NBA playoffs winners and losers: Thunder beat Lakers to stay perfect, Cunningham marshals Pistons to 2-0 lead
NBA playoffs winners and losers: Thunder beat Lakers to stay perfect, Cunningham marshals Pistons to 2-0 lead
OKC and Detroit are in full control with 2-0 series leads over Los Angeles and Cleveland, respectively
By
James Herbert
&
Sam Quinn
May 8, 2026
at
12:53 am ET
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6 min read
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Getty Images
The second round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs continued on Thursday with a pair of Game 2s. The top-seeded Detroit Pistons, led by Cade Cunningham and Tobias Harris, continued their strong run to beat the Cleveland Cavaliers 107-97, taking a 2-0 series lead.
Let's take a look at the big winners and losers from Thursday night's action.
Winner: Cunningham the floor general
Cade Cunningham took control of the fourth quarter in a "fabulous" performance for the Pistons star
This wasn't Cade Cunningham's loudest performance of the playoffs -- he attempted only 14 shots in 42 minutes -- but he controlled the game as much as he did when he scored 45 points in Game 5 of the Orlando series. For the first three quarters, Cunningham was mostly content to set up his teammates and use the Cavaliers' pressure against them. In the fourth, he scored 12 of his team-high 25 points, but it never felt like he was forcing it. At times, he was content to let Tobias Harris attack in isolation or Daniss Jenkins initiate.
"Cade is just fabulous," Pistons coach J.B. Bickerstaff told reporters after the game. "He's a killer closer. All of the adjectives you want to talk about it, he's it. And in the fourth quarter, he does his best work."
With six minutes left and the Pistons up by just two, Cunningham punished Dean Wade for going under a screen and nailed a pull-up 3. On the next trip down, he got James Harden switched onto him, then calmly knocked down a midrange jumper.
> Big-time buckets from Cade!
20 PTS
10 AST
Pistons lead by 5 with under 4 minutes to play in Game 2 🍿 pic.twitter.com/9pnBQX2MMx
— NBA (@NBA) May 8, 2026
And with less than three minutes left, right after getting a stop against Donovan Mitchell in isolation, Cunningham shook Max Strus for a smooth stepback 3 to put Detroit up by nine. I'm not sure if this qualifies as a dagger -- Cleveland managed to make it a two-possession game again -- but it was absolutely massive.
> CADE EXTENDS THE LEAD 🎯
Crosses.
Steps back.
Three points.
Pistons lead by 6 with under 2 minutes to play in Game 2 on Prime! pic.twitter.com/wxBwpmDMrK
— NBA (@NBA) May 8, 2026
Cunningham shot 3 for 6 from deep and 7 for 14 overall, and he made all eight of his free-throw attempts. He also dished 10 assists (including six that led to 3s) and spent a large percentage of his night guarding either Harden or Mitchell. He wasn't perfect, as evidenced by his five turnovers, but he was a game-high plus-13 and it felt like it.
This is a player who had an otherworldly feel for the game well before he arrived in the NBA. Typically, floor generals like this aren't also tough, multipositional defenders. Through two games in this series, he has been the best all-around player on the court. -- James Herbert
Loser: The first-quarter Cavs
Cleveland can't stop turning the ball over
Early in the game, in a span that lasted less than two and a half minutes, the Pistons went on a 9-0 run to take a 14-5 lead. During that run, the Cavaliers committed three live-ball turnovers. This has been an issue for Cleveland throughout the playoffs, and it must be driving the coaching staff insane.
Yes, the Cavaliers' opponents -- first the Toronto Raptors and now Detroit -- are excellent defensive teams, and they've had to deal with a lot of physicality. But the whole point of having Mitchell and Harden on the same roster is that you should be able to handle that sort of thing. If Cleveland's offense doesn't look purposeful and doesn't look organized, something is seriously wrong.
To the Cavs' credit, they cleaned up the turnover issue after halftime. They turned it over 12 times in the first half, though, and they scored just 81.8 points per 100 possessions (and 59.1 per 100 in the halfcourt) in the first quarter, per Cleaning The Glass.
Cleveland coach Kenny Atkinson told reporters that the team was "kind of bogged down" offensively and had trouble creating separation. Given that Detroit won the first quarter 37-21 in the opener, this was disappointing.
"I don't know what it is with the start of games," Atkinson said. "(The Pistons) came out super aggressive, of course, but it's playoffs. Obviously, haven't figured that one out."
If Atkinson wants to juice the early game offense, maybe Strus or Jaylon Tyson will take Dean Wade's spot in the starting lineup in Game 3. Regardless of who's out there, though, the Cavs need to get out of their own way.
"We gotta look at it," Atkinson said. "We just gotta keep looking at it. There's lineups, there's tactics, there's even more aggressive defensive tactics. Pushing the pace earlier in the game. Maybe running less sets. Although we don't run a ton of