Pistons Survive Late Scare to Edge Weary Nuggets Behind Harris and Cunningham 109-107
In the NBA, the schedule is often your toughest defender. But for the Detroit Pistons on Tuesday night, the opponent was a Denver squad running on fumes, pure adrenaline, and perhaps a bit of desperation. It wasn’t the prettiest masterpiece painted on the hardwood of Ball Arena, but for Detroit, the resultโa gritty 109-107 victoryโis all that matters in their pursuit of Eastern Conference supremacy.
The Pistons, who have now won nine of their last 11 contests, found themselves in a game that felt like it should have been a blowout but morphed into a nail-biter. Facing a Nuggets team decimated by injuries and plagued by a travel nightmare that left them stranded in Memphis until the morning of the game, Detroit built a comfortable 18-point lead. Yet, they had to sweat out the final buzzer in a chaotic finish that tested their composure.
Harris delivers in the clutch for surging Pistons
Tobias Harris has been in this league a long timeโ1,000 games to be exact. And on a milestone night where the lights could have been too bright or the pressure too suffocating, the veteran forward showed exactly why he is the steadying hand for this young roster.
Harris finished with 22 points, but none were louder than the two free throws he sank with just 2.0 seconds remaining on the clock. It was a moment of pure isolation: just him, the rim, and the deafening noise of a Denver crowd hoping for a miracle. He didn’t blink.
“Itโs about trust,” is the sentiment often echoed around this Detroit locker room, and down the stretch, the ball found Harris. While the offense stagnated at times in the fourth quarter, allowing Denver to claw back, Harrisโs ability to draw the foul and convert the shots was the difference between a morale-boosting road win and a devastating collapse.
Cunningham orchestrates the offense
While Harris provided the closing arguments, it was Cade Cunningham who built the case throughout the night. Cunningham matched Harris with 22 points of his own but added a masterful 11 assists, dissecting the Nuggets’ defense and finding teammates in rhythm.
Cunninghamโs growth this season has been the catalyst for the Pistons’ rise to a 34-11 record. He controlled the tempo, pushing the pace when Denverโs heavy legs dragged and slowing it down when the Pistons needed to stop the bleeding. His chemistry with Jalen Duren (14 points, 8 rebounds) and the spacing provided by the supporting cast allowed Detroit to dominate the early proceedings.
However, Cunningham knows this team has another gear. Letting a depleted roster back into the game is a habit theyโll want to break before the playoffs, but escaping with a “W” is a hallmark of maturing contenders.
The fatigue factor: Denver’s nightmare travel
You have to feel for the Nuggets. Already missing three-time MVP Nikola Jokic, along with Aaron Gordon and Cameron Johnson, the team was fighting more than just the Pistons; they were fighting biology.
After a winter storm grounded them in Memphis, the team didn’t arrive in Denver until Monday morning. Coach David Adelman admitted the “mental part” was the hardest hurdle. It showed early, as Detroit raced out to a lead, but the heart of a champion still beats in Denver.
Jonas Valanciunas, returning from injury, was a monster on the glass with 16 points and 16 rebounds, giving Denver a fighting chance. But ultimately, the tank ran empty at the worst possible moment.
A wild finish at the free-throw line
The gameโs climax was a cruel twist of fate for Jamal Murray. The Nuggets guard, who poured in a game-high 24 points and dished 10 assists, had the game on his fingertips. Trailing 107-104 with 4 seconds left, Murray was fouled on a 3-point attemptโa golden opportunity to tie the game.
But fatigue is the great equalizer. Murray, typically reliable, missed the first free throw. After making the next two (following a lane violation sequence), the game fell into a chaotic rhythm of intentional fouls. When Harris made his pair to put Detroit up 109-106, Murray went back to the line with 0.7 seconds left. He needed to make the first, miss the second, and pray for a tip-in. Instead, the first shot clanked off the iron.
He missed the second intentionally, but time expired before Denver could corral the rebound.
What this means for the Pistons moving forward
This win puts the Pistons 5.5 games clear of Boston for the top spot in the East. Itโs a cushion that matters. Winning on the road, against a desperate team, in a hostile environment, proves that Detroit isn’t just a cute story for the first half of the seasonโthey are legitimate heavyweights.
They head to Phoenix next to face the Suns, carrying the momentum of a team that knows how to win ugly. For the Pistons, the “Bad Boys” era is history, and the “Goin’ to Work” era is a memory, but this current squad is carving out a new identity: resilient, talented, and, most importantly, victorious.

