six for Wembanyama). The surrounding cast delivered this win for the Spurs by getting plenty of open looks and making a ton of them. The Spurs hit 18 three-pointers on the night compared to just seven for the Pistons. That was the ballgame right there.

These two teams entered tonight as two of the worst 3-point shooting teams in the NBA and succeeded despite it. Tonight, though, the Spurs shot 18-of-40 from deep, and Detroit was a woeful 7-for-36. If you told me before the game that San Antonio’s Devin Vassell and Julian Champagnie were going to shoot a combined 12-for-19 from deep tonight, I would tell you that the Spurs were going to win that game. And that’s exactly what happened. Sometimes basketball isn’t that complicated.

Vassell was the high-scorer on the night with 28 points and seven made threes, while Champagnie had 17, and Steph Castle had 16 and 11 assists. Wembanyama was bottled up on offense for the most part, but he still had an otherworldly 21 points, 17 rebounds, and six blocks.

The Pistons were able to stay in the game through three quarters via their signature — flying all over the floor, defending their butts off, and getting into the teeth of San Antonio’s defense. Jalen Duren led the Pistons with 25 points and 14 rebounds, and Ron Holland scored 15 and added 11 boards. But it was a night when Tobias Harris was invisible (1-of-6 for four points) and Ausar Thompson was played off the floor. Thompson only played 18 minutes and was subbed at the 8:14 mark of the third quarter with the Spurs up 63-62. He never returned to the game.

Either Thompson did something JB Bickerstaff really didn’t like or he had already determined that the paint was going to be off limits the rest of the night and needed to try to source some offense and couldn’t afford to put the non-shooter back on the floor. Whatever the reason, the offense never really came. Detroit was limited to 20 points in the third quarter and went up by as many as 15 points.

Cunningham struggled with fouls, struggled with his shot, struggled with ball pressure, and Detroit didn’t really have the ability to turn to anyone else to make things happen. The magic dust has worn off Daniss Jenkins a little bit, who still plays hard and mostly plays smart, but is not a reliable scoring threat. Caris LeVert played like Caris LeVert. Hit a couple of tough shots and did heinous things with the ball in his hands. Javonte Green is a defender and spot-up shooter only, and Ron Holland is all hustle; you can’t run plays through him.

That is a recipe for tough nights against the elite teams who are locked in, and it leaves Detroit with a lot of pondering to do, because this is exactly the kind of game you’re going to need to figure out how to win come playoff time.

The Pistons have the best record in the NBA against the league’s best teams, we know they know how to win close games, and they have an elite player in Cunningham they can turn to in the clutch. That’s great in the regular season, but Detroit needs to understand how to win playoff basketball. Because tonight had the look and feel of playoff basketball, and the Pistons came up way short.

Luckily, Detroit still has 26 games to figure it out.

Source: https://www.detroitbadboys.com/detr...ngredients-exposed-in-loss-to-title-contender
 
Pistons vs. Spurs Discussion: Game Time, TV, Odds, and More

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DETROIT, MICHIGAN - JANUARY 10: Jalen Duren #0 of the Detroit Pistons blocks out Victor Wembanyama #1 of the San Antonio Spurs duirng a during the first-half free throw at Little Caesars Arena on January 10, 2024 in Detroit, Michigan. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Welcome, friends to the NBA’s game of the year. Two of the most exciting young franchises in the NBA, both either first or second in their respective conferences, and both led by two young, superstar players who look like they could help define the NBA for the next decade-plus.

In one corner, you have the East-leading Detroit Pistons led by Cade Cunningham, one of the most versatile offensive hubs in the NBA. He does a lot of traditional things you expect from a lead guard — run the offense, dictate the pace, get others involved, score at all three levels, play hard on defense. He just does all of those things at a high level as a total package you want to build your team around. In the other corner, you have a very untraditional superstar in the San Antonio Spurs’ Victor Wembanyama. He is a 7-foot-4 dynamo on both ends of the floor with a face-up game, ball-handling skills more akin to a guard, and one of the most feared defenders of the paint in the NBA. He’s redefining what is possible on the court on a nightly basis.

But these two teams excel for reasons beyond their respective star players. Detroit is able to impose its will on teams behind total team defense, hustle, and grit. The Spurs play an excellent brand of defense as well, but it’s a more contained, disciplined variety. They don’t impose their will; they don’t give you anything to work with and are happy to let you settle for a bad shot. No team gives up a lower ratio of free throws than the Spurs on a nightly basis, and the San Antonio defense is top-four in both defending twos and defending threes.

Game Vitals​


When: 7 p.m. ET
Where: Little Caesars Arena, Detroit, Michigan
Watch: Peacock; FanDuel Sports Network Detroit
Odds: Pistons -1.5

Projected Lineups​

Detroit Pistons (42-13)​


Cade Cunningham, Duncan Robinson, Ausar Thompson, Tobias Harris, Jalen Duren

San Antonio Spurs (40-16)​


De’Aaron Fox, Stephon Castle, Devin Vassell, Julian Champagnie, Victor Wembanyama

Source: https://www.detroitbadboys.com/detr...s-spurs-discussion-game-time-tv-odds-and-more
 
Pistons vs. Thunder preview: League’s top two teams square off on ESPN

NBA: Oklahoma City Thunder at Detroit Pistons


Who would have thought just two years ago that a Pistons vs. Thunder game would be getting flexed onto ESPN because both teams are number 1 in the Conference. Obviously, that isn’t a huge surprise for the reigning NBA Champs, but the Pistons lost 28 games in a row just 2 years ago, they aren’t supposed to be here this fast.

Monday’s game against the San Antonio Spurs lived up to the hype, but the Pistons ultimately fell as their offense sputtered in the 2nd half. With how reliant they are on inside shooting, facing off against a game-wrecker like Victor Wembanyama is not a good matchup. The Spurs might be the worst matchup for the Pistons for that reason alone.

This isn’t to downplay the Thunder at all, they have the best record in the West for a reason and also sport the number 1 defense in the NBA, just in front of the Pistons. They have length, they are physical, and play just like the Pistons, so this game could get ugly.

Game Vitals​


Where: Little Caesars Arena in Detroit, MI
When: Wednesday, February 25 at 7:30 pm EST
Watch: ESPN or Fan Duel Sports Network Detroit
Odds: Detroit (-7.5)

Analysis​


You might be looking at those odds and be in shock, but there is a pretty good reason for it. The Thunder will be without Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Jalen Williams, and Ajay Mitchell. That does not mean that this will be an easy game. Just like the Pistons, the Thunder are a very deep team and their defensive infrastructure is still in place no matter who is on the court.

It goes without saying how important SGA and Jalen Williams are to the Thunder, but missing Ajay Mitchell is a very underrated loss. He has been a key player off the bench during his breakout season after going in the 2nd round last year. Just another example of the rich getting richer.

With those 3 players out, the Thunder will be forced to rely on Chet Holmgren and Cason Wallace to provide more offense. Both players are capable of providing more on offense, but there is a reason why they are complements to SGA and Jalen Williams to a lesser extent.

One player who has really stepped up in the absence of SGA is Isaiah Joe, who scored 22 points on 6-11 shooting from beyond the arc last night against the Raptors. He also had the exact same shooting line in a win against the Cavaliers on Sunday. He is a lethal shooter who can take over a game if left open, so the Pistons will need to adjust their defensive gameplan so they are not leaving him open like they did for the Spurs shooters on Monday.

The easy explanation for that is that the San Antonio Spurs have Victor Wembanyama, who is such a threat on both ends of the court that you have to change everything about how you play in order to stop him. For the Pistons, that meant putting extra pressure on him and leaving shooters open and letting your half court offense get completely stifled by his rim pressence.

Luckily, the Thunder don’t have anybody like Wemby. Chet Homgren is close, especially on defense, but he doesn’t have the same length and can be put in check a little bit with physicality. He also is not as skilled on offense, but can still make you pay if you don’t guard him. Whether he is able to step up offensively is a key factor in this game, as he is coming off a 7-point performance against the Raptors last night.

I would not be surprised to see some Paul Reed and Jalen Duren minutes to counter the Holmgren-Hartenstein frontcourt. This would have been a great matchup to unleash the Isaiah Stewart-Jalen Duren frontcourt, but Stewart is still out with his suspension. Tobias Harris should be able to handle Holmgren for some of the game, but is at a severe size disadvantage.

Another reason for the offensive struggles for the Pistons against the Spurs on Monday, and Cade Cunningham in particular, was the constant ball pressure by Stephon Castle. He was able to stay in front of him and had the strength to match his physicality. Castle is near the top of the list of defenders in the league capable of givng Cade Cunningham trouble.

Cason Wallace is at that level on defense with being able to pressure the ball and stay on his man, but he doesn’t quite have the size that Stephon Castle has, so the Thunder may opt to have Lu Dort guard Cade so he cannot get into rhythm offensively by outmuscling a smaller guard.

There is a reason these two teams are the top two teams in the league defensively, both are very physical and great at playing passing lanes to generate turnovers. With SGA being out, the Pistons are at least on an even playing field offensively, so this could be a very ugly game that ends with double digit scores for both teams.

With how tough the Pistons schedule is this week and next week, facing the Thunder while missing three key players is the perfect time to face them, so the Pistons need to take advantage of it. Don’t let the odds fool you, the Pistons have a great shot at winning, but the Thunder are where they are for a reason and it will not be easy.

Lineups​


Detroit Pistons (42-14): Cade Cunningham, Duncan Robinson, Ausar Thompson, Tobias Harris, Jalen Duren

Oklahoma City Thunder (45-14): Cason Wallace, Isaiah Joe, Lu Dort, Chet Homgren, Isaiah Hartenstein

Question of the Day​


How concerned are you with the Pistons performance on Monday against the Spurs. Was it just a bad night or a sign of things to come in the playoffs?

Source: https://www.detroitbadboys.com/detr...view-leagues-top-two-teams-square-off-on-espn
 
Pistons vs Thunder final score: Detroit beats depleted OKC

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DETROIT, MICHIGAN - FEBRUARY 25: Jalen Duren #0 Pistons high fives Ausar Thompson #9 of the Detroit Pistons during the second quarter against the Oklahoma City Thunder at Little Caesars Arena on February 25, 2026 in Detroit, Michigan. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Nic Antaya/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Despite the Thunder missing majority of their rotation with Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Jalen Willians, Isaiah Hartenstein, Chet Holmgren, Alex Caruso, and Ajay Mitchell all reported as out, they were able to hold with Detroit early as they held a 17-16 lead halfway through the first quarter. Their second and third-stringers showed up ready to play as seven different Thunder players would score in the first as they ended the quarter with a 15-2 run to lead 34-22.

Detroit’s defense was missing, but they found offense through Jalen Duren. Without both of the OKC big men, Jaylin Williams was the lone man left to handle JD. Duren’s size would prove to be a problem early as he led the team in field goal attempts along with eight points and three rebounds.

The Pistons needed a spark in the second and they found it from their 9-to-5 crew.

We saw the typical Ron Holland on defense, but it was his offensive rebounding with Paul Reed that provided extra possessions for Detroit to start clawing back against OKC. There was one sequence where the two of them had three straight boards over the Thunder team and RoHo was able to get the layup to go. It hasn’t looked pretty from three recently for Ron, but you can never doubt his effort.

I thought Ausar had a great second quarter – he came in for Caris LeVert after LeVert picked up his third foul and instantly made an impact on both ends of the floor. He had a sequence of a block pinned against the backboard into a transition alley-oop to Jalen Duren, and it was one of those moments where I was convinced no one else on the team could replicate that.

Most importantly, he did a great job of operating with the ball despite the Thunder not respecting his jumper from deep. They guarded him from the block or the free throw line at times, but he was able to attack and kick to find teammates for an open three. He was able to be patient and get to the right elbow for a jumper, a spot we know he’s much more comfortable shooting from.

Between these two and Jalen Duren continuing to feast inside, Detroit was able to reclaim the lead late in the second. They ended the half on a 10-2 run and took a 58-52 lead. Duren led the way with 18 points and seven rebounds as OKC didn’t have an answer for him down low.

The Pistons were able to extend that lead into the third quarter. They forced an Oklahoma City timeout after Cade did his best Tayshaun Prince impression with a chase-down block followed by a transition bucket from Duncan Robinson gave Detroit a double-digit lead. Newly acquired Kevin Huerter even got some minutes before the end of the quarter.

With a 94-80 lead heading into the final frame, things were looking good for Detroit in the Battle of the #1 Seeds. OKC was playing a lot of zone defense, though, Cade did a good job of picking it apart. While the Pistons relied on scoring from inside, the Thunder looked to score from deep. They were consistently shooting threes, with 10 attempts coming from Jaylin Williams who finished with a career-high 30 points. The entire team would shoot 18-for-49 from deep – Detroit’s season-high in attempts is 43.

Those OKC threes landed in the fourth quarter and they made it a five-point game with 5:30 left behind a 11-2 Thunder run. Guards Aaron Wiggins, Cason Wallace, and Jarden McCain contributed with at least 20 points each. Every time they made it close, Cade would carve up the Oklahoma City defense to keep the game just out of reach. It wasn’t the performance you’d hope to see after hearing more than half of their rotation was out, but Detroit now owns a 1-0 record over OKC this season after a 124-116 victory tonight.

It was the Cade Cunningham and Jalen Duren show for Detroit as they were the focal point of the offense and were able to capitalize with the lack of interior presence for the Thunder. Both players had 29 points while Cade added 13 assists and JD had 15 rebounds. The two combined to shoot 23-for-33 (69.7%) for an incredibly efficient night. Cunningham also added in multiple highlight reel blocks as he continues to show he’s a complete, two-way hooper.

Duncan Robinson had 16 points including three threes and five free throws, three of which came in the clutch after getting fouled on an attempted three-pointer with less than two minutes left. Ausar did Ausar things tonight and finished with a stat line of 11 points, four rebounds, seven assists, three steals, and two blocks. Thompson had a great bounce back game after being benched in the second half against San Antonio.

The gauntlet of potential playoff previews continues with another primetime matchup, this time on Friday night against the Cleveland Cavaliers.

Go Stones.

Source: https://www.detroitbadboys.com/detr...hunder-final-score-detroit-beats-depleted-okc
 
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