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When J.B. Bickerstaff took the helm as head coach of the Detroit Pistons, he faced a formidable challenge. The team was recovering from the longest losing streak in NBA history, having endured a grueling 28-game skid the previous season. Such a record of defeat can leave deep emotional wounds, yet it also forges resilience and determination, qualities that have since become the backbone of the Pistons’ remarkable turnaround.
Drawing strength from the lessons of that difficult period, the Pistons have transformed adversity into triumph. They currently boast a 16-4 record, sitting atop the Eastern Conference and holding the second-best record in the entire league. This impressive feat has been achieved despite setbacks, including injuries to key players such as Cade Cunningham and Jalen Duren, as well as other vital members of their rotation.
Rather than succumb to these challenges, Detroit has demonstrated an unwavering commitment to excellence. The team embarked on a thrilling 13-game winning streak, a feat that tied a franchise record. It wasn’t until a tightly contested game against the Boston Celtics, which ended in a narrow 117-114 defeat, that the Pistons’ streak came to an end, just shy of setting a new organizational benchmark.
Before facing the Celtics at TD Garden, Bickerstaff shared insights into the conversations and camaraderie that have been pivotal in propelling the Pistons beyond their past struggles. This sense of unity and focus has been instrumental in their rise to become one of the Eastern Conference’s elite teams, showcasing how adversity can indeed be a powerful catalyst for success.
Detroit’s cornerstones, Cade Cunningham and Jalen Duren, missed time due to injury. Some of their top rotation players went out for the same reason. Yet, as they’ve done since putting that historic losing streak in the rear view, the Pistons overcame.
How the Pistons moved forward
Not a team to indulge in excuses, despite dealing with injuries, Detroit rattled off 13 straight wins. That matched a franchise record. It took until the Boston Celtics narrowly escaped with a 117-114 victory to prevent them from extending that streak longer than any team in the organization’s history had before.
Before that tilt tipped off at TD Garden, Bickerstaff detailed the conversations and the camaraderie that allowed the Pistons to move past that scarring 2023-24 season and focus on the ascent that has turned them into one of the top teams in the East.
“They didn’t quit, and that was the main thing,” voiced Bickerstaff. “They didn’t complain. They didn’t ask for dramatic changes. They came in the next year and went to work. And as difficult as I’m sure that year was for them, it bonded them in a way that there’s no other situation that could have done that, right? When you go through what they went through, it was literally them against everybody. And I think they got so much closer because of it. So that when we came in, they already had that, right? The chemistry is there. You see how they treat each other. How they interact with one another. And then it was just about helping them take steps forward.
That meant sharing his journey with them.
Before relocating to Detroit, Bickerstaff had just spent six years with the Cleveland Cavaliers. He started as their associate head coach. When John Beilein resigned, Bickerstaff seized the reins. He held them for the rest of that 2019-20 campaign, then for another four years.
His time in Cleveland ended after a second-round exit in 2023-24, courtesy of the Celtics, who went on to lift the Larry O’Brien Trophy later that summer. The Cavaliers relieved Bickerstaff of his duties despite dealing with injuries to Donovan Mitchell, Darius Garland, and Jarrett Allen that postseason.
It was an exit he didn’t shy from discussing with his new team.
“The first thing we did was, we talked about, all of us, myself included, how we ended up here, and how that wasn’t going to impact anything we were gonna do moving forward together. And we just put it in the past,” said Bickerstaff.
Focused on maximizing their promising present, the Pistons are plenty capable of representing the Eastern Conference in the NBA Finals. And with a young core, led by Cunningham, 24, and Duren, 22, they’re in a position to keep it that way for years to come.
