Cleveland Cavaliers Fall Apart Late Against Detroit Pistons In Overtime Thriller
Friday night in Detroit had everything. A scoreboard that threw a full-on tantrum. A star player fouling out at the worst possible moment. A backup guard converting three clutch free throws to force overtime. And a crowd of 20,232 people losing their collective minds.
The Cavaliers came in with something to prove. They left with a loss. The Detroit Pistons beat the Cleveland Cavaliers 122-119 in overtime, moving to 44-14 on the season and 2-1 in the season series.
Jalen Duren Was a Man Among Boys
Let’s start with the obvious. Jalen Duren put on a show. He had 33 points and 16 rebounds. He was the anchor all night, and the Pistons fed him early, knowing Cleveland would have trouble stopping him. Even with Jarrett Allen and Evan Mobley combining for 48 points, Duren matched their energy and then some.
Cade Cunningham Did Everything Before Fouling Out
Before fouling out late in the fourth quarter, Cade Cunningham posted 25 points, 10 rebounds, and 7 assists. He was the engine keeping Detroit close when the Cavaliers built leads as large as 13 points.
He hit a turnaround fadeaway over Dennis Schroder. He found Ausar Thompson on a cutting reverse layup to open the third quarter. He simply refused to let the Pistons roll over. Then he picked up his sixth foul with two minutes left, sat down, and Detroit needed a new hero.
Daniss Jenkins Made Everyone Remember His Name
Enter Daniss Jenkins. The second-year guard stepped into the chaos and delivered. With Cleveland up three in the final seconds of regulation, Jenkins drove, got fouled hard by Jaylon Tyson, and earned three free throws. Three shots to tie the game. Three shots to send it to overtime. He made all three.
Then, in overtime, Jenkins and Duren combined for six of the team’s eight points in the extra period, with Jenkins banking one high off the glass — the kind of shot that makes coaches wince and fans go absolutely crazy. It was clutch. It was unexpected. It was exactly the kind of moment that defines a team’s character.
The Night the Scoreboard Went Haywire
We’d be doing you a disservice if we didn’t talk about the most chaotic 18 minutes of the NBA season so far. Five minutes into the third quarter, a power surge hit Little Caesars Arena, and the overhead scoreboard malfunctioned. That alone is a story. But here’s the thing — a blaring horn started going off and just kept going. Workers scrambled. Players retreated to their benches. Coaches stood there looking mildly confused and mildly entertained.
Pistons coach J.B. Bickerstaff and Cavaliers coach Kenny Atkinson were called to midcourt for a quick chat with officials. The call was made to shut down the entire scoreboard, which finally killed the horn. After that? The officials used a manual foghorn for the rest of regulation. A foghorn. In an NBA game. In 2026.
What the Cavaliers Were Missing
To be fair to Cleveland, this wasn’t exactly a full-strength Cavaliers squad. James Harden and Donovan Mitchell were both out for the game, leaving a significant offensive void. The Cavaliers leaned on their front court, Allen and Mobley stepping up with a combined 48 points. Sam Merrill hit some big threes early to help Cleveland build their lead.
But without their full backcourt firepower, the Cavaliers simply didn’t have enough juice late. Detroit’s defense in overtime was suffocating, and when Harris hit a turnaround over Tyson to put Cleveland away for good, it was over.
Detroit Is the Real Deal
The Pistons entered the week needing to prove they belong in the championship conversation. They finished 2-1 against a tough schedule, including this overtime thriller against the Cavaliers.
The Central Division standings tell the story loud and clear. Detroit sits 8.5 games ahead of Cleveland. This team can come back from 13 down. This team can survive losing its best player late. This team always finds a way.
