NBA

Siakam narrowly falls short of double-double as Raptors rout Pistons

Pascal Siakam had a game-high 32 points and nine assists and the Toronto Raptors dominated the Detroit Pistons en route to a 118-97 win on Friday night.

Toronto forward pours in 32 points, adds 9 assists in 118-97 victory

A men's basketball player goes up for a two-handed dunk.
Raptors forward Pascal Siakam dunks during a 118-97 win over the Detroit Pistons in Toronto on Friday. (Frank Gunn/The Canadian Press)

The Toronto Raptors put forth a stellar defensive effort and it led to a decisive victory Friday night.

Pascal Siakam had a game-high 32 points and nine assists and the Raptors dominated the Detroit Pistons en route to a 118-97 win. Toronto, which entered Friday averaging an NBA-leading 9.3 steals per game, had 12 steals and nine blocks as the Pistons coughed it up 22 times.

The Raptors also scored 23 points off turnovers.

"I thought we did a good job of executing defensively," said Raptors head coach Nick Nurse. "I thought we were really aggressive in pursuing the ball and deflecting it around a lot. Created a lot of turnovers, blocked a lot of shots, just kept staying with the play."

Chris Boucher added 19 points and 13 rebounds off the bench and Fred VanVleet poured in 18 points for Toronto (36-38), which ended its two-game skid.

It was the Raptors' first season sweep of the Pistons since the 2017-18 campaign. Toronto also improved to 7-0 on the year when holding its opponents to under 100 points.

WATCH | Siakam's 32-point night powers Raptors past Pistons:

Siakam leads Raptors to a big win over Pistons

2 years ago
Duration 0:56
Pascal Siakam dropped 32 points and Chris Boucher added another 19 as the Toronto Raptors defeated Detroit Pistons 118-97.

The Raptors moved within half a game of Atlanta for eighth place in the Eastern Conference with eight games remaining in the regular season.

"Every game right now is important for us, I don't care who we play, really," Siakam said. "All these games matter to us, and you know, we wanna go out there and give everything that we got every single game. This is it."

Jaden Ivey scored 20 points for Detroit (16-58), which had its losing streak extended to five games. Marvin Bagley III added 14 points and nine rebounds and James Wiseman also scored 14.

"I feel like our effort was horrible tonight. We've just got to have more effort," Ivey said. "Our effort has to be high to get back on defence and make those second-effort plays.

"We've got to all look ourselves in the mirror and say `Is our spirit there?' That's the most important thing when you step out there on the floor."

O.G. Anunoby kick-started a 7-0 Toronto run with a three-pointer and Will Barton capped it with a fast-break layup after a VanVleet steal to put the Raptors ahead 17-7 with 7:45 left in the first quarter.

Thirty-five seconds later, Barton hit a corner three to increase the lead. Toronto went 5-of-7 from three-point range up to that point and closed the frame up 38-26.

The Pistons trimmed the deficit early in the second with a 7-2 run, only for Siakam to foil their momentum. The all-star forward scored seven of his 26 first-half points in a 9-2 Toronto run that followed.

After a pair of free throws with 46.1 seconds left, Jakob Poeltl blocked a Bagley floater attempt and Toronto went into halftime ahead 72-52.

Hot start

"They were like a machine to start the game," said Pistons coach Dwane Casey.

Anunoby's 18-foot jumper with 2:03 left in the third gave the Raptors their largest lead of the night to that point at 22 points, and went into the fourth with a 92-73 edge.

Boucher scored five points in an 8-3 Toronto run early to make it a 104-77 game. The Montreal native had an emphatic put-back dunk over Pistons centre Jalen Duren following a Siakam miss and hit the free throw after. Boucher then blocked Duren, and two possessions later, hit a three-pointer.

"We're best when he's just flying around. It's a little wild sometimes. It's fun to watch," Nurse said of Boucher. "He's blocking shots. He's trying to dunk everything and just making lots of energy plays.

"That's big because I think that is contagious and translates to other players."

Add some “good” to your morning and evening.

Get up to speed on what's happening in sports. Delivered weekdays.

...

The next issue of The Buzzer will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in the Subscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.