Detroit Pistons Isaiah Stewart during an NBA game.
Monday night in Charlotte, and the biggest question for Detroit fans is simple:Is Isaiah Stewart suspended? As of Wednesday morning (Feb. 11), the league still hadn’t publicly announced penalties, but the rulebook precedent suggests a decision could come quickly with both teams back in action tonight.
If you missed the chaos, you can catch my full breakdown of how thePistons-Hornets brawl unfolded here.
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Four players were ejected in the third quarter: Stewart and Jalen Duren for Detroit, and Miles Bridges andMoussa Diabaté for Charlotte. Reports described the sequence starting with contact between Diabaté and Duren, then escalating into punches and a wider scrum.
Here’s the key piece for Stewart’s case: he was not in the game and came off the bench area during the altercation, and that matters because the NBA’s rules treat “leaving the bench” as its own discipline bucket.
The precedent that makes a suspension announcement feel imminent
This is the strongest “why today?” hook: the NBA has clear minimums for punches and for leaving the bench area, and suspensions typically begin with the next game. With Detroit playing at Toronto tonight (Feb. 11) and Charlotte hosting Atlanta, a ruling today lines up cleanly with how the league usually structures punishments.
Two rulebook guardrails create the baseline:
Throwing a punch (whether it connects or not) triggers a minimum one-game suspension after review.
Leaving the bench area during an altercation (for players not participating in the game) also carries a minimum one-game suspension.
That doesn’t guarantee Stewart gets exactly one game, it sets the floor. The ceiling is where history and context come in.
Why Stewart is the one Pistons fans are watching
Stewart isn’t just another name in the report.He has recent disciplinary history that the league can weigh when determining length, and in this incident he’s tied to two factors the NBA treats harshly: bench involvement and escalation.
Stewart isn’t just a headline because of the optics; he’s a real rotation piece. Through 48 games this season, he’s averaging 10.0 points and 5.1 rebounds in 23.3 minutes while shooting 54.0% from the field.
And the NBA has already shown it’ll escalate discipline with him: Stewart was suspended three games in February 2024 after a pregame altercation in which the league said he punched and pushed Suns center Drew Eubanks
Even if the NBA spreads discipline across multiple games or staggers it (as it has in past bench-area cases), Stewart’s availability is the headline for Detroit because it hits:
Detroit’s frontcourt rotation (minutes at the 4/5, backup big options, foul cover for Duren)
Lineup continuity on a travel day and a game night
The “repeat offender” lens that can push penalties beyond the minimum
What happens next (and how to read it when it drops)
If the NBA announces suspensions today, expect the league to spell out who is suspended, for how many games, and when it begins (usually “effective immediately,” starting with the next game). If it doesn’t hit before tip, the announcement can still come later tonight or Thursday, but the rulebook minimums make it hard to imagine no suspension at all for players tied to punches or leaving the bench.