Pistons stay hot at home, roll over Cavs

12/4/2012
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Detroit's Jason Maxiell, left, and Cleveland's Jeremy Pargo fight for the ball. The Pistons improved to 6-13. The Cavs fell to 4-14.
Detroit's Jason Maxiell, left, and Cleveland's Jeremy Pargo fight for the ball. The Pistons improved to 6-13. The Cavs fell to 4-14.

AUBURN HILLS, Mich. — Brandon Knight scored 17 points, Kyle Singler and Tayshaun Prince had 15 apiece, and the Detroit Pistons beat the Cleveland Cavaliers 89-79 on Monday night for their fifth straight home win.

Detroit is 1-10 on the road but 5-3 at home, and the Pistons have recovered a bit after losing their first eight games of the season. They beat Phoenix by 40 last week in their previous home game, and the victory over Cleveland wasn't really as close as the score indicated.

Detroit led 56-39 at halftime after holding the Cavaliers to 29 percent shooting.

Cleveland was without guard Dion Waiters, who sat out with a sprained left ankle. Anderson Varejao had 17 points and 18 rebounds for the Cavs.

The Cavaliers had scored 113 and 117 points in their previous two games, but the Pistons shut them down for the most part. Jason Maxiell and rookie Andre Drummond set the tone on a night Detroit would block 13 shots. The Cavs struggled to convert around the basket, and they went 3 of 20 from 3-point range.

A dunk by Maxiell put the Pistons ahead 14-4, and it was 30-17 after the first quarter.

Rodney Stuckey's layup off a nice pass from Brandon Knight made it 49-27, and although Cleveland chipped away at the deficit, Stuckey's floater to end the third quarter made it 75-63.

The Cavs cut it to six on two free throws by Varejao with 1:54 remaining, but they didn't score again.

Varejao has nine straight double-doubles and at least 15 rebounds in each of those games. Cleveland had 33 second-chance points in Saturday's 118-117 loss to Portland, but had only 14 against the Pistons.

Greg Monroe had nine points and 14 rebounds for Detroit. Maxiell had 12 points, six rebounds, and five blocks.

Drummond had seven points, 12 rebounds, and three blocks. In the fourth quarter, he grabbed an offensive rebound, flipped a pass to Charlie Villanueva for a dunk and then skipped gleefully back down the court.

The Cavaliers have been struggling without Kyrie Irving, who broke his finger last month.

Without both Waiters and Irving, the Cavaliers were missing a combined 38.1 points per game.

"I don't know if you can make up for it," Cavaliers coach Byron Scott told the (Cleveland) Plain Dealer before the game. "I don't know if you can."

The Cavs were limited to 34 percent shooting.