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The Detroit Pistons suffered a heartbreaking 117-113 loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 5, facing elimination in the playoffs. Despite a nine-point lead late in the game, critical mistakes led to their collapse.
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Detroit â Eminem was sitting courtside with 50 Cent. Detroit basketball royalty sat nearby, as Isiah Thomas and Ben Wallace looked on.
But home cooking only takes you so far in the NBA playoffs. And whether you want to blame the whistles that blew or the one that didnât, you canât ignore the plays the Pistons failed to make, either.
Theyâll pack some regrets as they head back to Cleveland trying to keep their season alive Friday, suddenly facing elimination after letting a pivotal Game 5 slip away Wednesday night at Little Caesars Arena.
After watching a nine-point lead evaporate in the final few minutes of regulation, some glaring mistakes in overtime sealed Detroitâs fate in a 117-113 loss.
Detroit guard Caris LeVert reacts after the Pistons were charged a foul during the third quarter of game five of the NBA Eastern Conference semi-finals between the Detroit Pistons and the Cleveland Cavaliers, at Little Caesars Arena, in Detroit, May 13, 2026.
Cade Cunningham scored a game-high 39 points Wednesday, but he also committed a costly turnover early in overtime and then missed a free-throw cutout with 22 seconds left in what was still a one-possession game.
And on a night where the Pistons appeared poised to regain control of this best-of-seven series, that ugly finish was one they wonât easily forget.
The Pistons' collapse was attributed to critical mistakes in overtime and a failure to maintain their nine-point lead late in regulation.
Eminem and 50 Cent were sitting courtside, along with Detroit basketball legends Isiah Thomas and Ben Wallace.
The loss puts the Pistons in a position of facing elimination as they head back to Cleveland for Game 6.
The Pistons will play their next game on Friday, trying to keep their season alive against the Cavaliers.
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Neither will the fans, of course, particularly after the way regulation ended Wednesday night.
The Cavaliers put the ball in the hands of star guard Donovan Mitchell, but some terrific defense by Ausar Thompson ended with him knocking the ball loose on Mitchellâs attempted floater. Then came the controversy, though, as Thompson tried to chase down the loose ball and was tripped up by Clevelandâs Jarrett Allen. He went sprawling to the floor with 1.7 seconds left as the ball bounced out of bounds.
Veteran referee Tony Brothers was right in front of the play but didnât blow his whistle. Thompson was livid about the no-call, as was J.B. Bickerstaff, who came charging out on the court to argue after time expired and the two teams were headed to overtime. The ESPN announcing crew also sounded a bit incredulous there was no foul called on the play, and if there had been, Thompson wouldâve been at the free-throw line with a chance to win it in regulation because the Cavs were over the foul limit.
âHe fouled Ausar,â Bickerstaff said. âItâs clear. He trips him when heâs going for a loose ball. End-of-game situation, thatâs tough.â
Thatâs what theyâve come to expect as this series has shifted dramatically, from a 2-0 series lead after the first two games in Detroit to this ominous task the Pistons are facing now.
They shot 35 free throws in Game 1 of this series, then shot 34 combined in the two games in Cleveland. And after he felt his team had gotten jobbed in Game 4 on Monday, Bickerstaff called that disparity âunacceptable,â suggesting the shift was due to Kenny Atkinsonâs complaints about Detroitâs physical play.
Game 5 didnât go any better on that front for the Pistons, who were called for 10 more fouls (26 to 16) and shot 18 fewer free throws than the Cavaliers. So that end-of-regulation no-call was just another brick in the wall.
âWeâre the Pistons,â said Daniss Jenkins, who scored 19 points while making his first career playoff start in place of an injured Duncan Robinson on Wednesday. âWe know it was a foul but we donât expect that (to be called).â
He insisted the Pistons didnât let that âlingerâ into overtime, either. It didnât matter, though, because the Pistons already looked flustered, failing to score a point in the final 3 minutes after a Tobias Harris three-pointer put them up 103-94.
In that stretch, the Pistons missed their final six shots and twice committed turnovers on shot-clock violations. And with the Cavaliers trapping Cunningham and forcing others to beat them, they ultimately couldnât.
âWe ainât supposed to lose that lead like that, man,â Jenkins said. âWeâve gotta be better, gotta execute better. Defensively we gave up too many timely 3s.â
They gave up too many offensive rebounds as well down the stretch, as the Cavaliers, whoâd trailed by as many as 15 earlier in the night, once again looked like the team with more playoff experience.
And now that team holds home-court advantage, which is a problem for the Pistons. Because the Cavaliers are a perfect 6-0 at home in these playoffs.
@JohnNiyo
This article originally appeared on The Detroit News: Detroit Pistons collapse down the stretch in Game 5 loss to Cavaliers