Detroit Pistons forward Blake Griffin made history on Wednesday night, turning out a rebound-less performance against the Los Angeles Lakers.

To make matters worse, it was the first time in his seven-year career in which he failed to grab a rebound in a game, doing so in front of one of the few nationally televised audiences the Pistons get nowadays:

Griffin didn't have a great game by any measure, mustering a mere 16 points on 6-of-14 shooting from the floor and 2-of-8 from deep, while posting a 6:4 assist-to-turnover ratio in a 113-100 loss to the LeBron James-less Lakers.

Frontcourt partner and league rebounding leader Andre Drummond snared 17 rebounds in the loss, putting him at an exact average of 15 per game, bound for another rebounding title for a second consecutive season and the third time in the last four campaigns.

The Pistons didn't have many misses to crash, as the Lakers shot a blistering 56 percent for the game, leaving Griffin with no glass to clean.

Griffin is no longer the double-double threat he was early in his career, having organically traded his prowess at the offensive glass for 3-point attempts, like many other big men have over recent years. But blanking the boards category at 6-foot-10 is a stat line he will soon want to forget.