The Detroit Pistons used another well-rounded effort, with contributions up and down the roster, to beat the Cleveland Cavaliers 107-97 and take a 2-0 lead in the Eastern Conference Semifinal series. It was a tougher game as Cleveland cleaned up its turnovers and got a much friendlier whistle than in Game 1, but every time the Cavs punched Detroit in the mouth, the Pistons found a way to punch back.
The Pistons were led by Cade Cunningham with 25 points and 10 assists, and just like in Game 1, Cunningham saved
his best for late in the game. Cade scored 12 points in the final six minutes of the fourth quarter and played excellent defense to help stave off a late Cleveland surge.
Detroit was up comfortably throughout the first half, but a stagnant third quarter on offense and a subpar defensive effort, combined with an unfriendly whistle, allowed the Cavs to cut Detroit’s lead to four entering the final quarter. Cleveland then scored the first three baskets of the fourth, including an emphatic Evan Mobley dunk, to take their first lead of the game since early in the first.
Detroit then turned into their two most reliable players in game one — Tobias Harris and Duncan Robinson. Harris settled things down with a steady turnaround jumper from 11 feet, and Robinson hit a three. When the Cavs cut it to a one-possession game again, Tobias hit a floater, and Duncan hit a three. Of course. That was all Detroit needed to get into Cade time.
He hit a pull-up three at the top of the key, a baseline fadeaway, got to the free-throw line, and effectively put the game away with a stepback three with just over two minutes left.
Plenty of Pistons played well, and it was all needed because nearly as many players were battling foul trouble. A game after Cleveland complained about the poor whistle they received, the script completely flipped in game 2 (interesting how that works).
Ausar Thompson got his fourth foul early in the third quarter, and his absence was a big contributor to Cleveland’s third-quarter run. James Harden seemed to be trying to bait foul calls as his entire role in the offensive game plan. Or, it was the only thing Harden did well, anyway.
The Beard was just 3-of-13 from the floor and had four turnovers, including a critical one late in the fourth when he pounded the air out of the ball and then got his pocket picked by Thompson. He wasn’t the only Cavs player who struggled. Evan Mobley was limited to just nine points and one rebound. Dean Wade, who is mostly in the lineup for defense, scored just eight points.
Donovan Mitchell almost won the game for the Cavs by himself. He was brilliant throughout the night. He had his swim move and floater game working hard, and he hit some tough perimeter shots to try to keep his team in the game. He led all scorers with 31 points. Jarrett Allen chipped in 22 points.
The Pistons got contributions up and down the roster. Ausar Thompson scored 10 points and added seven rebounds. Tobias Harris scored 21 points, stretching his 20-plus game streak to seven. Duncan Robinson scored 17 and hit five three-pointers. Daniss Jenkins scored 14 points and added six rebounds and four assists. He was absolutely critical to keeping Detroit in it when Cunningham was mostly quiet.
In the end, Detroit did exactly what it had to do. It protected its home-court advantage, established how they can best the Cavs on both ends of the floor, and now they will look to head to Cleveland to really put a stranglehold on this series.












