The Cavaliers won Game 3, 116-109, and cut the series deficit from 2-0 to 2-1. Cleveland has a chance to tie up the series 2-2 at home in Game 4.
Cleveland shot 58% from the floor (43/74) in Game 3 and edged out Detroit from deep 38% versus 36%. Donovan Mitchell poured in 35 points on 13-of-24 (54%) with 10 rebounds and four assists. James Harden (19 points) went full takeover mode in the fourth quarter with three huge shots (seven points) over the final three minutes. Three others also scored double figures for Cleveland as they continued their undefeated stretch at home in the playoffs (5-0).
Detroit was led by Cade Cunningham's triple double of 27 points, 10 rebounds, and 10 assists. The Pistons also received 21 points from Tobias Harris to make history. Cunningham and Harris tied Kobe Bryant and Shaquille O'Neal for the most consecutive games with teammates scoring 20-plus points in the postseason (6 games). Detroit was down 16 points at halftime and used a +14 third quarter to pull within two points. However, Cleveland closed the game stronger and with Game 5 in Detroit, the Pistons put their 1-3 road record on the line for a chance to back to Detroit up 3-1 or tied 2-2.
Let's take a closer look at tonight’s matchup and take into consideration lineups, injuries, and other factors affecting the line and total.
We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on how to catch tipoff, odds courtesy of DraftKings recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.
After 24 years, the NBA is back on NBC and Peacock, combining the nostalgia of an iconic era with the innovative future of basketball coverage. The NBA on NBC YouTube channel delivers fans must-see highlights, analysis, and exclusive and unique content.
Game Details and How to Watch Live: Cavaliers vs. Pistons
Date: Monday, May 11, 2026
Time: 8:00 PM EST
Site: Rocket Arena
City: Cleveland, OH
Network/Streaming: NBC / Peacock
Rotoworld has you covered with all the latest NBA Player News for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!
Game Odds: Cavaliers vs. Pistons
The latest odds as of Sunday courtesy of DraftKings:
Moneyline: Detroit Pistons (+136), Cleveland Cavaliers (-162)
Spread: Cavaliers -3.5
Total: 212.5 points
This game opened Cavaliers -3.5 with the Total set at 211.5.
Be sure to check out DraftKings for all the latest game odds & player props for every matchup this week on the NBA schedule!
Expected Starting Lineups: Cavaliers vs. Pistons
Cleveland Cavaliers
PG James Harden
SG Donovan Mitchell
SF Dean Wade
PF Evan Mobley
C Jarrett Allen
Detroit Pistons
PG Cade Cunningham
SG Duncan Robinson
SF Ausar Thompson
PF Tobias Harris
C Jalen Duren
Injury Report: Pistons vs. Cavaliers
Cleveland Cavaliers
None
Detroit Pistons
Kevin Huerter (hip) is listed as QUESTIONABLE for Game 4
Important stats, trends and insights: Pistons vs. Magic
Detroit is 49-43 ATS
Detroit is 49-42-1 to the Under
Detroit is 24-19-1 to the Under as the road team and 5-4-1 as the road underdog
Cleveland is an NBA-worst 37-55 ATS
Cleveland is 20-26 ATS at home, ranking second-worst
Cleveland is 19-24 ATS as a home favorite, ranking fifth-worst
Cleveland is 25-21 to the Under at home
Cleveland is 23-20 to the Under as a home favorite
Rotoworld Best Bet
Please bet responsibly. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, call the National Gambling Helpline at 1-800-522-4700.
Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the NBA calendar based on data points like recent performance, head-to-head player matchups, trends information and projected game totals.
Once the model is finished running, we put its projections next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.
Here are the best bets our model is projecting for Monday’s Cavaliers and Pistons’ game:
Moneyline: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Cavaliers’ Moneyline
Spread: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Cavaliers -3.5 ATS
Total: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Game Total UNDER 212.5
Want even more NBA best bets and predictions from our expert staff & tools? Check out the Expert NBA Predictions page from NBC Sports for money line, spread and over/under picks for every game on today’s calendar!
If you’re looking for more key trends and stats around the spread, moneyline and total for every single game on the schedule today, check out our NBA Top Trends tool on NBC Sports!
Follow our experts on socials to keep up with all the latest content from the staff:
The New York Knicks will try to close out their Eastern Conference semifinals series against the Philadelphia 76ers in Game 4. The Knicks own a 3-0 lead in the series and can sweep the 76ers with a win. The Knicks are 1.5-point favorites in Game 4. The over/under for the game is set at 213.5.
How to watch New York Knicks vs. Philadelphia 76ers
Date: Sunday, May 10
Time: 3:30 p.m. ET / 12:30 p.m. PT
Where: Xfinity Mobile Arena, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Moneyline: Philadelphia 76ers +100 (47.8%) / New York Knicks -120 (52.2%)
Over/Under: 213.5
Game 1:Knicks 137, 76ers 98 Game 2:Knicks 108, 76ers 102 Game 3:Knicks 108, 76ers 94 Game 4: New York at Philadelphia (Sunday May 10, 3:30 ET, ABC) Game 5: Philadelphia at New York (Tuesday May 12)* Game 6: New York at Philadelphia (Thursday May 14)* Game 7: Philadelphia at New York (Sunday May 17)*
The Knicks won Game 3, 108-94, and the series is 3-0 in favor of New York. Game 4 is set in Philadelphia and the 76ers once again have their backs against the wall.
New York was without OG Anunoby in Game 3 as he is dealing with a hamstring strain. Miles McBride started and finished with three points in 21 minutes. Jalen Brunson led the game with 33 points and the Knicks finished from 38-of-76 (50%) from the field. With a win in Game 4, New York will await the winner of Cleveland versus Detroit (2-1 Detroit).
Joel Embiid made a return in Game 3 after missing Game 2's six-point loss. Embiid finished with 18 points, six rebounds, and five assists over 35 minutes. Paul George was the hot hand for the 76ers early as he scored 15 points in the first quarter, but went scoreless the rest of the game. The 76ers shot 28% from deep (9/32) and lost the rebounding battle 49-33 in Game 3.
Lets take a closer look at tonight’s matchup and take into consideration lineups, injuries, and other factors affecting the line and total.
We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on how to catch tipoff, odds courtesy of DraftKings recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.
After 24 years, the NBA is back on NBC and Peacock, combining the nostalgia of an iconic era with the innovative future of basketball coverage. The NBA on NBC YouTube channel delivers fans must-see highlights, analysis, and exclusive and unique content.
Game Details and How to Watch Live: 76ers vs. Knicks
Date: Sunday, May 10, 2026
Time: 3:40 PM EST
Site: Xfinity Mobile Arena
City: Philadelphia, PA
Network/Streaming: ABC
Rotoworld has you covered with all the latest NBA Player News for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!
Game Odds: 76ers vs. Knicks
The latest odds as of Sunday courtesy of DraftKings:
Moneyline: Philadelphia 76ers (+102), New York Knicks (-122)
Spread: Knicks -1.5
Total: 212.5 points
This game opened 76ers -1.5 with the Total set at 213.5.
Be sure to check out DraftKings for all the latest game odds & player props for every matchup this week on the NBA schedule!
Expected Starting Lineups: Knicks vs. 76ers
Philadelphia 76ers
PG Tyrese Maxey
SG VJ Edgecombe
SF Kelly Oubre Jr
PF Paul George
C Joel Embiid (probable)
New York Knicks
PG Jalen Brunson
SG Josh Hart
SF Mikal Bridges
PF OG Anunoby (questionable)
C Karl-Anthony Towns
Injury Report: Knicks vs. 76ers
New York Knicks
OG Anunoby (hamstring strain) is listed as QUESTIONABLE for Game 4. Anunoby missed Game 3.
Philadelphia 76ers
Joel Embiid (ankle) is listed as PROBABLE for Game 4. Embiid played in Game 3.
Important stats, trends and insights: 76ers vs. Knicks
New York is 50-42 ATS and 50-42 to the Under this season
New York is 26-19 to the Under as the road team
New York is 11-4 to the Under as the road underdog
New York is 18-27 ATS as the road team, ranking third-worst
New York is 11-19 ATS as the road favorite, ranking seventh-worst
Philadelphia is 50-43 ATS
Philadelphia is 50-43 to the Under
Philadelphia is 25-21 to the Under at home
Philadelphia is 15-14 to the Over as a home favorite
Philadelphia is 22-24 ATS at home
Philadelphia is 8-9 ATS as a home underdog and 5-12 on the ML
Rotoworld Best Bet
Please bet responsibly. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, call the National Gambling Helpline at 1-800-522-4700.
Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the NBA calendar based on data points like recent performance, head-to-head player matchups, trends information and projected game totals.
Once the model is finished running, we put its projections next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.
Here are the best bets our model is projecting for Sunday’s Knicks and 76ers’ game:
Moneyline: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Knicks’ Moneyline
Spread: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Knicks -1.5 ATS
Total: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Game Total UNDER 212.5
Want even more NBA best bets and predictions from our expert staff & tools? Check out the Expert NBA Predictions page from NBC Sports for money line, spread and over/under picks for every game on today’s calendar!
If you’re looking for more key trends and stats around the spread, moneyline and total for every single game on the schedule today, check out our NBA Top Trends tool on NBC Sports!
Follow our experts on socials to keep up with all the latest content from the staff:
SAL LAKE CITY - JUNE 14: Michael Jordan #23 of the Chicago Bulls shoots the game winner against the Utah Jazz in the 1998 NBA FINALS of Game 6. The shot gave the Bulls their sixth NBA title, 87-86 at the Delta Center, Salt Lake City, Utah. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory copyright notice: Copyright NBAE 2002 (Photo by Scott Cunningham/ NBAE/ Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
We’re fully into the month of May on the calendar, which means a few things in the sporting world. Several of the college sports are getting down to the nitty gritty, with lacrosse soon crowning champions and the baseball and softball NCAA Tournaments soon to start. Meanwhile, in the pros, the MLB season is in full swing, the WNBA season is just getting underway, while two other leagues are only partway through their playoff journeys.
The spring and summer months feature the multi-week long battles that are the NBA and NHL playoffs. Around here at Tar Heel Blog, we have several Carolina Hurricanes fans on staff and probably as readers, there aren’t really any obvious UNC connections other than them being another local team. (It would be very cool if UNC sponsored an NCAA hockey team at some point, though).
However, there are plenty of connections to the NBA playoffs, as many Tar Heels have gone on to NBA careers following their time in Chapel Hill. Many of those names have also had notable moments and careers in the playoffs. It’s with that in mind that I ask today’s Question of the Day. What’s your most favorite or most memorable moment from a Tar Heel in the NBA Playoffs?
Several Carolina alumns had their moments in the NBA Playoffs, but of course, Michael Jordan has an abnormally large amount of them. Whether it be his shot over Craig Ehlo, his “flu game” in the 1997 NBA Finals, or winning the 1998 Finals with the shot over Bryon Russell, there are plenty to choose from. There are plenty I didn’t even get to in those examples.
However, I’m going to go a little off the board for my answer. One of my favorite ever Tar Heels whose time in Chapel Hill I can actually remember is Danny Green. It was especially fun watching him go from a second round pick and somewhat of an afterthought in the pros to a legitimate option for the Spurs, including in 2013.
While his San Antonio team didn’t end up winning that particular championship over the Heat — they did get revenge the following year — Green was incredible in the 2013 Finals. Including a 27-point, 6-10 from three effort in Game 3, Green led San Antonio in scoring in two games in the series and may very well have won Series MVP had the Spurs held on to finish off the series in Game 6. He ended up shooting an incredible 55.5% from three over the course of the seven games.
That’s my answer, but we want to hear from you! What is your favorite game or memory from a Tar Heel in the NBA Playoffs?
MINNEAPOLIS, MN - MAY 8: Stephon Castle #5 of the San Antonio Spurs looks to pass the ball as Jaden McDaniels #3 of the Minnesota Timberwolves plays defense during the game during Round Two Game Three of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on May 8, 2026 at Target Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Joe Murphy/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
Minnesota Timberwolves vs. San Antonio Spurs Date: May 10th, 2026 Time: 6:30 PM CDT Location: Target Center Television Coverage: NBC, Peacock
On Friday night, the Minnesota Timberwolves entered Target Center entrenched in a tug-of-war with the San Antonio Spurs. With a victory, they could seize control of the Western Conference Semifinals, wash away the stench of that Game 2 disaster, defend home court, remind the young Spurs that playoff experience actually matters, and turn Game 4 into a chance to put San Antonio on the brink.
Instead, they spent the first seven minutes of Game 3 acting like someone had unplugged the offense.
For over half of the first quarter, the Wolves managed one point. One. A single Anthony Edwards free throw. That was it. No rhythm, no flow, no composure, no ability to finish, no ability to breathe offensively. It was the basketball equivalent of trying to start a lawn mower in March after leaving it in the garage all winter. Pull the cord. Nothing. Pull again. Nothing. Everyone starts looking around awkwardly. Maybe this thing is broken.
By the time Minnesota finally woke up, San Antonio had already built a 15-point hole. And yes, to their credit, the Wolves clawed back. They showed fight. They turned what could have been a first-quarter burial into a real game. But that opening stretch mattered. In a playoff game that came down to the wire, you cannot give away seven minutes and expect the basketball gods to refund them later.
The cruel part is that once the Wolves stopped hitting the snooze button, they were right there. They competed and held leads. They had moments where it felt like the veteran team was about to take control. But every time Minnesota seemed ready to tilt the game, San Antonio had an answer: a better look, a cleaner possession, or Victor Wembanyama acting like a cheat code with a jump shot.
Ultimately that was the difference. The Spurs got easier offense. The Wolves had to work for almost everything. San Antonio attacked the rim with purpose. Minnesota too often ran into Wemby’s shadow and started negotiating with itself. San Antonio generated better looks closer to the basket. Minnesota had too many possessions that felt forced.
So now the series sits in the exact place Minnesota absolutely did not want it to be.
Spurs 2, Wolves 1.
Game 4 at Target Center.
Win, and this becomes a 2-2 series where both teams have shown they can hurt the other, where the Wolves still have every reason to believe their experience and toughness can carry them forward. Lose, and suddenly they are down 3-1, needing three straight wins against Wembanyama, including two in San Antonio, while still nursing injuries and searching for answers.
That is not a hill. That is Everest with a Spurs logo painted on it.
So let’s call this what it is: Game 4 is a must-win in everything but the mathematical sense. The Wolves do not technically go home if they lose. But if they drop this one, the series starts feeling like a funeral procession with a Game 5 tipoff time.
This is the desperation game. This is the bite-back game. This is where Minnesota either reasserts itself as the battle-tested, bruising, playoff-hardened team that just knocked out Denver, or it lets a young Spurs team start believing this whole thing belongs to them.
With that, here are the keys to the game….
1. Body Victor Wembanyama
Game 3 was too easy for Wembanyama. He got to his spots. He impacted the rim. He punished Minnesota from multiple levels. The Wolves talked a lot about physicality after Game 1, but in Game 3, they didn’t deliver enough of it. That has to change immediately.
This is where Julius Randle becomes one of the most important players in the series. We have seen him body Wemby before. We have seen him put a shoulder into that narrow frame, move him off his spot, and make him look like a baby giraffe fighting a lion. That version of Randle has to show up.
Every Wembanyama catch needs contact. Every drive needs bodies. Every rebound needs someone putting a forearm into his chest. The Wolves cannot let him float through this game like he is playing in open space. They need to make him feel the weight of the series.
Rudy Gobert has to do his part. Naz Reid has to do his part. Randle has to do a lot of it. This has to be a collective effort built around one simple idea: no comfort.
If Wemby gets comfortable, San Antonio becomes incredibly difficult to beat. If he gets battered, pushed, forced to work, forced to play through bodies for 48 minutes? Then the Wolves have a chance to tilt the game back toward their strengths.
2. Lock Down Everyone Else
Wembanyama is going to get his. That’s the starting point. You do not beat San Antonio by pretending you can make him disappear. But the Wolves absolutely cannot let the rest of the Spurs get comfortable around him.
This is where Minnesota has to borrow from the Denver series, even if the matchup is completely different. Against Denver, the Wolves made life miserable for Jamal Murray. Jaden McDaniels snatched his soul. Rudy battled Jokic, but the perimeter pressure was what allowed the whole defense to breathe.
Against San Antonio, the assignment is less obvious but just as important. De’Aaron Fox cannot be allowed to bend the defense at will. Stephon Castle cannot be handed easy lanes and confidence. Devin Vassell cannot be allowed to get into rhythm. Champagnie cannot be gifted clean catch-and-shoot looks.
The Wolves need connected perimeter defense. McDaniels, Edwards, Dosunmu, Shannon, Clark, whoever is on the floor, has to hound the ball, fight over screens, cut off penetration, and close out with purpose. They cannot allow the Spurs guards to waltz into the paint, force Gobert into impossible decisions, and then spray the ball out to shooters.
And yes, this might be a Jaylen Clark game. If the Wolves need chaos, put in the rabid wolverine. Let him pick up full court. Let him make someone uncomfortable. Let him blow up a possession or two. Sometimes in a playoff game, you don’t need elegance. You need disruption. You need someone who makes the other team say, “Why is this guy guarding me like I owe him money?”
3. Dominate the Glass
The Wolves technically outrebounded San Antonio in Game 3, but that number does not tell the whole story. Some of that came from Minnesota missing so many first looks and cleaning up its own mess. The bigger issue came on the defensive end, where the Wolves had multiple chances to finish possessions and simply didn’t. Three different times, balls that should have been secured by Minnesota ended up back in San Antonio’s hands, eventually turning into Spurs threes. In a seven-point game, that is basically the whole thing.
This is where playoff basketball becomes cruel. You can defend for 20 seconds, force a miss, and do almost everything right. But if you don’t finish the possession, none of it matters. Against a team with Wembanyama, Fox, Castle, Vassell, and shooters waiting around the arc, you cannot hand out second and third chances.
Everybody has to rebound like the ball is the series, because once Minnesota secures those boards, it can run. And that is the second half of the equation. Defensive rebounds are not just about preventing Spurs points; they are Minnesota’s best pathway to easier offense. Get the ball, push, attack before Wemby gets set, make San Antonio defend in transition. None of that happens if the ball keeps bouncing back to silver and black jerseys.
Finish possessions. Or get finished.
4. Make Shots, But Stop Letting Wemby Scare You Out of Good Ones
Minnesota’s offense in Game 3 started as a horror show and eventually became merely inconsistent. That’s not good enough. The Wolves shot 35% from three, which is around the target range they probably need in this series. But it still felt like too many important shots rattled out, too many possessions died late, too many looks near the rim got rushed, altered, or outright abandoned because Wembanyama was nearby.
That is the Wemby effect. He doesn’t have to block every shot. Sometimes he wins just by existing. The Wolves have to fight that.
This does not mean driving blindly into him and getting the ball slapped into the 15th row. It means attacking with a plan and not making the defensive play for him. If you have a lane, take it. If he commits, make the pass. If he stays home, finish strong. If the defense collapses, kick out. But the Wolves cannot allow his presence to turn good offensive opportunities into awkward, off-balance, self-defeating attempts.
There has to be a balance between respect and fear. Respect Wemby’s length. Do not fear it so much that you stop playing basketball.
From deep, the Wolves need to be more than adequate. They need to be timely. They need to hit the shots that stop runs, the shots that punish help, the shots that make San Antonio think twice about collapsing. This team has lived and died by the three all season.
Find a way to live.
5. Treat This Like the Season Is on the Line
The Wolves have spent the entire season playing with the switch. On, off, on, off… In Game 2, it was off. In the first seven minutes of Game 3, it nearly fell off the wall. That cannot happen again.
Not for a quarter. Not for five minutes. Not for two careless possessions. Game 4 demands full desperation from the opening tip.
The Wolves need to come out like the more urgent team, because they are the more urgent team. They need to defend 94 feet. They need to run back. They need to hit people legally, preferably. They need to box out. They need to attack. They need to play with the kind of edge that tells San Antonio immediately, “You are not walking into our building and taking this series from us.”
Target Center will be ready. The crowd will bring it. But the crowd cannot make the first shot, keep Wembanyama off the glass, or stop the Spurs in transition. The players have to bring the force.
This is where experience matters. This is where two straight Western Conference Finals runs are supposed to matter. This is where the Wolves are supposed to look like the team that has been through playoff wars and knows exactly how much a Game 4 can swing a series.
If they treat this like just another game, they will lose. If they treat it like a fight for survival, they can even the series and make this a best-of-three.
Bite Back
The Wolves were bitten in Game 3. They cornered the Spurs with Game 1, got mauled in Game 2, and then let Game 3 slip because they started too slowly, defended too inconsistently, and failed to make San Antonio feel the full weight of a desperate veteran team protecting its home floor.
Now it is time to bite back.
This series is not over. The Wolves have enough talent, enough toughness, enough playoff scar tissue, and enough defensive weaponry to beat San Antonio. But they cannot keep waiting until the game starts slipping away before they decide to fight. They cannot keep giving away stretches and asking themselves to climb back uphill. They cannot let Wembanyama and the Spurs grow more confident by the quarter.
Game 4 is the response game. Win, and the series is tied 2-2. Home court is technically gone, but momentum is alive. The Wolves head back to San Antonio having restored order and reminded the Spurs that this is going to be a long, painful, physical fight.
Lose, and everything changes. Down 3-1. Two games left in San Antonio if it gets that far. Wembanyama and this young team smelling blood and gaining belief. A battered Wolves team staring at the edge.
That cannot be the outcome.
The Wolves need to land their shot. They need to play with force. They need to turn Target Center into a place San Antonio wants no part of. They need to show, from the opening tip, that this series still runs through their defense, their physicality, and their refusal to go quietly.
SAN ANTONIO, TX -APRIL 10: Cooper Flagg #32 of the Dallas Mavericks drives by Victor Wembanyama #1 of the San Antonio Spurs in the second half at Frost Bank Center on April 10, 2026 in San Antonio, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Ronald Cortes/Getty Images) | Getty Images
You may or may not remember this, but a while back, Kelly Flagg counseled Cooper not to go crazy when he bought his first car.
From all reports, he listened.
She also counseled him to hold off on a girlfriend. And on that point, he may not have listened. And while we can’t be sure, he may have ignored that particular piece of advice for a while now, as he is apparently dating Duke Basketball player Arianna Roberson.
They were both freshmen last year, and Roberson is from San Antonio, which is about 250 miles from Dallas. And by Texas standards, that ain’t bad, more or less a Sunday drive.
We will say this, though. We would never suggest that someone date an NBA player, because, well, they’re generally players, as Megan Thee Stallion recently discovered with Flagg’s teammate Klay Thompson.
In Flagg’s case, we wouldn’t worry nearly as much. Why?
Because he’s a very loyal guy, and he’s already proven it.
He could’ve taken a much bigger deal from Nike, rather than signing with home-state shoe company New Balance. And when he signed that deal, he explicitly mentioned being loyal to Maine.
Given what we’ve seen from Flagg so far, the state is going to profit from that decision – already has, really. Nike is roughly 5 times the size of New Balance, but Nike has been struggling lately, while New Balance is coming on. A lot of people back home are very grateful to Flagg for looking out for them.
And there has always been speculation about Flagg signing with the Boston Celtics when his rookie contract is up. This spring, though, someone asked him about that, and he said that he was in Dallas, and that he’s a very loyal person.
Given those public examples, he seems like a good man to bet on romantically.
Los Angeles Lakers' Luke Kennard L goes for the basket against Oklahoma City Thunder's Jared McCain during the 2025-2026 NBA regular season basketball game between Oklahoma City Thunder and Los Angeles Lakers in Los Angeles, the United States, April 7, 2026. (Photo by Ringo Chiu/Xinhua via Getty Images)
In Saturday’s Brotherhood Playoff Action, Jared McCain and the Oklahoma City Thunder rolled right on by Luke Kennard and the Los Angeles Lakers, 131-108. OKC now has a 3-0 lead and will win the series. This team is 7-0 so far in the playoffs. There will be no collapse.
McCain didn’t score as well as he has recently, but didn’t need to. He finished with one three-pointer in 10 minutes and also had one assist.
For the Lakers, Kennard had a nice night with 18 points on 7-10 shooting, including 4-6 from behind the line.
On Sunday, Mason Plumlee and the San Antonio Spurs will square off with the Minnesota Timberwolves in Game 4. The Spurs currently lead, 2-1.
PHILADELPHIA, PA - MAY 8: Mitchell Robinson #23 of the New York Knicks and Joel Embiid #21 of the Philadelphia 76ers looks on during the game during Round Two Game Three of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on May 8, 2026 at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by David Dow/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
Keep the broom handy. The Knicks will face the 76ers on Mother’s Day in Game Four of the Eastern Conference semifinals at Xfinity Mobile Arena. New York holds a commanding 3-0 series lead and sits one win away from a second straight trip to the Eastern Conference Finals. The Sixers, meanwhile, are desperate to extend their season, to avoid a sweep on their home floor. The Knicks have ripped through six straight playoff wins, while Philly has looked washed and pressed after tumbling with the Celtics in the first round.
Much of the Knicks’ success has come from dominating in the paint and on the glass, repeatedly turning missed shots into crushing second-chance points. Philadelphia has struggled to match New York’s conditioning, size, and physicality for a full 48 minutes.
In Friday’s Game Three, the Knicks pulled away for a 108-94 win behind another sterling performance from Jalen Brunson, who finished with 33 points and nine assists. Mikal Bridges added 23 points while Josh Hart chipped in 12 points and 11 rebounds. Kelly Oubre Jr. led the Sixers with 22 points, while Tyrese Maxey added 17 points and seven assists. Paul George piled up 15 first-quarter points before vanishing, missing his final nine shots.
The postseason has exposed Philly’s lack of depth and heavy reliance on star creation. The Cheesesteaks can still generate bursts of offense, but not for long. New York’s defense (especially the wings) has simply suffocated them.
Maxey remains the engine of Philly’s offense, but the Knicks have neutralized him effectively for most of the series. Joel Embiid continues to battle through all sorts of aches and pains, relying on flops and dirty plays to make any headway. Oubre has been one of Philadelphia’s few consistently aggressive contributors, attacking the rim and crashing the boards. George remains an aging veteran; he can light up the first quarter and then fades into the ether. Rookie VJ Edgecombe offers athleticism and defensive energy, but has been unreliable offensively.
New York looks fully in control right now. Brunson has dictated the pace of the series, Towns has turned his passing ability into a true weapon, and Bridges has stepped seamlessly into a larger defensive role, especially with OG Anunoby sidelined. Hart continues doing it all on the margins—rebounding, defending, pushing pace, and playing massive minutes without slowing down. Landry Shamet also gave the Knicks an unexpected offensive lift in Game Three off the bench.
Anunoby remains day-to-day with a hamstring strain and is unlikely to play. For Philadelphia, Embiid is expected to play despite ongoing problems with his ankle, hip, etc.
Prediction
ESPN gives New York roughly a 66% chance to close out the series. Right on. Expect the Phillies to play with desperation early, but if the Knicks continue winning the rebounding battle and forcing Maxey into difficult half-court possessions, New York should pull away again. For the Knicks to finish the sweep: keep Brunson in attack mode, keep Towns out of foul trouble, and continue turning missed shots into extra possessions. The formula has worked three straight times already.
Interesting fact: the Knicks have not completed a best-of-seven playoff sweep since 1999. Today, the fatigue factor favors New York. Philadelphia’s core players have logged enormous minutes throughout the postseason. Maxey already leads all playoff players in total minutes played, and his legs have turned to rubber in the last two fourth quarters. He’s a fine young player. He’s no Jalen Brunson. Look for Cap to lock this game down in the third quarter and a party in the fourth. New York by 15!
Game Details
Who: New York Knicks (3-0) at Philadelphia 76ers (0-3) Date: Sunday, May 10, 2026 Time: 3:30 PM ET Place: Xfinity Mobile Arena, Philadelphia, PA TV: ABC Follow: @ptknicksblog and bsky
Apr 12, 2026; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA; Phoenix Suns forward Ryan Dunn (0) high fives his team after a play against the Oklahoma City Thunder during the first quarter at Paycom Center. Mandatory Credit: Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images | Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images
Welcome to our Phoenix Suns Season in Review series, where we revisit every player who suited up during the 2025–26 campaign through the lens of expectation, reality, and what it ultimately meant.
Player Snapshot
Position: SF/PF
Age: 23
2026-27 Contract Status: $2.8 million (team option)
SunsRank (Preseason): 6
SunsRank (Postseason): 11
*SunsRank is based on Bright Side writers’ ranking.
Season in One Sentence
Dunn’s development stalled out as he declined from a key rotation player to being out of the rotation.
By the Numbers
GP
MIN
PPG
RPG
APG
STL
FG%
3PT%
FT%
OFFRTG
DEFRTG
+/- (TOTAL)
70
19.4
5.8
4.2
1.5
0.9
45.3%
33.1%
48.9%
110.4
108.7
+4
The Expectation
Going into this season, everyone (myself included) hoped that Dunn would build off of a promising rookie season and continue to grow into a solid rotation player for the Suns’ future. Whether he started or came off the bench, we expected him to play high minutes and have a positive impact on games with his defense and rebounding. Offensively, the expectation was that he would continue to improve his three-point jumper and get comfortable in the new Jordan Ott offense.
The Reality
It was a frustrating season for Dunn as he showed the limitations and holes in his game during his sophomore campaign. He started the first six weeks of the season playing about 24 minutes a game in October and November, averaging over 8 points per game and shooting well from distance. As with many young players, the Dunn experience was highly volatile, and Ott opted to play more experienced players in his place, including Royce O’Neale, Jordan Goodwin, Haywood Highsmith, and Rasheer Fleming.
Dunn showed slight improvement in some areas this season; his three-point percentage ticked up from 31.0% to 33.1%, and he averaged more rebounds and assists than last season, too. However, the concerns remain about his shooting. He has yet to shoot over 50% from the free-throw line in his career, and while improving his three-point percentage from his rookie season, Dunn still looks hesitant and uncomfortable shooting wide-open threes. He only made 12 total threes above the break this year.
His strengths as a cutter and mover on offense do not outweigh his inconsistencies. So, until Dunn can become a reliable shooter, teams will opt to leave him open or foul him at the rim without any concerns because of his limitations.
Defensively, Dunn still gets whistled for fouls, making it hard for him to stay on the court against the league’s best players, and his energy and hustle did not match those of others around him. What we were hoping to get from Dunn this season was what Jordan Goodwin actually provided, and now the Suns have to decide if Dunn is worth building around moving forward.
What It Means
Dunn’s overall lack of development has him on the outs of the rotation heading into next season. He will not fetch much in return as a trade piece in any deal the Suns could pull off this summer, and his offensive limitations do not align well with the current roster, which relies heavily on spacing and three-point shooting.
Dunn is one of the most intriguing pieces on the Suns’ roster, as one of the few first-round draft picks of the decade. If Dunn can elevate his shooting and defensive impact, then the Suns could look to sign him to a team-friendly extension next season. If he continues to bounce in and out of the rotation, the Suns could move on after this season or next, when he has a team option for the fourth and final year of his contract.
Dunn has a lot of pressure to take a big leap in his third season. Right now, he is fifth in the pecking order of the Suns’ young players who need development. Jalen Green, Khaman Maluach, Rasheer Fleming, and Oso Ighodaro are all ahead of Dunn in priority because of their untapped potential. Last offseason, Ryan Dunn was a core piece to the Suns’ future; this offseason, he has become almost an afterthought.
Defining Moment
Dunn’s defining moment came early in the season against the San Antonio Spurs in November when he scored 17 points and grabbed five rebounds in a dominant win. He showcased everything he could be for the franchise if he could consistently knock down open threes, attack the rim, and play aggressive defense against one of the best teams in the NBA. Unfortunately, that confident version of Dunn rarely showed up in games the rest of the season.
Grade: C
Ryan Dunn deserves a C because even though his minutes in the rotation were inconsistent, he never detracted from the Suns’ identity and was always ready when his number was called on. It was not the big season we were hoping for, but he still contributed 19 minutes of hard-nosed, Suns brand of basketball every game this year.
Sep 29, 2025; Atlanta, GA, USA; Mandatory Credit: Atlanta Hawks general manager Onsi Saleh poses for a photo during Media Day. Dale Zanine-Imagn Images | Dale Zanine-Imagn Images
The day has finally arrived.
Today, we’ll know the final order of the upcoming NBA draft where the Hawks are slated to have three picks — one of those landing in the lottery despite Atlanta making the playoffs.
Last year, the Hawks acquired a valuable pick swap by sending out the 13th overall pick in the 2025 NBA Draft to pick up the 23rd overall pick in that draft — Asa Newell — and an unprotected 2026 first-round pick swap between the Milwaukee Bucks and New Orleans Pelicans.
Both teams missed the playoffs (and the Play-In Tournament entirely), giving the Hawks extra lottery balls to jump into the top 4.
Now let’s answer a few questions about today’s proceedings:
What are the lottery odds for this pick swap?
There has been some misinformation floating around about the true odds of where this pick will end up. Due to the statistical complexity of all of the lottery scenarios — as well as the chances both Milwaukee and New Orleans both see their combinations drawn — it’s not as easy as adding the two teams’ odds together.
The final odds, corroborated by a recent release from the NBA:
First overall pick: 9.700%
Second overall pick: 9.965%
Third overall pick: 10.135%
Fourth overall pick: 10.304%
Top-4 pick: 40.204%
What happens if the Hawks don’t hit the lottery?
In this case, the Hawks could finish no higher than seventh and no lower than 11th (although 11th would be a statistical improbability). The Hawks have a roughly combined 50-50 shot at receiving the seventh or eighth overall pick.
Seventh overall pick: 19.75%
Eighth overall pick: 30.18%
Ninth overall pick: 9.19%
10th overall pick: 0.67%
11th overall pick: less than 0.01%
Who is representing the Hawks at the draft lottery?
In years past, it has been the wife of the principal governor, Jami Gertz, on stage. However, the Hawks didn’t manage to have any luck with her as the talisman from 2018 to 2020.
Two years ago, the Hawks grabbed the number one pick with the top executive at the time, Landry Fields, present for the ceremony. This time, it will be new general manager Onsi Saleh to answer the call.
What about the other Hawks picks?
The Hawks will also have the 23rd overall pick (via the Cleveland Cavaliers and San Antonio Spurs) as well as the 57th overall pick (via the Boston Celtics).
What else to watch for this draft lottery?
One of the most interesting things to look for is where Indiana’s pick lands. If it stays within the top four, the Pacers keep the pick. If it slides to fifth or sixth — and there’s a roughly 50% chance at this scenario — the pick goes to the Los Angeles Clippers.
Speaking of the Clippers, their own pick goes to the Oklahoma City Thunder no matter what happens today, owing to the Paul George and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander trade way back in the 2019 offseason. There’s even a roughly 7% chance that the pick jumps into the top 4.
How and when can I watch, stream, or listen to the lottery?
Location: Navy Pier, Chicago, IL
Start Time: 3:00 PM EDT
TV: ABC
Radio: ESPN Radio
Streaming: ESPN Unlimited, DirecTV, Fubo, YouTube TV
Lakers guard Luka Doncic and teammate Jake LaRavia yell at referees after a perceived foul wasn't called against the Thunder during Game 3 on Saturday night at Crypto.com Arena. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
I swear, if Luka Doncic was playing, this second-round series against the Oklahoma City Thunder would be going differently.
But it’s not only because, without him, they’re stuck reliving a recurring nightmare; in all three games, the Lakers have played Oklahoma City tough in the first half, including taking the lead into halftime in Games 2 and 3, only for it to be yanked away.
It’s also because they’re also losing data points on the scoreboard going into a pivotal offseason.
This whole Western Conference semifinal series against these defending champions has been a lose-lose proposition for the Lakers, who are now down 3-0 and staring into the elimination abyss in Game 4 on Monday.
But throw in the 33.5 points per game Doncic averaged this season, and the Lakers don’t get outscored by a combined 54 points after halftime.
Calculate for Doncic’s career 30.9 points per playoff game, and let’s assume their high-water mark would surely eclipse Saturday’s tally in their 131-108 Game 3 loss at Crypto.com Arena.
For whatever that’s worth.
Which is little compared to what else the Lakers miss with Doncic on the bench, nursing the Grade 2 hamstring strain he suffered on April 2 in Oklahoma City.
Lakers forward LeBron James, sliding backward across the baseline, looks for a foul call on a missed layup during Game 3 against the Thunder. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
For the Lakers, this end-of-the-road series is most valuable as an evaluation period for next season. It’s a barometer reading: You are here. The Thunder are there.
The goal now is to build a team around Doncic that could conceivably keep pace with Oklahoma City, and so they’re evaluating who will help do that if they come along for the ride next year.
But the Lakers are doing these playoff measurements without Doncic on the court. They’re test-driving the wrong car toward vacation.
Doncic can expect a postcard in the mail: Wish you were there.
So does he, of course.
“It's very frustrating,” Doncic said between Games 1 and 2, standing with his hands in his pockets, pained to report that he wasn’t close to returning, five weeks into his eight-week return-to-work timeline.
“I don't think people understand how frustrating it is. All I wanna do is play basketball, especially this time. It's the best time to play basketball. It's very frustrating seeing what my team is doing. I'm very proud of them. It's been very tough, to, just to sit and watch them play.”
He got to see the Lakers upset the Houston Rockets in a six-game, first-round series without him and, for four games, Austin Reaves — who is averaging 18.7 points and shooting 40% from the floor and 25% from three-point range this series, having become a higher priority of the Thunder’s physical defense without having to deal with Doncic.
On Saturday, Doncic had to watch another lead — and with it, another opportunity to steal a game — disappear as if by a cruel magic trick. As time wore down, Doncic sat on the bench next to Reaves, staring blankly, hands folded in his lap, like so many Lakers fans at the arena.
The Lakers’ latest deflating loss could have used Doncic’s energy,his showmanship, his fire. He’s among the league-leaders in that, too.
“Look, yeah, when you have the league’s leading scorer out there – if he was – it definitely changes the dynamic of a team,” said guard Luke Kennard, who scored 13 of his series-high 18 points in the first half Saturday.
“Obviously, we miss him. And we know he’s working his butt off right now [to return to play] … but yeah, I mean, he would definitely change it for us. But right now, he’s not.”
Kennard is right, of course. Things would be different if Doncic was out there dealing.
Not that different.
But the Lakers at least wouldn’t be running out of gas so far from getting home every game, and they’d also have a better idea of how much farther they have to go.
SAN ANTONIO, TX - APRIL 30: Stephon Castle of the San Antonio Spurs is congratulated by his mother Quintette as he was named Rookie Of The Year at Victory Capital Performance Center on April 30, 2025 in San Antonio, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Ronald Cortes/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Happy Mother’s Day!
I realize today is Game 4 and there are options for discussion, but for now, let’s be grateful for those women who enrich our lives. Whether it’s your mother, or the mother of your children, or that nurturing aunt or neighbor, this is a great day to reach out and remind that someone that they made an impact in your life.
Dylan Harper was asked about his mother, who coached him through high school, and he shared this:
Last year, when the members of the Spurs were asked about the most influential people in their lives, “mom” topped the list.
No shortage of love.
How are you spending the day?
Welcome to the Thread. Join in the conversation, start your own discussion, and share your thoughts. This is the Spurs community, your Spurs community. Thanks for being here.
Our community guidelines apply which should remind everyone to be cool, avoid personal attacks, not to troll and to watch the language.
For those not competing for a NBA championship, it's one of the most important times of the offseason. Draft season.
First in order is the lottery on Mother's Day. The anticipated event is here meaning no more simulations on what the 2026 NBA draft order might be and presumably which prospect will go where. Draft positioning will be determined beginning Sunday, May 10 at 3 p.m. ET.
The Sacramento Kings posted a 22-60 record during the 2025-26 season and are searching for a piece that can be a contributor to their future or even the face of the franchise. They have a pretty good chance at landing one of the top prospects.
Sacramento is in need of a point guard. Kings general manager Scott Perry made it clear during end-of-season interviews with reporters that Sacramento will take a "best player available" approach, as they did in 2025.
Perry was brought in to the Kings brass following the 2024-25 season. His first opportunity to put his vision of building a contender began with the 2025 NBA Draft, where he drafted Nique Clifford (24th), Maxime Raynaud (42nd) and signed Dylan Cardwell as an undrafted free agent.
Fast forward to 2026. The odds for the Kings to land the No. 1 pick are 11.5%. The odds for Sacramento to land a top-4 pick are even greater at 45.1%.
However, their draft range is expected to be between No. 5-8, with the No. 9 pick being worst-case scenario. Experts are saying the most likely outcome is a No. 7 pick, overall. However, in many mock draft lists, the Kings have the No. 5 pick. And there's a consensus that they would take Darius Acuff Jr. of Arkansas.
Here's who experts are saying the Kings will select in their pre-lottery mock drafts:
Sacramento Kings experts' mock draft selections
With the draft lottery on May 10, here are predictions from sports experts in their mock drafts for the the Kings.
The Golden State Warriors are going into the draft with unanswered questions: whether or not Steve Kerr will be the coach and whether he wants to incorporate inexperienced players.
The draft isn't until June, but the draft lottery is Mother's Day. The Warriors will know their position in the 2026 NBA Draft beginning Sunday, May 10 at 3 p.m. ET.
Golden State is coming off of a 37-45 season where they were eliminated in the NBA Play-in Tournament by the Phoenix Suns in a game for the No. 8-seed. That game is where questions about Kerr's future emerged, as the end of the season marked the end of his contract.
As the Warriors answer head coaching questions, they must decide the type of player they want to bring in. The Dubs need a ball-handler, playmaker, scorer and an inside presence, namely someone who can be a spark or a glue guy in non-Stephen Curry minutes.
One of the brighter spots from their 2025 NBA draft selections was Will Richard out of Florida. He was scouted a prototypical 3-and-D player, and that's what the Warriors got in the making. Richard was a 56th overall pick by the Memphis Grizzlies later traded to the Warriors on draft night. He averaged 6.4 points, 2.5 rebounds, 1.3 assists and 1.2 steals in 20 minutes per game. His shooting percentages were on 46.8% field goals and 33% 3-point shooting in the 2025-26 season.
The 2026 Warriors are hoping to have similar fortune as the Dallas Mavericks in 2025, who finished 39-43, had a 1.8% to land the No. 1 pick and did, ultimately selecting Cooper Flagg, the 2026 NBA Rookie of the Year.
The Warriors have 2% chance at landing the No. 1 pick. Very slim, but stranger things have happened. Chances at landing a top-4 pick are better, but still small, at 9.4%.
It's expected the Warriors will likely land a pick between No. 11-14, with No. 14 being the worst-case. Golden State cannot land at No. 5 through No. 10 with less than 1.0% chance at No. 13 or No. 14.
The overwhelming consensus from sports experts is that the Warriors will have the No. 11 pick. Here's who experts' are saying the Warriors would select in their pre-lottery mock drafts:
Golden State Warriors experts' mock draft selections
With the draft lottery on May 10, here are predictions from sports experts in their mock drafts for the the Warriors.
CLEVELAND, OH - MAY 9: Donovan Mitchell #45 and James Harden #1 of the Cleveland Cavaliers talk after the game against the Detroit Pistons on May 9, 2026 at Rocket Arena in Cleveland, Ohio. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by David L. Nemec/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
CLEVELAND — Donovan Mitchell chased Detroit Pistons sharpshooter Duncan Robinson around screens to the baseline corner late in the second quarter. Mitchell beat Robinson to the spot and bumped him straight into his own bench as a punishment for making him work so hard defensively. Isaiah Stewart was a few steps away and gave Mitchell a light shove after seeing what happened. Mitchell looked up and then returned the favor before continuing to chase Robinson around the perimeter.
Basketball games aren’t always won by the more physical team. It’s a contact sport that rewards size and strength, but the outcome is ultimately decided by who puts the ball through the hoop more consistently.
That said, in a series like this, doing so is much easier if you’re able to get into the paint and create from there.
The Cavs couldn’t do that in the first two games of this series. The offense was stagnant, often relying on the guards to create against a set defense. And when the ball did get kicked out to the perimeter for open threes, the shots weren’t falling, as is often the case for an offense that is moving side-to-side instead of north and south.
That changed on Sunday.
The Cavs were the aggressors in Game 3. They completed more of their shots in the restricted area and were able to get to the free-throw line more consistently. Both are things they weren’t able to do throughout the first two games of the series.
This was most true for Mitchell. He went 6-8 on shots at the rim after taking just one there combined in the first two games. A renewed focus on getting downhill woke up what was a dormant Cavs’ offense.
There was a level of decisiveness from Mitchell that wasn’t in the first two games. Instead of trying to probe the defense for openings in an effort to look for a perfect shot, he attacked whenever he had any sliver of daylight. This included pushing his advantage in semi-transition off missed shots and turnovers.
Here’s six baskets that Mitchell was able to get by just simply carrying his momentum from the backcourt into the front court. That accounts for nearly half of his made field goals.
Anything bought from the links helps support Fear the Sword. You can buy the Spida shirt HERE. You can also shop all of Homage’s Cavs gear HERE.
These aren’t fast-break or transition baskets, but they might as well have been from an efficiency standpoint. Mitchell is one of the most difficult players to stop when he has a head of steam. That allowed him to more easily showcase the skills that make him one of the most dominant scoring guards in the league for years.
Detroit’s defense is tough for a 6’2” guard to crack. We know that Mitchell can be lethal with his jumpshot, even though he’s struggled with that through three games. Getting downhill in semi-transition like this offsets some of those concerns. It’s why he was able to get an efficient 35 points in a game the Cavs desperately needed to win.
Max Strus provided several things the Cavs desperately needed. His energy and effort changed the game defensively. Strus forced several turnovers, including an incredible steal off a Cade Cunningham inbound pass that led to a critical two points the other way to break a 104-104 tie.
Plays like that encapsulate who Strus is as a player, and why he’s so valuable to the team.
“There’s just so many things he does that don’t show up in the box score,” Mitchell said.
One of those things is screen setting. The Pistons turned the momentum around in the second half by switching more ball screens, similar to what the Toronto Raptors did in the first round. This stalled out Cleveland’s offense at the start of the third quarter before it got going again in the fourth.
Strus’s ability to set hard picks helped get the offense going. The Pistons tried to hide their weakest defender, Duncan Robinson, on Strus. Solid screens forced Detroit to switch, allowing James Harden to get one of his several closing baskets against the matchup he wanted.
You can’t see the screen in this video, but this mismatch doesn’t happen without it.
This showed us what the best version of the Mitchell and Harden backcourt could be. Harden said it was a “small dose” of their full potential afterward, and you could see why.
Mitchell had it going throughout, but he deferred to Harden in the high-leverage moments to get the job done. Harden delivered by knocking down clutch baskets on three-straight possessions, including the game-sealing three over Tobias Harris.
Harden brought them over the finish line, scoring nine points in the fourth quarter, but had just 10 points leading up to it. He had 10 fewer shots than Mitchell overall and wans’t the main focus of the offense.
It’s a different role than what we’ve seen from Harden over the past decade, but one he’s completely embraced because he knows what life is like for Mitchell — the guy forced to carry the fate of the team on his shoulders.
“I talked to Don a few times today, and it’s like, “All right, if you ever feel like tired or you need [a break], you know, I’m available,” Harden said. “I understand what that feels like when you’re that age, and you’re used to scoring 30 points and you know you’re the guy. So, you got to pick and choose and find your spots where you want to take them and where you want to just let them go. … Tonight was one of those cases where he looked like he needed a break, and he called on my number.”
Mitchell and Harden are very different players, but have run into similar roadblocks during their careers. Their playing style has led to incredible regular-season success, but neither has achieved the playoff team success their talent would lead you to believe they should.
Few can relate to the internal weight and frustration Mitchell has felt from playoff losses more than Harden. If they’re going to break through together, it will be due to performances like this.
“I am who I am, he is who he is, but that what makes us so dynamic,” Mitchell said. “Having a trust in him and vice versa is why those moments happen.”
The Cavs passed the test in Game 3. They responded with the physicality they needed to make this series competitive again. They know how to and can beat this team. Now, they just need to show that they can meet that physicality consistently, and not just once every couple of games.
“At the end of the day, it’s just 2-1,” Mitchell said. “We’ve got to find a way to win Game 4. … We’ve got another opportunity to play in front of the greatest fans in the league. Hopefully, we get another one.”