This deserves a dedicated post-game thread, given the circumstances 🥳🎉🍾
Sixty-three days separated the Detroit Pistons’ second and third wins this season. At least they can enter the new year with their heads held high.
The Pistons (3-29) snapped their 28-game losing streak Saturday with a 129-127 win over the Toronto Raptors at Little Caesars Arena. The Pistons had already set the NBA’s single-season record for consecutive losses and tied the all-time record set by the Philadelphia 76ers across the 2014-15 and 2015-16 seasons.
Their previous win? A 118-102 thumping Oct. 28 of the Chicago Bulls at LCA. The Pistons finish 2023 with just 10 wins — they are 5-52 since Feb. 10 — and will now aim to set a better tone in 2024 when they face the Rockets in Houston on Jan. 1 to start a four-game western road trip.
On Saturday, Cade Cunningham had a rough start but came alive late, thanks to a strong night at the free throw line. He scored 26 of his 30 points in the second half, and went 8-for-8 at the line through the first three quarters with just made four field goals in the same span. He also dished out 12 assists with zero turnovers.
“I’m proud of how our guys have continued to fight through adversity,” Pistons owner Tom Gores said in a released statement postgame. "I know it’s been hard, but they’ve kept their heads up and showed real character. The streak is over, but the hard work continues.”
A few hours before the game, the Raptors (12-20) officially tiopped off trade season by sending OG Anunoby, Precious Achiuwa and Malachi Flynn to the New York Knicks for RJ Barrett, Immanuel Quickley and the Pistons’ 2024 second-round pick.
It allowed the Pistons to face a team that not only had to play without three rotation players and its best defender, but was also coming off a 120-118 road loss to the Boston Celtics less than 24 hours prior. Toronto still shot the ball well (50.5% overall, 50% from 3) but was outdone by a Pistons team that got strong performances across the roster.
Toronto’s Pascal Siakam led all scorers with 35 points, but the Pistons got strong nights from Bojan Bogdanovic (19 points), Jalen Duren (18 points, 17 rebounds) and Kevin Knox II (17 points).
The Pistons took control in the first half as the Raptors went cold after a hot start, taking a 52-44 lead entering halftime after Toronto shot 6-for-23 in the second quarter. The Pistons picked up after making just six of 21 shot attempts through the first nine minutes of the opening period.
Offensive rebounding and a rare productive night for the bench (led by Alec Burks’ 16 points on 4-for-6 shooting) helped the Pistons build a lead even though Cunningham struggled early.
He had four points on 1-for-8 shooting in the first half, after averaging a staggering 33 points, 7.4 assists, 5.8 rebounds and 1.8 steals on 56.9% overall shooting over his past five games.
The Pistons can credit a strong night at the foul line, knocking down 35 of their 40 attempts to hold off the Raptors’ furious last-minute rally.
The Pistons went 14-for-17 on free throws in the final quarter.
The Raptors took a one-point lead multiple times and tied it at 85 with a Siakam layup. Detroit finished the third period with a pair of free throws from Ausar Thompson and a contested corner 3-pointer by Bogdanovic, extending the lead to 90-86. Burks then opened the fourth with an entry pass to James Wiseman for a dunk.
The home crowd rose to its feet and cheered in the final moments as the Pistons left the court with smiles.
“I’ve been in a ton of locker rooms my whole life, and that’s a first for me, to have that kind of, it wasn’t relief. It was just like, ‘Thank God,’” head coach Monty Williams said. "Finally. Guys were screaming. I was almost in tears. I’m just so happy for our guys, happy for everybody in the locker room. Sometimes it just takes a win like that to get things started.
“I’ve said it so many times that I think people may have thought that they were ok with losing, but they came in every day with a great spirit and they wanted answers and they came in wanting to learn and get better. We rarely came into the gym with a bad spirit. We always had our joy because knew that if we put it together we could win just not one game, but put many wins together. I just respect the heck out of our guys. Really happy, and we finally got a win. Because it’s so hard to win in this league. It was pretty cool.”
Burks, Knox lift Pistons early
You could almost hear a collective groan in the arena when Williams handed the reins to his bench with four minutes left in the first. The Pistons’ units without either Cunningham or Bogdanovic on the floor have been routinely crushed by teams. The group (Burks, Killian Hayes, Isaiah Livers, Ausar Thompson and James Wiseman) initially gave up a pair of Raptors baskets and struggled to find room offensively.
But after their first possession together ended with a shot clock violation, Burks picked up the slack. The veteran sharpshooter drew fouls on a transition layup attempt and 3-pointer and made all five free throws, and then knocked down a catch-and-shoot 3 to put the Pistons ahead 25-24 after a quarter.
They sustained their momentum, too. Knox and Livers knocked down back-to-back 3s to extend the lead to 47-37 with just over three minutes remaining in the second.
Knox continued rolling in the third, scoring seven points with a 3 and a pair of inside baskets, including a poster dunk of Jakob Poeltl, to help the Pistons sustain a lead through the first half of the quarter. Knox scored all 17 of his points in the first three periods, and finished 7-for-14 shooting.
Burks has struggled for most of the season, shooting 32.6% overall and 32.8% from 3 entering the game. Saturday was a return to form.
“He always says it comes back around,” Cunningham said. “I always say it to him, I call him ‘All Buckets,’ because when I stepped into the league when he was in New York, I didn’t like playing against him. To have him on the squad, that’s what he does is score the ball. It’s something that even through the slump, I trusted him to knock down shots, because that’s what he does. It was only right that it came back around in a big moment for us.”
Cunningham finishes strong
One of the NBA’s hottest players these past two weeks, Cunningham appeared to be in store for a rough night. Shots didn’t fall early, though he did have four assists.
Cunningham knocked down eight of his 12 attempts in the second half, including a handful of big shots in the final period. On consecutive possessions, he knocked down a pull-up 3-pointer and found Jaden Ivey open for a 3-pointer to give the Pistons their biggest lead of the night, 110-99, midway through the fourth.
With 1:34 to go, Cunningham knocked down a midrange jumper to give the Pistons a 116-107 cushion, nearly icing the game and ending 2023 on a joyful note after a historically horrendous stretch.