I’m going to make this recap short. I just got back from an absolutely infuriating basketball game with thousands of my Pistons fan friends, and way too many Cavs fans. Walking through the concourse and to the parking lot around a bunch of elated Cavs fans — who knew they got away with something — not fun! In the end, the Detroit Pistons lost 117-113 in overtime and now face a 3-2 deficit heading to Cleveland in a possible elimination game.
Look, the free-throw disparity that has plagued Detroit for
the three games prior did not abate tonight. Detroit shot 20 free throws on their home floor and the Cavaliers shot 38. The most egregious was thanks to a bunch of James Harden contortions and selling calls. It was maddening.
But most important was a critical no call that should have gone Detroit’s way and very well could have delivered the Pistons a victory. The Pistons had a nine-point lead with just under three minutes left but let it dwindle away and suddenly the game was tied and the Cavs had the ball on what could have been the final possession.
Ausar Thompson, who was brilliant all night, hounded Donovan Mitchell at the top of the key and blocked the ball from behind as Mitchell went up for a potential game-winning shot. As Ausar attempted to retrieve the loose ball he was clearly tripped by Jarrett Allen. A whistle sends Ausar to the free-throw line with two chances to put Detroit ahead with under 1.5 seconds left. But there was no whistle. Instead, the ball bounced across the floor and time expired.
That was one of a dozen calls that will make any Piston fan furious and will haunt the team for the rest of the offseason unless they can pull off a miracle and win the next two games.
The Pistons did not play perfect basketball, but it felt like they played well enough to win. Cleveland outlasted Detroit thanks to Max Strus hitting six threes, James Harden hitting shots and selling calls, and the Pistons inability to score in the final minutes to truly ice the game. And the refs. It’s not an excuse. The game was simply way too dictated by the referees tonight not to mention it. To pretend the refs calls didn’t dictate this entire game is to put your head in the sand. It’s simply really hard to make up the deficit caused by spotting the opposing team 13 points at the free-throw line.
Cade Cunningham played a great game, scoring 39 points, hitting six threes, and adding nine assists and seven rebounds. He seemed to tire late and was less assertive in the final minutes of the fourth when the Pistons squandered a nine-point lead. But he gave the team everything he could tonight.
So did Daniss Jenkins, a surprise starter in place of the injured Duncan Robinson. The young guard had 19 points and played his butt off on the defensive side of the ball. Isaiah Stewart played solid minutes in the first half, even hitting two from deep. Paul Reed played 17 second-half minutes and scored 10 points on quality shooting and added eight rebounds.
They just couldn’t do enough. On to Cleveland to try to save the season.








