Cade Cunningham vs. Paolo Banchero: A 45-Point Playoff Duel That Rewrites NBA History

Two former No. 1 picks go bucket-for-bucket in a rare playoff explosion as Cade Cunningham sets franchise records and joins elite efficiency company.

When the NBA playoffs tighten up, scoring usually gets harder. Defenses lock in, possessions slow down, and 40-point games become rare air. But in one unforgettable matchup, two former No. 1 overall picks turned the pressure into pure offense.

Cade Cunningham and Paolo Banchero delivered a playoff duel that instantly enters modern NBA lore.

Both players dropped 45 points in the same playoff game during a 2026 First Round showdown between the Pistons and Magic. That alone puts this performance in extremely rare territory. Historical records show only a handful of playoff games where two players have ever scored 45+ points in the same game, regardless of draft status—making this version even more unique because it features two former No. 1 picks going head-to-head.

But Cade didn’t just match the moment—he arguably outplayed it in efficiency.

Cunningham scored his 45 points on eight fewer shots than  Banchero, showcasing control, pace, and shot selection that separated him in a game defined by volume scoring.

The performance didn’t stop there.

Cade also broke multiple franchise marks:

27 points in a single playoff half, the highest in Pistons playoff history

45 points total, a new franchise record for a playoff game

Fifth straight playoff game with 25+ points, another Detroit postseason milestone

That kind of consistency is turning into a statement run rather than a one-off explosion.

And then comes the efficiency layer that puts this game into historic conversation.

When filtering playoff performances for:

40+ points

Perfect free throw shooting (14/14 or better)

Only two confirmed games stand out in NBA playoff history:

Dirk Nowitzki – 48 points, 24/24 FT (2011 Western Conference Finals)

Cade Cunningham – 40+ points, 14/14 FT (2026 Playoffs)

That puts Cunningham in an extremely exclusive club of playoff efficiency under pressure.

With Detroit pushing deeper into the series and the possibility of a Game 6 or Game 7 still alive, Cunningham’s run isn’t just about numbers—it’s about momentum, legacy, and rewriting what Detroit postseason basketball looks like.

And when two former No. 1 picks collide like this, the league takes notice.

This wasn’t just a scoring duel. It was a statement game on both sides of a rising rivalry that might not be done making history.
 

 


 

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