Matchup Overview
Detroit holds a commanding 54-21 record and a top-tier 7.24 Team Quality Score (TQS). Even on a back-to-back and down several starters, the Pistons remain the BAC Model favorite. Across the court, Toronto (42-32, TQS 2.23) has played its best ball in the last week—scorching Orlando and New Orleans but still searching for consistency with a patchwork lineup.
Stats Corner
- Detroit boasts a +8.1 net rating (second-best in the East), surrendering only 109.5 points per game.
- On offense, the Pistons pull down a whopping 35.4% of their own misses (offensive rebounding rate), dominating second-chance opportunities.
- The Raptors lean on efficiency—54.3 eFG%—and limit turnovers (13.8 TOV%), offsetting their weaker offensive glass presence (30.1 ORB%).
- In the last five: Detroit is 3-2 with a +22.2 vs. Minnesota and +21 vs. New Orleans, but just dropped a close game to OKC (110-114).
- Toronto has two blowout wins in its last three (Orlando, New Orleans), led by RJ Barrett’s 20.4 PPG on 53% shooting in recent games.
The Edge & What Could Break It
BAC Pick: Detroit Pistons. Even shorthanded, Detroit’s size and system get it done—offensive rebounding and stout defense travel, and the Raptors’ front line is thinned by injuries.
- Supporting: Detroit’s defense (108.7 DRtg) outclasses Toronto’s, and even reserves like Paul Reed and Javonte Green make the Pistons elite on the glass.
- The Pistons’ recent blowouts show the machine keeps running, even when stars like Cade Cunningham are out.
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Toronto’s bigger risks on Ingram (questionable), Quickley (out), and a weak frontcourt force heavy lifting from Barrett, making them easier to scheme against.
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Risks: Detroit faces fatigue, entering the last leg of a back-to-back while missing four starters (Stewart, Cunningham, Duren, Harris).
- If Brandon Ingram suits up at full strength, Toronto gets a true closer and all-around scoring threat—enough to flip a single-possession game.
Confidence Tag: This is a 56/44 game—edge to Detroit, but recent injuries and travel keep things tight.
The Bottom Line
Detroit’s depth and identity hold. Their interior dominance and disciplined D will carry them to a grind-it-out win, but Ingram’s health and Toronto’s hot hands keep the door cracked. Pistons take it. Playoff-tested systems trump short-handed home cooking.
