“Our guys were unbelievable tonight,” J.B. Bickerstaff said after Detroit’s 114-110 overtime loss to Oklahoma City, and the game backed that up. The Pistons led 97-90 with under four minutes left and still forced overtime despite missing five key rotation players.
Detroit had control late and let it slip
Detroit did not hang around; it dictated the fourth quarter. A Daniss Jenkins three capped a run that put the Pistons up seven, and Oklahoma City needed a late push just to stay alive.
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored six straight to close the gap, then saw a potential game-winning three wiped out before overtime. He finished with 47 points on 12-for-19 shooting and 21-for-25 from the line, scoring eight of OKC’s 13 overtime points to finally separate the game.
The injury context changes how this game reads
Detroit was missing Cade Cunningham, Jalen Duren, Tobias Harris, Duncan Robinson, and Isaiah Stewart, removing more than 60 points per game from its usual rotation. Cunningham alone averages 24.5 points and 9.9 assists, while Duren adds 19.3 points and 10.6 rebounds.
Even so, this is not a one-off. The Pistons are 10-3 without Cunningham, though their offensive rating drops from 121.8 with him to 111.5 without him. This game followed that exact pattern: enough execution to win, but less margin late.
Effort and execution showed up in the numbers
Paul Reed stepped into the frontcourt role and produced 21 points and 10 rebounds, while Javonte Green added 19 points and five made threes. Six Detroit players scored in double figures, reflecting the collective approach Bickerstaff has leaned on.
“We go out there and fight every night, that’s our identity,” Green said, a quote that matched how Detroit erased a halftime deficit and built a fourth-quarter lead on the road.
The free-throw gap decided the game
The clearest statistical edge came at the line. Gilgeous-Alexander attempted 25 free throws by himself, compared to 23 attempts for the entire Pistons team.
Bickerstaff acknowledged the difficulty of that gap postgame, noting SGA’s ability to generate contact. “He’s mastered… creating those whistles,” he said, pointing to a skill that ultimately tilted the closing stretch.
Detroit still had a chance to win. “We should have won that game,” Daniss Jenkins said after the loss. That is what made Bickerstaff’s opening assessment hold up, not as emotion, but as a direct reflection of how the game actually played out.
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