Nba Playoffs Winners And Losers: Pistons Survive After Magic Collapse
This was a pivotal night in the 2026 NBA playoffs.
The slate on Friday, May 1 saw three potential closeout games, which meant that three series could have ended tonight – or the same three series could continue with decisive Game 7s.
The Eastern Conference featured two games, with the No. 8 seed Orlando Magic seeking to knock out the top-seeded Detroit Pistons, while the No. 4 seed Cleveland Cavaliers looked end the season of the No. 5 seed Toronto Raptors. In the Western Conference, the Houston Rockets hosted the Los Angeles Lakers in a Game 6 showdown.
The night started with chaos, with the Pistons completing an improbable comeback. Conversely, depending on your perspective, the Magic fell apart in an epic meltdown.
Here are the winners and losers from Friday night in the NBA playoffs:
NBA PLAYOFF BRACKET: Scores and schedules from all first-round series
WINNERS
A friendly bounce in Toronto
The Raptors had to scrap after blowing a 15-point lead in the second half, but guard RJ Barrett got the friendliest of bounces off the back rim on Toronto’s game-winning 3-pointer in overtime that extended the season to a Game 7.
With the Raptors facing a one-point deficit with 10.9 seconds left in overtime, Toronto inbounded the ball to forward Scottie Barnes, who brought it up the floor. Barnes faced a double-team when Cavaliers forward Evan Mobley collapsed on Barnes in the paint, leaving Barrett wide open at the top of the key. Barrett hoisted a 3-point attempt that hit the back rim and then bounced high in the air, reaching to the top of the shot clock above the basket, before it fell through the net.
RJ BARRETT MIRCALE SHOT OMG pic.twitter.com/AQN3nvj6tP
— Legion Hoops (@LegionHoops) May 2, 2026
The shot gave the Raptors a two-point edge, and Mobley missed the would-be, game-winning attempt on the other end to give Toronto a 112-110 victory.
The shot was reminiscent of another back-rim bounce from last season’s playoffs, when Pacers guard Tyrese Haliburton tied Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals when his shot bounced high off the back rim.
Cade Cunningham
Once again, the Detroit Pistons were carried by their All-Star and Most Valuable Player candidate. Cunningham dropped 32 points, 10 rebounds, 4 steals and 3 assists in another masterpiece. Nineteen of those points came in the fourth quarter. And as the Pistons started to overwhelm Orlando with their defense, Cunningham was an integral part in that, leading with effort and intensity.
The @DetroitPistons recorded the largest comeback by a road team facing elimination since the 1996-97 season, overcoming a 24-point deficit in Game 6. pic.twitter.com/1tDHD4MO39
— NBA Communications (@NBAPR) May 2, 2026
LOSERS
The Orlando Magic may have just given away a chance at history
This looked like a team that simply gave up. The Magic collapsed Friday night, blowing a 24-point lead before losing by 14. And with that, the Magic have now lost two consecutive closeout games and face a daunting Game 7 against the No. 1 seeded Pistons in Detroit. This was an epic implosion, one that feels insurmountable.
During a span that stretched back to late in the third quarter, the Magic missed 23 consecutive shots. In the fourth quarter alone, they shot 1-of-20, which is a remarkably abysmal 5% (!). That followed a third quarter in which they scored just 11 points. They failed to crack 20 … in the entire second half. Their 19 points marked the lowest scoring second half in the history of the NBA playoffs.
Magic shot 4-37 in the 2nd half. pic.twitter.com/VGBTgwqJ3f
— Micah Adams (@MAdamsStatGuy) May 2, 2026
The Magic entered the night looking to be just the seventh No. 8 seed in NBA history to topple a No. 1. Instead, it feels like Orlando just gave this series away.
Orlando Magic coach Jamahl Mosley
If there were calls for him to be fired, they’re only going to grow stronger. There were many people to blame for this colossal meltdown. The Magic were far too carless with the ball and lazy passes were sniped for easy steals. Shot selection devolved late in the game as did decision making and effort.
But Mosley enabled this collapse by failing to halt the avalanche. As Detroit ramped up its defense, the Magic shrunk. Mosley didn’t do enough to call timeouts to stop the bleeding. His poor game management and inability to draw up plays to facilitate easier offense are the main culprits for this loss. As mentioned above, it may have just cost Orlando the series.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Magic collapse, Pistons prevail in NBA playoffs winner, losers tonight
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