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The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 165
Sunday, 14 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 11:08 UTC
  • UTC11:08
  • EDT07:08
  • GMT12:08
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← The MonexusSports

Pistons Close Out Magic in Game 7 Rout, End 18-Year Playoff Series Drought

Detroit's 116-94 win over Orlando on Sunday ended an 18-year stretch without a playoff series victory, delivering the franchise its most meaningful postseason result since the 2008 Eastern Conference Finals.

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The Detroit Pistons eliminated the Orlando Magic with a 116-94 Game 7 victory on Sunday at Little Caesars Arena, ending a postseason series drought that had stretched back to 2008. The 22-point margin marked the widest Game 7 win by any team since the Milwaukee Bucks dispatched the Boston Celtics by 23 points in the 2019 semifinals. For a franchise that missed the playoffs entirely in ten of the twelve seasons between 2019 and 2025, the result represents a sharp reversal — and a proof of concept for a roster assembled through the draft and under the salary-cap constraints of a mid-market market.

The victory sends Detroit into the Eastern Conference semifinals, where it will face the winner of the Cleveland Cavaliers and Toronto Raptors series. The Cavs hold a 3-2 series lead heading into Monday's Game 6 in Toronto.

The Pistons built the lead in the second quarter, outscoring the Magic 32-19 in the period to take a 62-43 advantage into halftime. Orlando, playing its first Game 7 since 2010, never recovered. Paolo Banchero finished with 28 points and seven rebounds but was the only Magic player to score more than fifteen. Franz Wagner added 14 on 5-of-13 shooting. The team shot 38.2 percent from the field, its worst shooting night of the series.

Detroit's bench contributed 34 points, a significant factor in a game where the Magic's second unit managed just 18. The Pistons' three-point defense — a point of emphasis all series — held Orlando to 7 of 30 from beyond the arc, roughly three points below the Magic's season average of 36 percent.

What Detroit's Return to the Semis Means

The Pistons last reached the conference semifinals in 2008, when a team built around Chauncey Billups, Richard Hamilton, and a young Tayshaun Prince advanced to the Eastern Conference Finals before losing to the Boston Celtics in six games. That roster had been constructed through a decade of draft picks and measured acquisitions — a model that the current front office, led by general manager Trajan Langdon, has explicitly sought to replicate. The 2025 draft produced two rotation players who saw meaningful minutes in this series, and the team's willingness to ride youth over veteran depth was a recurring feature of the regular season.

Sunday's result provides an early return on that patient approach. Whether the Pistons can sustain it against a likely Cleveland opponent remains an open question. The Cavaliers finished the regular season with the league's fifth-ranked defense and a net rating of plus-7.2 — figures that suggest a far more difficult matchup than the Magic presented. But the Pistons' ability to handle the moment, particularly in the fourth quarter of a series in which they had trailed 2-1, offers a data point that was not available before the series began.

Orlando's Exit and the Rebuild Question

The Magic now enter an offseason that will be scrutinised for the franchise's direction. Orlando's core — Banchero, Wagner, and Jalen Suggs — represents three consecutive lottery picks. The group reached the playoffs in back-to-back seasons for the first time since the Dwight Howard era ended in 2012. That context matters when evaluating whether the team has closed the gap or merely maintained proximity to it.

The Magic's offensive rating in the series ranked thirteenth among the sixteen playoff teams, a figure that reflects structural limitations more than individual underperformance. Suggs, who was listed as questionable entering Game 7 with a sprained ankle suffered in Game 6, managed eleven points on 4-of-9 shooting. His availability at reduced capacity was a subplot that Orlando's coaching staff managed without publicly disclosing the extent of the injury.

The Second-Round Picture

Should Cleveland advance as expected, the Pistons will enter that series as underdogs by most quantitative models. The Cavs' perimeter defense — anchored by a backcourt that ranks in the top five byDefensive Estimated Plus/Minus — poses a structural problem for a Detroit offense that ranked ninth in three-point attempt rate during the regular season. The matchup also places two of the league's more aggressive transition teams against each other, which could accelerate the series tempo in ways that advantage whichever squad executes defensively.

The scheduling for that series has not been announced. The Pistons will have at least two days before their next game, a window that the team's medical staff will likely use to assess the fitness of any players who finished the Magic series with minor injuries.

A Franchise Turns a Corner, With Caveats

Sunday's result does not automatically restore the Pistons to contender status. The Eastern Conference semifinals represent a harder ceiling to breach than the first round, and the Cavs — if they advance — present a more complete opponent than Orlando showed over seven games. But the series win itself changes the franchise's internal baseline. It ends a drought that had become a reference point in coverage of the team's rebuild, and it provides a reference point for what the current roster can accomplish when the circumstances tighten. Whether those circumstances recur against a healthier, better-resourced opponent is the question that the next round will answer.

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