Rudy Gobert has returned strong after five games in Corona protocol while the Golden State Warriors take a dip in Minnesota. The No. 1 pick concedes a curious ejection against Phoenix.
Detroit Pistons (10-32) – Phoenix Suns (33-9) 108:135 (BOXSCORE)
- Mandatory task for the Suns, who did it accordingly clearly – mainly thanks to Devin Booker, who was in the best mood in his home state of Michigan (Booker comes from Grand Rapids) and put up a strong 30 points at 11/18 from the field. “I was just hitting shots and the guys served me the ball in all the right places,” said the All-Star. “I couldn’t come here very often as a kid, so it’s even more fun to play against my former favorite team.”
- Booker had plenty of support; Detroit kept up the pace in the first half, but as the game progressed the visitors continued to pull away. JaVale McGee, also from Michigan, and Cameron Payne, who both had 20 points coming off the bench, also helped. Phoenix had two quarters of 39 points each, scoring over 58 percent from the field as a team.
- The Pistons couldn’t quite keep up, especially since they lost Cade Cunningham, who had been good until then, in the third quarter. The No.1 pick stood at 21 points (9/15 FG), when he conceded his second technical foul of the game for pointing at Booker after a reverse dunk, who previously dubbed for Phoenix in attack. Too hard, as (not only) Pistons coach Dwane Casey found.
- “I guess they thought he was pointing at the person he was dunk about. I’ve definitely seen worse things that went unpunished,” Casey said. The Pistons’ top scorer alongside Cade was Cory Joseph with 21 points, Trey Lyles had 18. Josh Jackson also conceded an ejection in the fourth quarter.
- Curious about the Pistons: They have a positive record in January (5-4) – but each of the four losses came by at least 27 points.
Sacramento Kings (18-28) – Houston Rockets (13-32) 112:118 (BOXSCORE)
- Actually, 10th place and thus the play-in tournament for the Kings in the west is within reach, but they should probably win such home games – especially if they even take a 5-point lead into the last quarter. But in this game, the Rockets became the spoilsport in the person of Eric Gordon.
- First, Houston took control thanks to an 18-5 run that saw Garrison Mathews score 8 of his 17 points. Kings star De’Aaron Fox (14) had fouled out with a flagrant-2 at this point, so without Tyrese Haliburton the Kings lacked the ordering hand on the court. Nevertheless, they stayed on until the final minutes, but 12.5 seconds before At the end Gordon (17) made it 116:112 with a clutch layup and on the other side Harrison Barnes (12) missed the last chance to catch up again.
- “Everyone played well today. It’s good to see when everyone pulls together and plays well at the same time. We can build on that,” said Christian Wood, who shared the Rockets top scorer and was in a good mood, especially at the beginning of the game (23, 14 rebounds). Kevin Porter Jr. also had 23 points while No.2 pick Jalen Green had 15. Daniel Theis was not used.
- Buddy Hield, in particular, fought back for the Kings, scoring 10 of his 27 points (9/16 FG) in the final quarter. With the exception of the top shooter, the Kings hardly hit anything (7/29 3FG), which interim coach Alvin Gentry also complained about. “We played good shots. You just have to hit them.” It was Sacramento’s sixth loss in eight games.
- Corona-Protokoll: Robert Woodard II, Tyrese Haliburton (beide Kings).
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