Detroit Pistons Pull Away From Cleveland Cavaliers In Second Half To Force a Game 7

Detroit Pistons forward Duncan Robinson (55) knocks the ball away from Cleveland Cavaliers guard Donovan Mitchell (45).

The Detroit Pistons looked exhausted. The crowd in Cleveland smelled blood. And somewhere around the middle of the third quarter Friday night, the game turned into the kind of ugly, emotional rock fight that would’ve made the old-school Eastern Conference proud.

Detroit stormed into Rocket Arena and punched the Cleveland Cavaliers in the mouth with a 115-94 Game 6 win, forcing a Game 7 nobody in Ohio wanted to see. How did this game unfold?

Pistons Finally Played Like the Hungrier Team

This wasn’t about pretty basketball. This was survival basketball. Detroit defended like every possession carried rent money. Loose balls suddenly belonged to the Pistons. Rebounds became wrestling matches. Even routine passes looked stressful for Cleveland. The Pistons didn’t just beat the Cavaliers; they dragged them into the mud and left them there.

Cade Cunningham once again played the role of steady heartbeat instead of superhero, finishing with 21 points and 8 assists while controlling the pace like a veteran point guard who’s seen this movie before. Meanwhile, Jalen Duren and the Detroit frontcourt turned the paint into a demolition site. Duren’s energy changed the game, and the Pistons’ role players finally gave Cunningham the support he desperately needed after Game 5 became the “Cade vs. everybody” experience.

You could feel Detroit’s confidence growing possession by possession. That’s the dangerous thing about young teams in the playoffs. Once they stop caring about the moment, they become terrifying.

Cavaliers Picked the Worst Possible Night To Go Cold

The Cavaliers looked tight from the opening tip. Not nervous. Tight. There’s a difference. Shots came up short. Turnovers piled up. Offensive possessions turned into awkward isolation basketball and late-clock prayers. Cleveland shot poorly, coughed up the ball repeatedly, and never looked comfortable once Detroit grabbed momentum in the second half.

Donovan Mitchell struggled through an inefficient shooting night, and even when Cleveland threatened to make a run, the Pistons answered immediately. That is usually the sign of a mentally tougher team in elimination games. For all the conversations about playoff experience, composure, and “knowing how to win,” Detroit suddenly looks like the calmer group. That sentence would’ve sounded insane three months ago.

Pistons Are Playing With House Money Now

This is where things get weird. The pressure has completely flipped. Nobody expected the Pistons to push this series to seven games. Most people assumed Cleveland’s experience would eventually overwhelm Detroit’s youth. Instead, the Pistons have turned this series into a street fight where every game feels emotionally draining. Now Game 7 heads back to Detroit.

That building is going to sound like a jet engine Sunday night. The Pistons already erased a 3-1 deficit against Orlando earlier in these playoffs, so there’s zero panic in that locker room anymore. If Cunningham keeps controlling games like this while Detroit’s defense keeps turning every possession into a traffic jam, Cleveland suddenly has a very real problem.

For More Great Content

Find Justin on X: https://x.com/jrimp803 and LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/justin-rimpi-11502014a/