The Pistons canceled a trade and then stopped LeBron James and the Cavaliers.
Reggie Jackson scored 23 points, Kentavious Caldwell-Pope added 19 and Detroit withstood Cleveland's late comeback for a 96-88 win Monday night to snap a five-game losing streak.
One day after allowing New Orleans center Anthony Davis to score 59 points with 20 rebounds, the Pistons beat the Eastern Conference's top team for the second time this season and earned their first win since Feb. 4.
''It had been a long time since we got a win - coming up on three weeks - so we definitely needed it,'' coach Stan Van Gundy said. ''You've seen it all year: We're capable of beating anybody and we're capable of losing to anybody. The guys felt good about themselves tonight, and I think everyone played well defensively the whole game.''
Andre Drummond added 15 rebounds for the Pistons, who let an 18-point lead in the fourth quarter dwindle to six before putting away the Cavs and ending their five-game winning streak.
Kyrie Irving scored 30 and Kevin Love 24 for Cleveland, which had an off night after looking so impressive in a win at Oklahoma City on Sunday. James scored just 12 points - 13 below his average - and went 5 of 18 from the floor, missing all four 3-point tries and committing six turnovers.
''I probably should have had about 12 of them,'' said James, who acknowledged lacking energy on the back end of a back-to-back.
Following the game, Irving revealed he didn't play Sunday against the Thunder after being bitten by bed bugs in his Oklahoma City hotel.
''I was freaked out,'' he said.
Tobias Harris, acquired from Orlando in a trade last week, scored 14 in his first start for the Pistons, who before the game rescinded their three-team trade last week with Houston and Philadelphia because not all the players involved were cleared medically.
Then, the Pistons went out and rejected the Cavs.
''It feels great to get the win,'' Harris said. ''The best thing was the effort, the energy level we showed against one of the very best teams. We didn't get discouraged when they made some tough shots. We just kept telling each other, `Let's keep our pace, let's keep running.' We just kept playing our pace.''
Detroit opened the fourth quarter with a 13-2 run to take an 18-point lead on Caldwell-Pope's short jumper with 6:31 remaining.
After going through the motions most of the night, the Cavs finally awakened and reeled off 10 straight points to get to 88-82. But Jackson responded by dropping a floater in the lane, and Caldwell-Pope made the game's biggest play, stripping a driving James and then taking the ball the length of the floor for a layup, a bucket that brought Pistons radio commentator Rick Mahorn - one of Detroit's original Bad Boys - out of his seat.
Jackson credited the Pistons with digging deep to get the win.
''We're desperate, man,'' he said. ''We've got to be hungry for every last win after dropping the last five. We've been trying to find a way to battle and be resilient, and I couldn't be more proud of the guys for stepping up with us so short-handed.''
Source : foxsports
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