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Celtics come back from 21 down, beat Pistons in OT, hand Detroit record-tying 28th straight loss

Detroit Pistons v Boston Celtics
Detroit Pistons v Boston Celtics

In a record-tying 28-game streak, some losses hurt more than others. This one was just brutal for the Detroit Pistons.

Detroit ran into a Celtics team that came out sloppy and was looking past the Pistons — and they took advantage. Behind 22 points in the first half from a motivated Cade Cunningham, Detroit led by 19 after 24 minutes.

Boston decided at halftime it didn't want to be THAT team. They came out with a defensive intensity missing in the first half, hit big 3-pointers, and within a quarter had tied the game. To its credit, Detroit showed real fight and did not roll over against what was considered the best team in the NBA. Boston started to pull away late, but back-to-back 3-point plays by Jaden Ivey (one the old-fashioned way on a drive, one corner 3) tied the game at 106-106, and an offensive rebound and putback by Bojan Bogdanovic forced overtime. It was the best game the Pistons have played this season and they showed a resolve not often seen by this team all season.

It wasn't enough.

Detroit faded in overtime, Boston made plays the way contenders do, and came away with the 128-122 win.

That makes 28 consecutive losses for the Pistons, tying the NBA all-time record of the "peak" process Philadelphia 76ers, who had their losing streak across two seasons in 2014-15.

Detroit hosts Toronto on Saturday night — the second night of a road back-to-back and third game in four nights for the Raptors — and a loss then would set a new record for futility at 29 straight losses.

Cunningham finished with 31 points and nine assists, hitting four 3-pointers. Ivey added 22 points with 10 rebounds, and Bogdanovic added 17. Jayson Tatum led the Celtics. Kristaps Porzingis had 35 points for the Celtics, while Jayson Tatum added 31 with 10 assists.

Detroit's two key problems in this game — and two reasons they are on the brink of setting this record losing streak — are a lack of depth and shooting. Cunningham and the Pistons starters held their own and even won stretches against maybe the best starting five in the NBA, but as the bench entered the game things fell apart — Alec Burks was 4-of-13 shooting and -15 for the game, for example. Yet coach Monty Williams leaned into all-bench five-man units in each half, when this consistently been a disaster all season (they did better in the second half Thursday). In crunch time, even when Cunningham on the drive or Jalen Duren on a tip-out created a good look, the shots just didn't go down. Detroits' biggest issues start with roster construction and a lack of quality shooters.

However, for two games in a row now Detroit has played with a fire lacking for much of this losing streak — there were long stretches in the last month where, when the other team made a run, the Pistons wilted and looked resigned to their fate. Not against Brooklyn and Boston in their previous two games — Detroit showed resilience and fight in both contests. It just was not enough.

They need it to be enough Saturday to avoid a dubious NBA record.