The Pistons host the Lakers at Little Caesars Arena on Monday, March 23, at 7 p.m. ET.
The Pistons enter this game at 51-19, first in the East, and 27-8 at home. The Lakers are 46-25, third in the West, and 23-13 on the road.
The Pistons’ last game was a 115-101 win on Friday over the Warriors. The Lakers’ last game was a 105-104 win on Saturday over the Magic. That means one team is trying to keep first place in the East steady without its main star, while the other is chasing a 10th straight win.
The season series matters too. The Pistons already beat the Lakers once this season, winning 128-106 on December 30. That result is not everything, but it does matter because the Pistons did not just survive that game. They controlled it.
For the Pistons, Jalen Duren has produced 19.2 points, 10.5 rebounds, and 1.7 assists while shooting 64.2% from the field. Cade Cunningham has been the engine of the season at 24.5 points, 5.6 rebounds, and 9.9 assists, but he is out for this one.
For the Lakers, Luka Doncic is at 33.4 points, 7.9 rebounds, and 8.4 assists, while LeBron James has posted 21.1 points, 5.8 rebounds, and 6.8 assists.
This is a great style test. The Pistons have been the tougher, more complete defensive team all year. The Lakers have the best offensive player in the matchup and the hotter recent form. With Cunningham out, the game changes, but it does not get simple. It gets tighter.
Injury Report
Pistons
Cade Cunningham: Out (left lung pneumothorax)
Isaac Jones: Out (G League – Two-Way)
Bobi Klintman: Out (G League – On Assignment)
Wendell Moore Jr.: Out (G League – Two-Way)
Marcus Sasser: Out (right hip strain)
Isaiah Stewart: Out (left calf strain)
Lakers
Marcus Smart: Questionable (right ankle soreness)
Rui Hachimura: Questionable (right calf soreness)
Maxi Kleber: Questionable (lumbar back strain)
Why The Pistons Have The Advantage
The Pistons have the stronger full-team profile, and it starts on defense. They own a 109.6 defensive rating, which ranks second in the league, and that is the biggest number in this matchup for me. The Lakers are at 116.7, which ranks 20th. That is a big gap. The Lakers can absolutely score, but they have not defended at anything close to the Pistons’ level over the full season, and that matters against a team that is comfortable winning slower, more physical possessions.
The Pistons also create pressure in ways the Lakers do not. They average 10.5 steals per game, which leads the league, and they get to the line 26.5 times per game, which ranks second. Those two things matter together. They can speed you up with their hands, then punish you physically once they get downhill. Even without Cunningham, that identity still showed up in the win over the Warriors, when they forced turnovers early and turned the game into a grind the other side never solved.
There is also the rebounding and size piece. The Pistons are at 45.8 rebounds per game, they shoot 48.0% from the field, and they still average 27.1 assists per game. That is a strong mix. They are not just some defensive team surviving on effort. They rebound, share the ball, and generate enough paint pressure to keep the game under control. Against a Lakers team that is only at 41.0 rebounds per game, the Pistons should have a real chance to own the glass and make the Lakers play through contact all night.
The last part is simple. This group has already shown it can function without Cunningham for short stretches. The Pistons have won six of their last seven; they just handled the Warriors without him, and Duren has looked like a real pressure point around the rim. No, they are not better without Cunningham. That would be nonsense. But they are organized enough, deep enough, and good enough defensively to keep winning games if the matchup stays in their preferred range.
Why The Lakers Have The Advantage
The Lakers’ case starts with offensive ceiling. They own a 118.2 offensive rating, which ranks fifth in the league, and they lead the NBA in field-goal percentage at 49.9%. They also get to the line 26.5 times per game, which is tied for the league lead, and they play at a 98.5 pace, seventeenth in the NBA. So even when the game slows down, they still have enough creation and efficiency to score. That is why this winning streak is real and not just schedule noise.
Then there is the most obvious point on the board. The Lakers have Luka Doncic, and the Pistons do not have Cade Cunningham. That changes the late-game math. Doncic leads the league at 33.4 points per game, adds 7.9 rebounds and 8.4 assists, and his technical foul was rescinded, so he is available. If this game gets tight in the final five minutes, the Lakers have the best half-court creator on the floor by a mile. That is not a small edge. That is the biggest single variable in the game.
The Lakers also come in much hotter. Their last game was a 105-104 win on Saturday over the Magic, and that pushed the streak to nine straight. Before that, they beat the Heat, and before that, they beat the Rockets twice in three days. This team is not just stacking wins. It is learning how to survive different game scripts. Some of those wins have been explosive. Some have been ugly. That flexibility matters on the road against a defense this good.
And even if the Pistons defend well, the Lakers still have enough secondary scoring to stay balanced. LeBron James is still giving them 21.1 points, 5.8 rebounds, and 6.8 assists. Austin Reaves has added 23.5 points, 4.8 rebounds, and 5.5 assists. So this is not a one-man operation. The Pistons should be able to make life hard on somebody, but the Lakers can still attack you from multiple spots if the role players make enough open shots.
X-Factors
Tobias Harris is one of the biggest swing pieces for the Pistons. He is at 13.1 points, 5.2 rebounds, and 2.4 assists this season. With Cunningham out, the Pistons need one more stable scorer who does not force the game. Harris matters because he can punish smaller defenders, space the floor just enough, and keep the offense from becoming too dependent on Duren touches and broken-play creation. If he gets an efficient 16 to 18 points, the Pistons become much harder to guard.
Ausar Thompson is the other one. He has put up 10.0 points, 5.8 rebounds, 2.9 assists, and 1.9 steals this season, and that line tells the story. He is not there to carry usage. He is there to wreck possessions. Against a Lakers team that wants to flow through Doncic and Reaves, Thompson’s defense, activity, and transition play can swing the rhythm of the night. If he is generating extra possessions instead of just filling space, the Pistons’ edge gets real fast.
Austin Reaves feels like the clearest Lakers x-factor. He is posting 23.5 points, 4.8 rebounds, and 5.5 assists, and he just had 26 in the win over the Magic. The Pistons are going to throw bodies at Doncic. Reaves is the release valve who can actually punish that with real on-ball scoring, not just spot-up shooting. If he wins the second-creator battle, the Lakers have a much easier path than people think in a road game like this.
Deandre Ayton is a key piece because this could become a glass game. He has given the Lakers 12.4 points, 8.3 rebounds, and 0.9 blocks while shooting 67.0% from the field. The Pistons want to win with size, steals, and foul pressure. Ayton is one of the few Lakers who can push back physically inside without needing plays called for him. If he keeps Duren from owning the paint, that changes the whole matchup.
Prediction
I’m taking the Pistons, but barely. The Cunningham injury should swing this toward the Lakers on paper, and I get that argument because Doncic is the best player in the game, and the Lakers are hotter. But I still trust the Pistons’ team defense more. They are second in defensive rating, first in steals, second in free-throw attempts, and much stronger on the glass. At home, that is usually enough to drag a great offense into a game it does not fully enjoy. I think the Lakers have more late-game shot-making. I think the Pistons have more ways to make the other 43 minutes matter.
Prediction: Pistons 113, Lakers 111

