DETROIT — The Pistons open their first-round playoff series at home against No. 8 seed Orlando on Sunday, carrying the weight of 60 wins and the Eastern Conference’s top seed into a matchup that could still turn on the smallest edges. Detroit also enters as a team that led the league in steals and blocks, a defensive profile it will need immediately against a Magic group that survived the play-in round.
That edge has not softened the mood inside the Pistons’ camp. Coach J.B. Bickerstaff said outside expectations do not affect the group, adding that his players do not live and die by what other people think but by how they play Pistons basketball. Ausar Thompson sounded just as blunt, saying everybody has a right to an opinion and that Detroit believes it can come out of the East and win it all.
The numbers behind Detroit’s rise are hard to miss. The Pistons finished the regular season with the third-best field goal percentage, ranked 17th in 3-point percentage and still won enough games to spend most of the year atop the conference. Cade Cunningham returned during the final week of the season after recovering from a collapsed lung, and Isaiah Stewart appeared in some late-season games after a calf strain, giving Detroit more of its rotation back at the right time.
Orlando, meanwhile, had to take the longer road. It was beaten 109-97 by Philadelphia in the No. 7 versus No. 8 matchup before beating Charlotte 121-90 in the play-in game to reach the first round. The Magic led by 35 points late in the first half against Charlotte, and Paolo Banchero finished that game with 25 points and six assists, a reminder that Orlando can still overwhelm an opponent when it gets rolling.
The matchup also brings a layer of familiarity. The teams last met on April 6, 2026, when Detroit beat Orlando 123-107, and both sides know Sunday is a different kind of game. Magic coach Jamahl Mosley called for a physical contest and said there will be a lot of aggression and a lot of physicality, describing it as a dogfight. Banchero echoed that sense of urgency, saying great players have to respond and cannot settle for subpar performances in a do-or-die setting.
Detroit is trying to end a postseason drought that has stretched since 2008, a chase made sharper by last season’s quick exit against the New York Knicks after the Pistons had already qualified. This time, they arrive as the conference’s top seed, and the pressure is no longer about getting in. It is about proving that 60 wins and a league-leading defense can finally carry them through a series that starts April 19, 2026, at home.