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Pistons snap NBA record-tying 28-game losing streak with win over short-handed Raptors

In the end, all the Detroit Pistons needed to end their NBA-record losing streak was a 12-19 team that had traded away three of its rotation players hours earlier.

The Pistons snapped their 28-game skid with a 129-127 win over the Toronto Raptors on Saturday, leaving them tied with the 2014-15/2015-16 Philadelphia 76ers for the longest losing streak in NBA history. However, those 28 games remain the longest ever losing streak in a single season.

Before Saturday, Detroit's last win had been on Oct. 28. Its record now sits at 3-29.

It was a game where a heroic performance from Cade Cunningham didn't go to waste, for once. After averaging 33.0 points, 7.4 assists and 5.8 rebounds with 50.0% 3-point shooting over his last five games, Cunningham again came through with 30 points on 9-of-20 shooting with 12 assists and zero turnovers.

One of those assists led to a Jaden Ivey 3-pointer to go up by 11 points and made the Little Caesars Arena crowd start to believe. By the final minutes, chants of "Lets go Pistons" were ringing through the stands, rather than "Sell the team."

That shot finished a game-winning 11-2 run in the fourth quarter, but the Raptors made things a little too interesting down the stretch when they cut the lead down to five points with four minutes remaining and again in the closing seconds.

The final 60 seconds took a solid 15 minutes to play, but the result was a streak snapped and a sigh of relief.

Pistons coach Monty Williams near tears after win: 'Thank God'

No one was more relieved by the Pistons' win than head coach Monty Williams, who joined the team last offseason on a six-year, $78.5 million deal, then the largest in NBA history.

Williams was visibly emotional when speaking with reporters after celebrating with the team in the locker room:

“I’ve been in a ton of locker rooms. That’s a first for me, to have that kind of — it wasn't relief, it was just like 'Thank god, finally.' Guys were screaming. I was almost in tears. I'm just so happy for our guys, I'm happy for everybody in our locker room. Sometimes it just takes a win like that to get things started.

Raptors were set up to end Pistons' losing streak

The Raptors were a perfect opportunity for the Pistons to end their descent into infamy. First, the Raptors simply haven't been very good this season, entering Saturday sitting at 12th in the Eastern Conference and having lost four of their last five. Second, Toronto was in the second night of a back-to-back after losing a heartbreaker to the Bostons Celtics.

Third, and arguably foremost, the Raptors traded away standout guard OG Anunoby as well as reserves Malachi Flynn and Precious Achiuwa to the New York Knicks the same day. New York sent back RJ Barrett and Immanuel Quickley in return, but neither player was in the lineup Saturday, leaving Toronto suddenly short-handed.

It was a golden opportunity the Pistons finally didn't let slip away, unlike what they did Thursday. The Pistons appeared on track to stun the NBA-leading Celtics with a 19-point halftime lead, but collapsed in the second half and lost in overtime to tie the Sixers.