Clippers Pull Off Improbable Comeback to Stun Pistons in Detroit 98-92
It wasn’t pretty. For the first three quarters, it was actually downright ugly. Style points don’t count toward the standings, and the Clippers proved that on Saturday night by stealing a 98-92 victory from the Detroit Pistons.
Staring down a 19-point deficit in the first half and trailing by 14 midway through the fourth quarter, Los Angeles looked dead in the water. They were playing a Pistons team missing its entire young coreโCade Cunningham, Jalen Duren, and Isaiah Stewart were all in street clothesโyet the Clippers seemed content to sleepwalk through a Saturday night in the Motor City.
Then, the switch flipped.
A Fourth Quarter for the Ages
When Detroit’s Ron Holland II threw down a windmill dunk on a fast break to put the Pistons up 84-70 early in the fourth, the energy in Little Caesars Arena was electric. It felt like the dagger. But that moment served as a wake-up call for a veteran Clippers squad that suddenly remembered they had a game to win.
Los Angeles responded with a ferocious 28-8 run to close the game, completely suffocating the inexperienced Pistons. The defense, which had been porous all night, tightened up in a hurry. They forced Detroit into 12 turnovers in the final quarter aloneโa complete meltdown by the home team, but a testament to the pressure applied by Kawhi Leonard and company.
James Harden, who had struggled with his shot for much of the night (4-for-20 from the field), found other ways to impact the game when it mattered most. With just under three minutes left, Harden converted a massive three-point play to knot the score at 90-90. It was the momentum swing Los Angeles had been hunting for all night.
Collins and Leonard Carry the Load
While Harden facilitated the late surge, it was John Collins and Kawhi Leonard who kept the Clippers within striking distance.
Leonard was his usual steady self, pouring in a team-high 26 points. He didn’t force the issue, picking his spots and capitalizing on Detroit’s defensive breakdowns. But the surprise spark came from John Collins. The forward was a force, dropping 25 points and providing the athletic punch the team desperately needed.
With two minutes remaining, it was Collins who gave the Clippers a 93-92 leadโtheir first since the opening minutes of the game. He was active on the glass and efficient from the floor, serving as the perfect complement to Leonard’s methodical approach.
Surviving the Chaos
The final minute was a masterclass in chaotic basketball. Harden forced a turnover with 61 seconds left but smoked a layup in traffic. It gave Detroit life, a chance to tie or take the lead. Javonte Green had a look at a tying three, missed, and Paul Reed grabbed the offensive board only to commit Detroit’s 25th turnover of the night.
It was a sloppy, gritty, grind-it-out sequence, but the Clippers navigated the chaos better than their younger counterparts. Harden iced the game at the free-throw line, securing a win that looked impossible just an hour prior.
Momentum Building for Los Angeles
This wasn’t a clinic on offensive efficiency. The Clippers shot just 43% from the field and struggled from deep. But good teams find ways to win when they aren’t playing their best basketball, and that is exactly what Los Angeles did.
They have now won nine of their last 11 games, finding a rhythm as the season grinds toward the All-Star break. It would have been easy to fold against a scrappy, albeit depleted, Pistons team. Instead, the Clippers dug deep, erased a double-digit deficit, and escaped with a victory that keeps them climbing the Western Conference standings.
They head home to host the Charlotte Hornets on Monday, knowing they narrowly avoided a bad loss, but feeling good about the fight they showed when their backs were against the wall.

