Raptors Snap Pistons’ Win Streak with Dominant 119-108 Victory
Brandon Ingram walked off the Scotiabank Arena floor Sunday afternoon looking like a man on a mission. Thirty-four points. Four three-pointers. A performance that reminded everyone in Toronto — and across the Eastern Conference — that this Raptors team is not going away quietly.
The Raptors beat the Detroit Pistons 119-108, snapping Detroit’s three-game win streak and sending a clear message to the rest of the East: sixth place is theirs to keep.
Ingram Carries the Raptors When It Matters Most
There are nights in the NBA when one player simply refuses to let his team lose. Sunday was one of those nights for Brandon Ingram.
The Raptors’ forward was surgical all afternoon, operating from the mid-range, getting to the line, and — when Toronto needed it most — stepping back and draining a long three-pointer with 2:30 left in the third quarter to push the lead to 12. That shot capped a decisive 9-2 run and, for all practical purposes, broke the Pistons’ spirit.
Ingram finished 12-of-25 from the field, 4-of-9 from deep, and 6-of-8 from the free-throw line. He played 38 minutes and posted a plus-14. Not bad for a Sunday afternoon.
“Brandon Ingram got buckets from all three levels,” the NBA noted on social media after the game. Hard to argue with that.
Ingram didn’t do it alone. RJ Barrett was relentless, finishing with 27 points and six rebounds on 11-of-17 shooting. Barrett has quietly become one of the most reliable two-way players on this roster, and Sunday was a perfect example of why.
Then there was Jakob Poeltl. The Austrian center was absolutely everywhere — 21 points, a season-high 18 rebounds, and five assists. He dominated the glass in a way that made the Pistons’ interior look completely unprepared. When Poeltl is playing at this level, the Raptors are a legitimately dangerous team.
Scottie Barnes chipped in with a double-double of his own — 14 points, 10 rebounds, and eight assists. His plus-minus of +22 was the best on the floor. That number doesn’t lie.
Detroit came out of halftime with momentum. The Pistons shot 64.9% in the first half — a number that would have buried most teams. But the Raptors didn’t flinch.
In the third quarter, Toronto flipped the script entirely. The Raptors outscored Detroit 34-17 over those 12 minutes, holding the Pistons to just 26.9% shooting. Detroit’s offense, which had looked unstoppable in the first half, suddenly had no answers. The Raptors’ defense — physical, disciplined, and locked in — was the difference.
It was arguably the best defensive quarter Toronto has put together all season.
Cade Cunningham Fights, But It’s Not Enough
Credit where it’s due — Cade Cunningham did not go down without a fight. The Pistons’ star finished with 33 points and nine assists, but shot just 12-of-24 from the field and picked up a technical foul in the third quarter that cost Detroit a momentum swing at the worst possible time.
Tobias Harris added 21 points on efficient shooting, and Jalen Duren posted a double-double with 20 points and 11 rebounds. Detroit’s numbers looked respectable on paper. The scoreboard told a different story.
What This Win Means for the Raptors
Two wins in a row. Sixth place in the East. A victory over the conference’s first-place team.
The Raptors are 38-29, sitting six games behind Boston in the Atlantic Division. They’re not a contender — not yet, and maybe not this season. But they’re a team that competes, that defends, and that now has legitimate building blocks in Ingram, Barrett, Barnes, and Poeltl.
This win didn’t just feel good. It felt like proof.
The Raptors hit Chicago next on Wednesday. After Sunday’s performance, the Bulls better be ready.

