The Detroit Pistons walked off the floor Thursday night frustrated, and their head coach wasn’t shy about explaining why.
Following Detroit’s 116–114 overtime loss to the Dallas Mavericks, Pistons coach J.B. Bickerstaff delivered one of his most pointed postgame press conferences of the season, blasting what he viewed as biased and uneven officiating that altered the flow of a tightly contested game.
Detroit was hit with four technical fouls, while Dallas received none. Two of those techs resulted in Ausar Thompson’s first career ejection, while Cade Cunningham and Bickerstaff himself were also whistled.
And from Bickerstaff’s perspective, it started before the ball was even tipped.
“First of all, let’s address that,” Bickerstaff said when asked about the officiating (via Detroit Free Press). “A referee makes a comment to me about night-by-night, this is how our interactions are. That says to me that the referee is coming into the game not being objective, OK?”
J.B. Bickerstaff J.B. Bickerstaff officiating criticism
Bickerstaff Questions Referee’s Objectivity
Bickerstaff explained that his own technical foul came while he was attempting to defuse a situation, not escalate it.
“You look at the play, that same referee at halftime, I get my technical foul, I don’t say anything to him,” Bickerstaff said. “I go to grab Cade to get Cade off the floor. He gives me a technical foul. That’s my job — to get my player away from the ref and get us back to halftime so we can have the conversations that we need to have.”
The most controversial moment came earlier, when Thompson was ejected after arguing a call under the basket.
NBA rules state a player is automatically ejected if they initiate contact with an official. Bickerstaff strongly disagreed with how that interaction was interpreted.
“The same referee who came into the game who’s not objective and then he goes out and makes those calls,” Bickerstaff said. “If you take a look at the play where he ejects AT, he steps toward AT. That’s where the minimal contact happens — where he steps towards him and initiates it.”
‘This Game Wasn’t About the Referees — Until It Was’
Despite his frustration, Bickerstaff tried to separate his criticism from the players on the floor.
“To me — and I want to make this clear — this game is not about the referees,” he said.
“This was a highly contested game by two really competitive teams and guys who laid it out on the line.”
But he followed that with a blunt assessment of what he felt went wrong.
“You had one guy who wanted to make the game about the referees when that’s not what this should’ve been,” Bickerstaff continued. “Anybody who comes into the game and says ‘night-by-night,’ he clearly has an unobjective point of view.”
Bickerstaff emphasized that the Pistons understand how they play — physical, aggressive, and right on the edge.
“We don’t care about how people referee us. We’re going to play physical, we walk that line,” he said.
“But all we’re asking for is fairness.”
Missed Timeout Seals the Frustration
The final flashpoint came in overtime.
With Detroit down two in the final seconds, Jalen Duren grabbed back-to-back offensive rebounds. Bickerstaff said he immediately called timeout — and never got it.
“JD got the offensive board, I called timeout,” Bickerstaff said. “That same referee is standing next to me, does not award me the timeout.”
Moments later, Dallas was granted a timeout with 0.9 seconds left, a sequence that left the Pistons with no real chance to respond.
J.B. Bickerstaff on tonight’s officiating:
“A referee makes a comment to me about, ‘night by night, this is how our interactions are.’ So that says to me that the referee is coming into the game not being objective.” pic.twitter.com/rUDnq5s6dZ
— Hunter Patterson (@HunterPatterson) December 19, 2025
The Bigger Picture
Detroit finished the game with 20 free-throw attempts compared to Dallas’ 36, a disparity that only fueled the postgame tension.
For Bickerstaff, the issue wasn’t about favoritism — it was about trust.
And Thursday night, that trust was clearly shaken.