Mitchell and the Cavaliers look to clinch series against Detroit

Detroit Pistons (60-22, first in the Eastern Conference) vs. Cleveland Cavaliers (52-30, fourth in the Eastern Conference)

Cleveland; Friday, 7 p.m. EDT

LINE: Cavaliers -3.5; over/under is 209.5

EASTERN CONFERENCE SECOND ROUND: Cavaliers lead series 3-2

BOTTOM LINE: The Cleveland Cavaliers look to clinch the Eastern Conference second round over the Detroit Pistons in game six. The Cavaliers defeated the Pistons 117-113 in overtime in the last meeting on Thursday. James Harden led the Cavaliers with 30 points, and Cade Cunningham led the Pistons with 39.

The Cavaliers are 11-5 against the rest of their division. Cleveland ranks seventh in the Eastern Conference in team defense, giving up only 115.4 points while holding opponents to 46.4% shooting.

The Pistons are 12-4 against the rest of their division. Detroit is fourth in the league scoring 18.0 fast break points per game led by Cunningham averaging 3.8.

The 119.5 points per game the Cavaliers average are 9.9 more points than the Pistons give up (109.6). The Pistons average 117.8 points per game, 2.4 more than the 115.4 the Cavaliers allow to opponents.

TOP PERFORMERS: Evan Mobley is scoring 18.2 points per game and averaging 9.0 rebounds for the Cavaliers. Donovan Mitchell is averaging 25.3 points and 5.3 rebounds over the last 10 games.

Jalen Duren is averaging 19.5 points and 10.5 rebounds for the Pistons. Cunningham is averaging 29.4 points over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Cavaliers: 5-5, averaging 108.5 points, 43.2 rebounds, 21.7 assists, 7.0 steals and 6.3 blocks per game while shooting 45.4% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 109.6 points per game.

Pistons: 5-5, averaging 106.1 points, 43.5 rebounds, 22.6 assists, 8.8 steals and 7.4 blocks per game while shooting 45.4% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 103.2 points.

INJURIES: Cavaliers: None listed.

Pistons: None listed.

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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

13 Takeaways from Cavs Game 5 win over Pistons: Cavaliers show why this team is different

DETROIT, MI - MAY 13: James Harden #1 of the Cleveland Cavaliers drives to the basket during the game against the Detroit Pistons during Round Two Game Five of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on May 13, 2026 at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit, Michigan. 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 Chris Schwegler/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

DETROIT — After the game, Cleveland Cavaliers head coach Kenny Atkinson was asked what it took for this team to overcome a nine-point deficit in the final three minutes to complete the comeback.

James Harden, who was waiting in the back of the press-conference room for his coach to finish up, thought he would just answer it himself.

“Balls,” Harden said.

While crass, it’s the truth.

The Cavaliers have been called soft for years, and understandably so. They’ve folded in the biggest moments too often in the previous three years not to be called that.

However, this isn’t that team. At least it wasn’t in Game 5.

The Cavs were down nine against the Detroit Pistons with three minutes left in the fourth quarter. The building was on fire. The hometown fans were celebrating what they assumed would be a win. Any momentum that the Cavs had from a strong second half was completely gone.

But then they did something that they hadn’t previously done. They got off the mat.

The Cavs counterpunched with a Donovan Mitchell layup and seven-straight points from Evan Mobley. This was coupled with stifling defense on the other end, as they didn’t give Cade Cunningham anything easy going to the basket.

Cleveland needed overtime to get this game over the line, but they got the job done 117-113.

It wasn’t pretty, but a win is a win. And probably the best victory this group has had since LeBron James was last in town.

Now, they just need one more win to go to the Eastern Conference Finals.

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This game was why you grabbed James Harden at the deadline. President of Basketball Operations Koby Altman’s reasoning at the time was simple.

“[We’re] really excited about when it gets to a chaotic time in the playoffs and we’re on the road, and there’s a fever pitch, being able to throw the ball to him and calm this thing down,” Altman said back in February.

Those words proved to be prophetic. Time and time again, it was Harden who came through. He settled the team down and ensured that they got good offense time and time again in a game they weren’t getting much from Mitchell.

Harden continually got to his spots possession after possession, as if it were 2018 again. And even when you let an older version of Harden get to his spots, he’s going to make you pay.

All of the shanagans that drew the ire of NBA fans for a decade and a half were on full display. Harden baited fouls with the rip through, his endless pump fakes, and his ability to get to the rim and have guys bounce off him.

So much so that he had an entire arena chanting “f*** James Harden” throughout overtime when he was continually parading to the charity stripe.

Aging stars can turn back the clock. The issue is that the consistency may not be there from night to night like it was in their prime. We’ve seen that at times throughout this series, when Harden has had issues with turnovers, which partially led to their collapse in Games 1 and 2. But when the Cavs have needed him this series, he’s more than answered the bell.

In Game 3, he closed the Pistons out with clutch shots. In Game 4, he kept the offense going and took care of the ball, playing a supporting role alongside Mitchell, and in Game 5, he dropped 30 points.

“He really understands the moment,” Atkinson said. “When to get a guy the ball, when to try to get a free-throw. All of it. [This was] the big reason we got him.”

Moving to a role like this has been an adjustment for Harden, and one that he’s not fully used to yet.

“I’ve only been here two and a half months,” Harden said. “The things that we’re going through is all new. Learning how to be a second option and feed and play off Donovan.”

Nights like this show that he does still have it when the team needs something.

Before the game, Kenny Atkinson said they needed a role player to step up to help them reverse their fortunes on the road.

“I just think we need someone to step up,” Atkinson said before the game. “It’s going to be someone you don’t expect.”

That someone was Max Strus.

Strus kept a somewhat lifeless offense alive at the beginning of the game. His four triples in the first half accounted for a majority of the team’s threes (6-14).

In the second half, he was seemingly everywhere on the court, coming up with every loose ball and playing great defense on Cade Cunningham.

“The things that he’s doing don’t necessarily show up on a stat sheet,” Harden said.

What did show up on the stat sheet was a much-needed 20-point performance off the bench.

“He’s got a nasty character, and I love it,” Atkinson said. “We need that.”

Donovan Mitchell simply didn’t have it in Game 5.

The Cavs have gone as Mitchell has this entire season. When he’s getting downhill and getting into the basket, Cleveland’s offense looks good. When he isn’t, things can look stagnant as they did at times in Game 5.

Detroit made shrinking the floor a priority. They walled off the paint by shifting help defense into driving lanes whenever he got the ball on the perimeter. This resulted in Mitchell attempting just two of his 18 shots at the rim.

When he’s not getting to the rim, he isn’t getting to the free-throw line either. Mitchell took just six free throws after getting 15 in the game before.

But the Cavs were able to overcome it still. That shows in part how this group is different, and not the same one we’ve seen in years past.

Additionally, the Cavs lost the possession game. They were outscored 27-16 in points off turnovers and 15-14 in second-chance points.

This wasn’t a pretty game, but again, that doesn’t matter on days like this.

Cade Cunningham was the star the Pistons needed him to be, until he wasn’t.

Cleveland’s defenders were already trapping him throughout Game 4 due to how few of Detroit’s role players were stepping up. That ramped up in Game 5 with sharpshooter Duncan Robinson missing this game with a lower back injury.

The extra attention didn’t matter.

Cunningham did a good job of moving off-ball to create advantages, and then when he got the ball, he made his move to the basket quickly before the help defense could arrive.

And when he was the primary ball handler, he accepted the trap and trusted his teammates to find the advantage out of the odd-man situation. More often than not, they did. This led to Cunningham scoring 20 points on 7-14 shooting in the first half.

Then things changed.

The Cavs found success in the second half by just switching these ball screens. They trusted the defenders to stay with him in isolation. Cunningham sought out the mismatches, but doing so tired him out. That showed through down the stretch, particularly in overtime, where he registered just two points and a turnover.

Cleveland simply wore Cunningham down. This is where Detroit’s lack of depth — especially with Jalen Duren struggling as he has — showed through most and cost them the game.

Mobley came through in the biggest moment.

He didn’t register a single point in the fourth quarter until the final three minutes. He scored Cleveland’s last seven points, which included making two free throws to send the game to overtime. That was impactful for someone who seemingly forgot how to make foul shots in the middle of the season.

Mobley did this while being by far the best player on the floor. He shut off drives to the basket by merely rotating over. His impact on that end — maybe even more than the offense — is what allowed Cleveland to climb out of the hole late.

On top of that, he was excellent as a playmaker in the short roll with a team-best eight assists.

The series isn’t over yet.

Despite how this game ended, Detroit has proven to be an incredibly resilient group. That makes Game 6 at home so much more important.

“I’ve been in this position before, and have lost this next Game 6, then that puts a lot of pressure on you in Game 7, especially if you have to go on the road,” Atkinson said. “It’s a must-win game for us in terms of if we want to move forward.”

Pistons vs. Cavs final score: Unkind whistle, unacceptable mistakes doom Detroit

May 13, 2026; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Cleveland Cavaliers center Evan Mobley (4) is defended by Detroit Pistons guard Ausar Thompson (9) in the first half during game five of the second round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Little Caesars Arena. Mandatory Credit: Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images | Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images

I’m going to make this recap short. I just got back from an absolutely infuriating basketball game with thousands of my Pistons fan friends, and way too many Cavs fans. Walking through the concourse and to the parking lot around a bunch of elated Cavs fans — who knew they got away with something — not fun! In the end, the Detroit Pistons lost 117-113 in overtime and now face a 3-2 deficit heading to Cleveland in a possible elimination game.

Look, the free-throw disparity that has plagued Detroit for the three games prior did not abate tonight. Detroit shot 20 free throws on their home floor and the Cavaliers shot 38. The most egregious was thanks to a bunch of James Harden contortions and selling calls. It was maddening.

But most important was a critical no call that should have gone Detroit’s way and very well could have delivered the Pistons a victory. The Pistons had a nine-point lead with just under three minutes left but let it dwindle away and suddenly the game was tied and the Cavs had the ball on what could have been the final possession.

Ausar Thompson, who was brilliant all night, hounded Donovan Mitchell at the top of the key and blocked the ball from behind as Mitchell went up for a potential game-winning shot. As Ausar attempted to retrieve the loose ball he was clearly tripped by Jarrett Allen. A whistle sends Ausar to the free-throw line with two chances to put Detroit ahead with under 1.5 seconds left. But there was no whistle. Instead, the ball bounced across the floor and time expired.

That was one of a dozen calls that will make any Piston fan furious and will haunt the team for the rest of the offseason unless they can pull off a miracle and win the next two games.

The Pistons did not play perfect basketball, but it felt like they played well enough to win. Cleveland outlasted Detroit thanks to Max Strus hitting six threes, James Harden hitting shots and selling calls, and the Pistons inability to score in the final minutes to truly ice the game. And the refs. It’s not an excuse. The game was simply way too dictated by the referees tonight not to mention it. To pretend the refs calls didn’t dictate this entire game is to put your head in the sand. It’s simply really hard to make up the deficit caused by spotting the opposing team 13 points at the free-throw line.

Cade Cunningham played a great game, scoring 39 points, hitting six threes, and adding nine assists and seven rebounds. He seemed to tire late and was less assertive in the final minutes of the fourth when the Pistons squandered a nine-point lead. But he gave the team everything he could tonight.

So did Daniss Jenkins, a surprise starter in place of the injured Duncan Robinson. The young guard had 19 points and played his butt off on the defensive side of the ball. Isaiah Stewart played solid minutes in the first half, even hitting two from deep. Paul Reed played 17 second-half minutes and scored 10 points on quality shooting and added eight rebounds.

They just couldn’t do enough. On to Cleveland to try to save the season.

Cleveland rallies from 9 points down in the final 3 minutes to force OT, wins in Detroit to take 3-2 lead

This is what playoff experience looks like — and why it matters.

Detroit took a nine-point lead with three minutes to go on a Tobias Harris 3-pointer. From that moment on through the end of overtime, Cleveland stepped up, outscoring Detroit 23-10, shooting 50% to the Pistons 23.5%, Cleveland was 2-of-3 from beyond the arc while Detroit was 0-of-5, and Donovan Mitchell led the way shooting 4-of-5 in that stretch with nine points, while Cade Cunningham was 1-of-4 for two points as Cleveland doubled him and dared anyone else to beat them.

The result was Cleveland's first road win in these playoffs, a 117-113 victory that sends them home with a 3-2 series lead and a chance to close out the series on Friday night on their home court.

"You're going to have to choke the life out of this team," Pistons coach J.B. Bickerstaff said of his team. "We're not going to go down without a fight. We're not going to go down without kicking, punching, grabbing, clawing. That's just who we are."

Pistons fans were livid about a play at the end of regulation. After Ausar Thompson made a brilliant read on Mitchell and stripped the ball away, it looks like Jarrett Allen fouls Thompson going for the loose ball. Crew Chief Tony Brothers, standing right there, sees the play but chooses not to decide the game on a foul away from the basket. There was no call and the game headed to overtime.

"During live play, both players were going for the ball and there was incidental contact with the legs with no player having possession of the ball," Brothers told a pool reporter of the no-call after the game.

That call is not why the Pistons lost the game.

Cleveland was the mentally tougher team on the night — they trailed by 15 at one point, by nine late, and just kept making plays. It was Cleveland's best defensive effort of the series. Detroit made plays, but when Cleveland doubled Cunningham and dared anyone else to beat them, nobody stepped up. It was another rough night for Jalen Duren, who did not play in the entire fourth quarter, as Bickerstaff chose to go with Paul Reed.

Cunningham scored 39 on the night, with nine assists and seven rebounds. Daniss Jenkins added 19, and Tobias Harris had 13 points but on 6-of-19 shooting.

Cleveland got 30 points on the night from James Harden, who was at times brilliant and at times made head-scratching plays. Mitchell came on late with 21 points, but the unsung hero of the night was Max Strus, who scored 20 on the night, making 6-of-8 from 3-point range, plus playing strong defense. Evan Mobley and Jarrett Allen combined for 35 points, 18 rebounds and five blocks.

Jenkins got his first playoff start for Detroit because Duncan Robinson was a late scratch. Without Robinson, the Pistons still opened the game 5-of-9 from 3, with Isaiah Stewart going 2-of-2 on above-the-break 3-pointers, and after one quarter it was 29-27 Pistons. Detroit forced six turnovers which led to 11 points, and Cade Cunningham had 10 points.

Detroit started the second quarter shooting 8-of-8 from the floor, three of those makes by Harris, and stretched their lead out to 15. Give the Cavaliers credit, they responded with an 8-0 run to keep it in single digits at the half.

Cleveland was careless with the basketball in the first half, turning the ball over 10 times leading to 20 points for Detroit, and that's why the Pistons led 60-52 after 24 minutes.

Once again the third quarter belonged to Cleveland. The Cavaliers stopped turning the ball over (just twice in the fourth), moved the ball well, and Harden scored 9, while the Pistons shot just 33.3% from the floor. It was Cleveland by four at the end of three.

Then Detroit started the fourth on a 5-0 run to retake the lead. The Cavaliers started the fourth 0-of-9 (plus two shots blocked and three turnovers) and the Pistons went on a 12-0 run and took an eight-point lead.

But as they had been all night, the Cavaliers were resilient. They fought back. And now they can close out the series at home.

Player Grades: Cavs vs Pistons Game 5 – Max Strus goes nuclear

DETROIT, MICHIGAN - MAY 13: Max Strus #2 of the Cleveland Cavaliers shoots a three point basket against Cade Cunningham #2 of the Detroit Pistons during the third quarter in Game Five of the Second Round of the NBA Eastern Conference Playoffs at Little Caesars Arena on May 13, 2026 in Detroit, Michigan. 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. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers pulled off their gutsiest win of the 2020s. Let’s celebrate before getting nervous about Game 6 on Friday.

All grades are based on our usual expectations for each player.

Donovan Mitchell

21 points, 4 rebounds, 3 assists, 2 turnovers

This game started as a disaster. It nearly ended as one, too.

Mitchell was stripped on the final possession. His turnover, combined with a horrific shooting night, could have cost them an inspiring comeback.

Thankfully, Mitchell has a short memory. He scored seven points in overtime, pushing the Cavs over the finish line and saving himself from a bummer night.

Frustrations aside, I did think Mitchell was taking good shots in the flow of the offense. His process was better than the results. That, and his overtime scoring, explain the grade.

Grade: C-

James Harden

30 points, 8 rebounds, 6 assists, 1 steal, 3 blocks, 6 turnovers

Harden put the first two games of this series in the past and had the Cavs offense on his back tonight. Sure, we had the occasional turnover that makes you want to pull your hair out. But Harden’s shot-making was one of the only things keeping Cleveland in the game.

The Cavs offense was prone to droughts in previous years. Winning a game that involved poor shooting from Mitchell felt impossible. That’s no longer the case, as Harden’s kept them above water even in Mitchell’s worst moments. That’s huge.

His carelessness with the ball (six turnovers) and occasional lack of effort defensively ding his grade. Still, it’s a make-or-miss league, and the Cavs wouldn’t be leading 3-2 in the series if he wasn’t making shots tonight.

Grade: A

Evan Mobley

19 points, 8 rebounds, 8 assists, 1 steal, 3 blocks

Mobley took a while to get going tonight. His playmaking was a bright spot, but the Cavs need him to do more than create in the short roll. Once he started scoring and re-establishing himself on defense, the game suddenly became winnable.

The Cavs leaned on Mobley heavily down the stretch. He scored seven points in the closing minutes of regulation to erase a nine-point deficit. He also shut things down defensively, turning the tide and stifling Detroit in the clutch.

Grade: A+

Jarrett Allen

16 points, 10 rebounds, 1 assist, 1 steal, 2 blocks

It’s easy to miss how impactful Allen has been for the Cavs this postseason. Smaller nights like tonight can fly under the radar. But an efficient double-double and elite rim protection from your fourth-best player is a luxury. Allen has thoroughly outplayed Jalen Duren in this series and deserves recognition.

Grade: A

Dean Wade

0 points, 6 rebounds, 1 steal

Wade has not scored since the second quarter of Game 3. He’s only attempted three shots in his last 63 minutes of the series. That’s… not enough.

Still, Wade’s helped put the Cavs defense where it needs to be. They don’t have enough size on the wing to cut him from the rotation. And, he’s honestly been as helpful as anyone can be while being a zero on offense. That’s worth something.

Grade: C

Max Strus

20 points, 8 rebounds, 1 assist, 1 steal, 1 block

The Cavs don’t win tonight without Strus. Point blank period.

Strus made all the winning plays. His three-point barrage in the first half was key to keeping the game competitive. He continued pouring it on in the second half while ramping up the defensive intensity to push Cade Cunningham over the edge. His physicality wore on Cade throughout the game and eventually rang victorious in the closing minutes.

Grade: A+++

Jaylon Tyson

0 everything, 3 minutes

Tyson got into a scuffle with Isaiah Stewart and Tobias Harris only moments after checking into the game. I thought that might fuel the Cavs. Instead, it actually deflated them. Tyson was on the floor as Detroit opened the second quarter, shooting 8-8 from the field, and worked towards their biggest lead.

Grade: F

Dennis Schroder

5 points, 5 assists, 2 turnovers

I don’t have anything new to say about Schroder. He’s earned his place in the rotation and is an important cog in the machine offensively. Even the tiniest bits of usage that Schroder can carry help take the load off Mitchell and Harden’s shoulders.

Grade: C+

Sam Merrill

6 points, 1 assist, 1 steal

I’m just waiting for Merrill to let loose in one of these games. He entered tonight as the second-worst ‘open’ shooter of the playoffs and went 2-5 on mostly clean looks today. That can’t be sustainable, right? Sam feels too talented to keep missing good looks.

Grade: D+

Winners and Losers: Cavs vs Pistons Game 5 – Evan Mobley comes up clutch

DETROIT, MI - MAY 13: Evan Mobley #4 of the Cleveland Cavaliers celebrates during the game against the Detroit Pistons during Round Two Game Five of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on May 13, 2026 at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit, Michigan. 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 Chris Schwegler/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers stole Game 5 from the Detroit Pistons, rallying back behind some timely shots from Evan Mobley.

Let’s go over today’s winners and losers.

WINNER – Evan Mobley

This game wasn’t pretty in the beginning for Evan Mobley. In fact, he was working his way towards a LOSER tonight when he failed to post up both Cade Cunningham and Caris LeVert. Those are matchups he needs to win.

But as the game went on, it became impossible to deny Mobley’s impact.

He was making strong reads as a playmaker all night. Mobley has found a niche for creating in the short-roll, diming Jarrett Allen multiple times in this game and bending the help defense to kick out to the perimeter. He ended the night with a playoff career-high 8 assists.

That’s impressive, but not that impressive. Let’s get to the good stuff.

Mobley sprang to life by yamming a driving dunk in the second half. He then showed off his range by banging home a three-pointer on the next play. All of a sudden, the Cavs had momentum.

This continued into the fourth quarter, when Mobley’s clutch shot-making helped the Cavs recover from a nine-point deficit and force overtime. It’s worth noting that Mobley has converted on a number of timely three-pointers this postseason, including the first round against Toronto.

Mobley finished with 19 points, 8 rebounds, 8 assists, 3 blocks, and a steal. The second game in a row that he’s dipped his hand into multiple cookie jars and walked away as a winner.

LOSER – First Half Turnovers

Can I be honest? I’m kinda tired of typing this. It’s almost insulting to the wonderful readers of Fear the Sword that I keep reminding everyone why taking care of the ball is important. We’re all aware.

Yet, it’s important enough to keep hammering home.

The Cavs conceded 27 points off turnovers. 20 of those came in the first half. Coughing it up and allowing the Pistons to score in transition is the primary thing the Cavs should worry about in this series. They lost games 1-2 because of it, and they nearly repeated history tonight.

WINNER – James Harden

James Harden netted his first 30+ point playoff game as a Cavalier. It was his 50th career game of 30+ points in the postseason.

Couldn’t have come at a better time.

Harden, even when he’s turning it over and walking back on defense, has somehow managed to keep the Cavs alive throughout these playoffs. Other than games 1-2, where he actively cost them from winning, Harden has been a lifeline for Cleveland.

Tonight was more of that. Harden took a sputtering Cavalier offense and towed them to the finish line. His isolation scoring ensured that Detroit could never pull too far away, immediately bringing the Cavs back into range after the Pistons went up by 16 points.

There’s a sense of calm that Harden brings to the roster. Again, even when everything is burning down, Harden keeps the same demeanor. That can frustrate you when the team loses. It might seem like he doesn’t have any sense of urgency. But when the Cavs rally back? Harden’s composure is a bright spot. He didn’t allow them to panic, and that resilience won out in the end.

WINNER – Max Strus

In a just world, Max Strus will be remembered as a Cleveland legend. The only thing that’s left is a deep playoff run under his belt. Maybe he gets it this year.

Strus does everything a blue-collar city should love. Grit, tenacity, and nonstop hustle. He’s a streaky shooter, but that motor never shuts off. That’s allowed him to be impactful in games where he doesn’t have his shot rolling. And when his shot is falling like tonight? It’s a cherry on top.

The Cavs fell behind early in this game due to turnovers. It was Strus, alongside Harden, who connected on timely buckets to keep things under control. He continued to nail momentous shots in the second half — on top of hustling for loose balls and second-chance opportunities.

Strus, who came up with a clutch steal in Game 3, did it again tonight when he stole the ball and passed to Mitchell for a layup in overtime.

If that wasn’t enough, he also won over Charles Barkley tonight.

It wasn’t perfect for Max. He had a difficult time keeping Cade Cunningham away from his spots defensively. That resulted in the best game Cade has had all series. But Strus eventually started to win that battle, wearing Cunningham down as the game went on. And, he fueled the Cavaliers with his 20 points, making up for anything he conceded to the opposing team’s All-NBA star.

LOSER [and partial WINNER] – Donovan Mitchell

The highs… and the lows.

Mitchell scored a historic 39 points in the second half of Game 4. It feels like he maybe should have saved some of that for tonight. If Mitchell could have replicated even sixty seconds of that performance, the Cavs would have won comfortably.

The Pistons’ defense had Mitchell totally in a box for most of this game. He began 3-11 from the floor and 0-7 from downtown.

This game was begging for Mitchell to take over. But it wasn’t happening. At one point in the fourth quarter, Mitchell missed a wide-open three-point attempt from the corner that led to a transition three from Detroit. A devastating six-point swing with the game hanging in the balance.

On the final possession, Mitchell had the world in his hands with a chance to win the game. He was absolutely smothered by Ausar Thompson and turned it over without getting a shot up. Rough.

It wasn’t all bad, thankfully. Mitchell sparked just enough fire to help the Cavs get over the hump in overtime. He scored half of Cleveland’s 14 points in the extra frame, drilling his first three-pointer of the night and bursting to the hoop for a pair of buckets.

NBA playoff takeaways: Cavaliers win as Pistons let Cade Cunningham down

In the all-important Game 5, the Cavaliers did something they hadn’t done all postseason long: they won away from Cleveland.

The Cavs outlasted the Detroit Pistons Wednesday, May 13 to take a 3-2 lead in the Eastern Conference semifinals, putting them one victory away from a date in the conference finals with the New York Knicks.

And now the series will head back to Cleveland, where the Cavaliers haven’t lost in the playoffs, winning all six games they’ve played at Rocket Arena.

James Harden led all Cavaliers with 30 points on 8-of-21 shooting (38.1%), while Donovan Mitchell added 21 and Evan Mobley chipped in 19.

The Cavaliers won, 117-113, in overtime.

Here are takeaways from Game 5 between the Cleveland Cavaliers and Detroit Pistons:

The Cavaliers, frankly, got lucky with all their turnovers

In some ways, this is a game the Cavaliers shouldn’t have won. Their star players, Harden and Mitchell, combined to shoot just 38.5%. They faced a 15-point deficit in the second quarter. But more concerning were 17 turnovers, many of them inexcusable.

The Cavaliers were far too casual with their ball security, floating lazy passes across the court and telegraphing them at times. That allowed Detroit to turn those giveaways into 27 points, and it’s also why the Pistons claimed a 23-7 edge in fast-break points.

The Cavaliers were better in the second half, but that careless offense can completely sabotage a team’s chance of winning. Cleveland should consider itself fortunate, because if the Cavs move on to the conference finals, the Knicks won’t let them off easy.

The Detroit Pistons are far too dependent on Cade Cunningham

It was another banger for Cunningham, Detroit’s unquestioned star. Cunningham scored 39 points on 13-of-27 shooting, adding 9 assists and 7 rebounds. Yet, once again, the Pistons wasted a marvelous game from Cunningham because his supporting cast has not been able to contribute sufficiently.

Daniss Jenkins, making his first career postseason start, did score 19 in a solid 8-of-17 night, even though he struggled from 3-point range (2-of-8). But Tobias Harris (13 points) and Jalen Duren (9 points and 5 rebounds) struggled. This is becoming thematic for the Pistons.

As long as they look to Cunningham to be their savior — particularly in the clutch, when teams can play a little more physically and throw double-teams at him — Detroit will struggle to advance deep into the playoffs.

Cunningham is stellar, one of the top 10 basketball players in the world. But the pressure and responsibility placed on his shoulders is unsustainable, and it also leads to unforced errors; his 6 turnovers Wednesday night — including a debilitating one late in overtime — are an issue he needs to fix.

Game 6 can end a lot of narratives

Donovan Mitchell has had some massive playoff games in his career, but his teams have never broken through the conference semifinal round. James Harden, despite a handful of big postseason performances across his 185 career playoff games, has a reputation — one that’s unfair, frankly — of shrinking when it matters most.

But if Cleveland can defend homecourt Friday, May 15 to get Cleveland through to the Eastern Conference finals, Mitchell and Harden will have the chance to reframe those narratives.

There have been times this series when both have struggled somewhat. Yet, when Cleveland has needed clutch buckets, it has been both Mitchell and Harden to deliver.

The Pistons, who are 1-4 this postseason on the road, will be playing desperate, so the Cavaliers will need to be prepared and ruthless. Look for Mitchell and Harden to try to set the tone.

Paul Reed is eating into Jalen Duren’s minutes. Is a benching next?

Probably not. Duren, after all, was a first-time All-Star this season and still does impact the game on the defensive end, which doesn’t always show up in box scores.

But Reed once again outplayed Duren, and it’s clear that Pistons coach J.B. Bickerstaff is adjusting his rotations because of it. Reed played a series-high 17 minutes Wednesday night, which was just eight fewer than Duren’s 25 minutes.

Reed scored 10 points, grabbed 8 rebounds and blocked 2 shots, while Duren scored 9 points, picked up 5 rebounds and didn’t record a block.

Duren’s plus-minus of -16 was the team low Wednesday night and he has now posted a -42 over the last three games of the series.

In the regular season, Duren had developed a steady mid-range jumper that simply is not part of his game right now. It seems the only offense Duren contributes are putbacks or the occasional lob; he took just 5 shots Wednesday, compared to 7 from Reed, who is simply playing with more energy and pace as soon as he steps onto the floor.

It appears to be a confidence issue for Duren, and Detroit needs him to at least work the glass, because his offensive rebounding can give the Pistons second chances and his defensive rebounding can spring transition opportunities.

That's the Evan Mobley (and Max Strus) the Cavaliers needed

At times in the playoffs, Mobley has found it difficult to assert himself offensively. The last three games, though, have been steady progress. Mobley scored 19 points on 6-of-13 shooting, grabbed 8 rebounds and swatted away 3 blocks. He hit a pair of 3-pointers, the first at the end of the third quarter, and the second with 1:22 left in the fourth quarter to close Detroit’s lead to two points.

Strus was also electric, going 6-of-8 from 3-point range to score 20 points off the bench, adding 8 rebounds. When he ignites, Strus is a key part of Cleveland’s offense and can help launch runs. He scored 64.5% of the team’s bench points Wednesday night. In order to close out Detroit in Game 6, the Cavs will need the same type of production from both.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: NBA playoff takeaways from Cavaliers vs Pistons Game 5

Cavs erase 16-point deficit, rally back for Game 5 win over Pistons

DETROIT, MICHIGAN - MAY 13: James Harden #1 and Donovan Mitchell #45 of the Cleveland Cavaliers look on against the Detroit Pistons during overtime in Game Five of the Second Round of the NBA Eastern Conference Playoffs at Little Caesars Arena on May 13, 2026 in Detroit, Michigan. 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. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers clawed back for their first away victory of the playoffs, beating the Detroit Pistons 117-113 in overtime of Game 5.

There’s been a theme in this series. Win the possession battle, win the game. That’s true in most cases, but especially in this matchup — where the Pistons are forced to rely on an elite defense to narrow the gap between their limited offense and the dynamic Cavaliers.

Cleveland will win any fair fight against Detroit. Fair, in this instance, means an equal amount of possessions. But the Pistons have worked to take that away from the Cavs. Their smothering defense forced 10 turnovers in the first half, scoring 20 points off those turnovers.

Tobias Harris, Cade Cunningham, Dannis Jankins, and Isaiah Stewart all got hot in the first half to give the Pistons an eight-point lead. Truth be told, the Cavs felt lucky to have the deficit under double-digits, all things considered.

I’d say Max Strus and James Harden did most of the work keeping Cleveland in range during the first half. Harden’s shot-making kept the floor from falling out from under them while Strus nailed a pair of three-pointers in the closing minutes of the second quarter to cut into the lead.

The dam finally broke in the third quarter, when Harden and Strus did enough to regain the lead. Evan Mobley contributed, as well, delivering a huge sequence where he dunked all over the Pistons, and then hit a three-pointer on the next play.

Detroit kept fighting, however.

The Pistons’ defense became overwhelming as the game went on. They swarmed the ball, forcing turnovers and generating more opportunities to score in transition. The Cavs offense was thrown totally out of whack, as Donovan Mitchell (who began the game 0-7 from deep) couldn’t crack the code.

All of this led to a nine-point lead for the Pistons with just three minutes remaining. It looked like the Cavs would lose a third game in Detroit in almost identical fashion. An early deficit followed by a second-half rally that runs out of gas.

Then the miraculous happened.

The Cavs somehow rallied back again, led by some gigantic shots from Mobley. A clutch triple put them in reach. Then, a pair of free throws tied the game. It says something about Mobley to struggle shooting the ball all season, only to connect on the three biggest shots of his life.

Cleveland forced Detroit into difficult shots down the stretch. Holding them scoreless for most of the pivotal run to force overtime.

Then in the extra period, Mitchell broke free and found a rhythym, hitting a three-pointer and then getting an open layup off another clutch steal from Max Strus.

Strus added 21 points on 6-8 three-point shooting. Harden finished with a game-high 31 points. Mobley turned his night around for 19 points, 8 rebounds, 8 assists, and 3 blocks.

By the end, Cleveland had erased a 16-point deficit on the road in their most important game of the 2020s. That’s the type of resilient win this city has been begging for.

The Cavs now lead 3-2 and have a chance to advance to the Eastern Conference Finals on Friday.

Jawhawks on the Jazz: Ranking the Kansas Alum’s who have played in Utah

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 22: Darryn Peterson #22 of the Kansas Jayhawks dribbles the ball against the St. John's Red Storm during the first half in the second round of the 2026 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament at Viejas Arena at San Diego State University on March 22, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The NBA draft lottery has come and gone, and now it is time to think very critically about the potential options for the Jazz at the #2 selection. However, I am going to leave that job for someone smarter than myself – instead, I will view the awe-inspiring Mr. Darryn Peterson through the lens of baseless superstition. Peterson spent his single year collegiate career at Kansas University, where he wowed with his creation abilities and best-in-class shot making. While many articles can and will be written on those talents and how they would potentially fit on the Jazz roster, I will be instead be focusing on the first detail in the preceding sentence; namely, his alma-mater.

Per my exhaustive studies, 9 Jayhawks have played for the Jazz organization since its founding as the New Orleans Jazz in 1974, and that number may increase to 10 if Peterson is the selection for Utah on draft night. In anticipation for that potentially franchise-altering decision, this article will attempt to recount the history of Kansas University alumni on the Jazz by ranking each of those 9 players. This analysis will attempt to place the players in the order of their production and ability while on the Jazz – more emphasis will be placed on peak output than longevity with the organization. Today, the question will be answered; does a Jayhawk pedigree lead to success with the Jazz, or does the trip out to Utah cause these alums to say in despair “I have a feeling we aren’t in Kansas anymore?”

*Writer’s note: I realize this analysis on Peterson lacks some academic rigor, and probably wouldn’t hold up against a peer review. If he is picked at #2, this obviously has no bearing on his future Utah Jazz success, which I hope is plentiful. We’re just having fun here.

9. Brandon Rush
PORTLAND, OR – DECEMBER 6: Brandon Rush #25 of the Utah Jazz controls the ball against the Portland Trail Blazers on December 6, 2013 at the Moda Center Arena in Portland, Oregon. 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 2013 NBAE (Photo by Sam Forencich/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE/Getty Images

Brandon had a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it career with the Utah Jazz – 418 minutes played during the 25 win 2013-2014 campaign. Don’t think that if we were to just have given Rush a few more minutes that this disastrous season could’ve been averted. He averaged a measly 2.1 points per game on a horrid 43% true shooting, and his defense was nothing to write home about either. The fact that 2 years later he started 25 games for the 2015-2016 Warriors (otherwise known as the greatest regular season team of all time) is perhaps the single most impressive testament to the greatness of Stephen Curry.

8. Udoka Azubuike
Utah Jazz v Sacramento Kings

It was oh-so tempting to place Doke at the bottom of this list, less because of what was and more because of what could have been. The shock of Adam Silver announcing his name as the Jazz’s #27 overall pick in 2020 still lingers inside of me, and is only surpassed by the shock of reading that Dennis Lindsey announcing that the organizations advanced metrics placed Azubuike at #2 in the draft class. The Jazz fandoms disdain for this particular pick is not purely an example of hindsight being 20/20 – even at the time, people tended to understand that (a) Desmond Bane and Jaden McDaniels were cleaner, more useful fits for what the team needed and (b) that using a first round pick on Udoka was a bit of a reach. More than any other instance in my memory, this is a case of the general public being 100% spot-on in their evaluation of late first round prospects; Bane and McDaniels are key starters on playoff teams, and Azubuike is out of the league after an uneventful 4 seasons, and is now playing in the Israeli A-league. While perhaps not the worst Jayhawk in Jazz history, his lack of success was certainly the most influential on the overall strength of the organization – a different pick in 2020, and perhaps the Jazz have a banner in the rafters, and the construction of the Donovan Mitchell and Rudy Gobert statues are in early development.

7. Ochai Agbaji
Utah Jazz Open Scrimmage

A former teammate of Azubuike both on the Jayhawks and the Jazz, Ochai provided more minutes and less disappointment, but without play that was very conducive to winning basketball games. Ochai was drafted after his All-American senior season and marketed as a high-floor, instant-impact type of player, but failed to make his mark in Utah, even with the constant carousel of new players as Will Hardy looked for anyone that could be a piece on the next iteration of a winning team (23 players took the court in Agbaji’s rookie year, 21 in his sophomore). He was an underwhelming shooter, an unreliable defender, and showcased next-to-no skills with the ball in his hands. Nowadays, he’s struggling to get minutes on the tanking Nets, and unless he turns things around, he will be brought up in draft analyses for years as an example of the perils of drafting supposedly “high-floor” players, who lack an outlier skill to hang their hat on.

6. Jeff Withey
NBA: Utah Jazz at Brooklyn Nets

Withey was perfectly serviceable and perfectly unremarkable third string big man. He played in the era of Rudy Gobert and Derrick Favors, meaning that even on his best days we had little use for him. Was he much of a scorer? No, I wouldn’t say so. Did his feet seem painfully slow at times? Yes, certainly. Was he missed once the Jazz moved on to Tony Bradley and Epke Udoh as the backups in 2018? Not particularly. But, for about 10 minutes a game he brought reliable rim protection and rebounding, and was able to function in the offensive sets Quin had designed for Gobert while Rudy was out with injury. (P.S. – did you know that he got a triple-double with blocks in his senior season Kansas? Because I sure didn’t).

5. Bud Stallworth

Alright, sue me; I have not watched a second of Bud Stallworth’s New Orleans Jazz career, and I’m not sure that any highlights of it exist on the internet. Stallworth was a selection in the 1974 expansion draft, meaning that he played on the first ever roster put forth by the Jazz organization. He put up some points on mediocre teams, and then unfortunately had to end his career after 3 years in New Orleans due to back injuries incurred by an automobile accident. Stallworth maintains some fame for ending his Kansas career with a 50 point game against the rival Missouri Tigers, but was less spectacular during his time in New Orleans.

4. Jacque Vaughn

In terms of role, Vaughn functioned in a similar fashion to Jeff Withey – perfectly dependable, not too memorable third stringer behind a Jazz legend (Gobert with Withey, Stockton with Vaughn). Also, what a testament to the durability of Stockton that Vaughn, his backup, played 224 games in Utah and didn’t start a single one – that’s true iron man stuff. But, back to the Jayhawks, I give Vaughn the edge over Withey primarily because he played on the two most successful Jazz teams in history. Additionally, he could function well in the very reserved backup point guard role that Sloan preferred – run the plays, don’t turn the ball over, be pesky on defense. Not everybody could function in that scheme, but Vaughn was reliable enough to get minutes in the twilight of Stockton and Malone’s careers. Here’s hoping he enjoyed his time in Salt Lake; he was on the Kansas basketball staff this past year, and presumably had plenty of time to hype up the nightlife to Darryn.

3. Svi Mykhailiuk
Portland Trail Blazers v Utah Jazz

Is this a bit of recency bias? Most likely, but I have been nothing but impressed by Svi’s time in Utah. While it was an interesting decision to start him over the young bucks at the beginning of the year, I do believe that Mykhailiuk contributed more to winning than any of his potential replacements in the starting lineup. A consistent shooter and high energy defender, Svi knows his job and performs it well. A little too well, in fact – in my opinion, it was the reason Svi was shut down at the end of the year while Konchar continued to receive minutes. Svi may not be around on next years roster, and may not ever taste winning basketball in Utah, but I will stand firm on the idea that despite the fact that the ‘25-’26 Jazz did not do much winning, it was not the fault of Svi Mykhailiuk – the shooting and know-how he displayed would translate to a bench role on a number of winning teams, and I hope he receives the chance to prove that in a Jazz uniform.

2. Danny Manning

Manning’s time on the Jazz was short-lived – he lasted one year, 2000-2001. However, unlike all of his predecessors on this list, Manning was a rotational contributor to a team that won basketball games. While he was long past his Wooden Award days as a Jayhawk, and his all-star days as a Clipper, Manning was still able to provide reliable bucket-getting off the bench for a Jazz team still competing in the rough-and-tumble Western Conference. And even though Utah was eliminated in the first round by an up-and-coming Mavericks team, it was not due to fault of Manning – in those 5 games, he increased his scoring, rebounding, and efficiency as Sloan trusted the playoff-savvy veteran with increased responsibilities. This was no world-beater, to be sure, and he was surely best used in a bench role, but Manning still had some gas in the tank and provided an admirable single season outing in Utah.

1. Greg Ostertag

Was Ostertag the most consistent? No, not even close. Was he ever a poster boy of physical fitness and conditioning? Far from it. But did he block 9 shots to close out the Shaq-led ‘97 Lakers in game 5, and then in the immediately following round play Hakeem Olajuwon to a stalemate in game 6 to beat the Rockets and secure the franchises first trip to the NBA finals? Yes, and no one can ever take that away from him. As a young, late first-rounder, Ostertag was immediately thrown out of the frying pan of Kansas and into the fire of starting on a team with championship aspirations, going against the best big men the league had to offer on a nightly basis, and he did about as well as anyone could’ve reasonably hoped. Heck, if Michael Jordan missed a few more shots in 1997, Ostertag very well could’ve been known to this day as the starting center on a championship team. There’s more to basketball analysis than a series of “what if…”‘s, but Ostertag’s perfectly solid defense and iconic clutch performances are found outside of the realm of the hypothetical. If The Big O is half as good as a mayor as he was as a Shaq defender, the people of Mount Vernon, Texas have chosen one dependable elected official.

Utah’s history with Kansas alumni has often been a bit underwhelming. Missed draft picks, deep bench pieces, and wasted potential define the relationship between a historically successful NBA organization and a historically successful basketball university. Luckily for the Jazz, they may have the golden opportunity on June 23rd to buck the trend and select one of the best prospects KU has ever produced.

Do you have any changes you’d make to this ranking? Any fun memories regarding these players? Comment below!

Jalen Brunson’s selflessness made Knicks running offense through Karl-Anthony Towns work

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows The willingness of Jalen Brunson (left) to let the Knicks run the offense through Karl-Anthony Towns has paid dividends

This was a few weeks ago, after the Knicks had dropped two straight games to the Hawks and were looking at what would’ve been a disastrous early playoff exit.

Mike Brown went to the players with an idea. He wanted to switch things up on the offensive end, to put the ball in Karl-Anthony Towns’ hands more. It meant Jalen Brunson playing off the ball at times and getting his shots in different ways.

Some stars may have pushed back, feeling they were being blamed for the team’s struggles. Brunson didn’t think twice.

The willingness of Jalen Brunson (left) to let the Knicks run the offense through Karl-Anthony Towns has paid dividends. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

“Was there any concern? No. What was the dialogue? The dialogue was, ‘OK, let’s do it,’” he recalled Wednesday after the Knicks’ first practice since sweeping the 76ers in the Eastern Conference semifinals. “It was that simple. There’s not really much you can talk about at that point when you’re down 2-1.”

When it was suggested to Brunson that other stars may not have taken the change in stride, he responded: “1) I’m not a star. 2) I want to win.”

As he walked out of the press conference room, he added: “I’m not self-centered, that’s why.”

This, of course, isn’t the first time Brunson has shown his selfless side. Two years ago, he agreed to a four-year, $156.5 million contract extension in which he left money on the table. The deal went into effect this season. It helped the Knicks stay out of the second apron and build out their bench.

And this change, while taking the ball out of Brunson’s hands somewhat, has worked out better than anyone could’ve anticipated.

The Knicks haven’t lost since, reeling off seven consecutive victories by an average of 26.4 points. Towns has thrived in a playmaking role, totaling 66 assists this postseason, 44 more than a year ago.

The Knicks have produced a through-the-roof 130.5 offensive rating per 100 possessions over these seven games.

Brunson has taken off, too, averaging 27.3 points while shooting 51.9 percent from the field and 42.6 percent from 3-point range in this current run. And he’s been more efficient.

According to NBA.com, Brunson averaged .285 points per touch during the regular season and is at .324 points per touch in this winning streak. His touches are also down, from 91.3 per game to 84.1.

“It’s my job as a head coach, as well as [our] assistants, to try to put guys in position to help them out,” Brown said. “Being able to do stuff off-ball is another way to attack a defense. When you have guys that pass the ball like Draymond Green, like Sabonis, like KAT, you try to utilize their strengths to help others out and make others better. Putting KAT in that position knowing we have great screeners and great cutters, and like I said a great facilitator, it was easier to say, ‘Let’s try it and do it more.’”

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It obviously wouldn’t have worked without Brunson being on board.

When the Knicks moved on from Tom Thibodeau and replaced him with Brown, there was some uncertainty about how the new coach and Brunson would mesh.

Brunson was close with Thibodeau going back to his childhood. In the biggest moment so far of Brown’s tenure with the Knicks, Brunson was in lockstep with him.

“He’s always one to have open dialogue since Day 1,” Brunson said. “Obviously, he’s the coach and makes decisions and everything. Whether they’re good or bad opinions, they’re talked about and they’re decided on later. I’m pretty comfortable with it. I think a lot of us are comfortable with it.”

OG Anunoby takes key step for Knicks in hamstring injury recovery

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows OG Anunoby slaps hands with Miles McBride during Knicks' practice on May 13, 2026 at the team's training facility in Tarrytown, N.Y

OG Anunoby is making progress. 

For the first time since he suffered a mild right hamstring strain late in Game 2 of the Eastern Conference semifinals against the 76ers, the standout two-way wing took part in practice Wednesday. 

Anunoby practiced on a limited basis, and coach Mike Brown stopped short of saying he would be available for Game 1 of the conference finals, although there is optimism within the organization that he will be ready once that series begins, sources told The Post’s Stefan Bondy. 

OG Anunoby slaps hands with Miles McBride during Knicks’ practice on May 13, 2026 at the team’s training facility in Tarrytown, N.Y. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

“Anytime anybody’s able to do stuff, you’re encouraged,” Brown said. “That’s what [the medical team] told me he can do today, and I’ll wait until Friday to see what he can do [then]. … The stuff that he went through, he looked fine.”

Asked if Anunoby is able to sprint, Brown declined to answer, and a media relations staffer said that Anunoby is doing individual work. 

“At least for me, I’m taking it one [day] at a time,” Brown said. “I don’t want to know from medical or anybody else anything but beyond that, because when I do that stuff, I get my hopes up. I don’t like doing that at all.”

Anunoby missed the last two games of the sweep over the 76ers. He was listed as questionable for both of those contests.



The 6-foot-7 wing was having a sensational postseason before the injury, averaging 21.4 points, 7.5 rebounds, 1.9 steals and 1.1 blocks. He was also shooting an absurd 53.8 percent from 3-point range on 4.9 attempts per game. 


The Knicks did some live work in practice on Wednesday, meaning full contact.

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The team will be off on Thursday and practice Friday and Saturday. It remains uncertain if the Eastern Conference finals will begin on Sunday or Tuesday. It depends on how long the Cavaliers-Pacers series goes. 

“You don’t want to have too many days of live [work],” Brown said. “The last thing you want this time of year is an injury so we mixed in some live today. Not sure if we’ll do it again. Maybe we’ll do it one more day. That would be on feel and based off of whether we play sooner or later.”


Brown shared condolences regarding Jason Collins, who died Monday at 47 of brain cancer. Brown got to know Collins and his twin brother, Jarron, while working with the Warriors.

“[Jason] was a great man. I knew him personally through Jarron, and it’s gotta be tough times to go through what they’re going through when you’re dealing with the passing of somebody so young,” Brown said. “So my best condolences go out to him, his family and all their friends.”

Lakers focused on finding ‘true lob threats’ and ‘wings with athleticism’ this offseason

OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA - MAY 5: Deandre Ayton #5 of the Los Angeles Lakers handles the ball while being defended by Isaiah Hartenstein #55 of the Oklahoma City Thunder during the first quarter in Game One of the Second Round of the NBA Western Conference Playoffs at Paycom Center on May 5, 2026 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. 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. (Photo by Joshua Gateley/Getty Images) | Getty Images

While the Lakers could justify getting swept by the Thunder as them losing because they didn’t have Luka Dončić available, that would be a foolish take.

Sure, Luka would’ve helped, and perhaps the Lakers would have won a game or two with him, but the gap is still considerable between them and OKC.

When push came to shove against the Thunder, the Lakers’ depth chart shrank and they didn’t have enough players who could perform at a high level consistently.

Now that the offseason has arrived, they can focus on addressing their roster’s weaknesses.

Based on an article by Dan Woike of The Athletic published Tuesday morning, it is clear that the Lakers will be looking for bigs and wing players this summer.

Those priorities remain, according to league sources. There is a desire for better center play, true lob threats who mimic the skills of Daniel Gafford and Dereck Lively II (with cleaner injury histories). There is a desire for true two-way defensive players, wings with athleticism and energy on the defensive end and a sweet shooting stroke on the offensive side of the ball. And there’s a desire to lock in a long-term secondary playmaker next to Dončić.

While Deandre Ayton was a solid starter for LA, he was unable to consistently elevate his game. He averaged 12.5 points and 8.0 rebounds per game, but was unsatisfied with his role at times in the season. Also, he was often benched late in games as Jaxson Hayes was outplaying him. This happened regularly, including in Game 4 against OKC.

While Hayes was able to step up he also isn’t a consistent center the Lakers can rely on. So, upgrading that position to someone who can always be a great option at the five would be ideal.

The wing depth is even more dire for the Lakers than the center one is. Jarred Vanderbilt is a very limited offensive player, and Jake LaRavia was abysmal in the playoffs. After playing all 82 regular-season games, he didn’t play in the final two playoff contests, as his production plummeted to essentially nothing.

No one understands these weaknesses more than the Lakers’ front office. During Lakers President of Basketball Operations Rob Pelinka’s exit interview, he outlined how the franchise must improve this offseason.

“The archetype of the roster we want is going to be retrofitted around Luka and the things he needs,” Pelinka said. “Clearly, he’s that leader and player for the future that we want to build the right way around.”

What Luka needs is a great pick-and-roll big that can also provide vertical spacing and wings that can knock down option shots when Dončić gets doubled.

Right now, center play is inconsistent, and the wings they need are not on the roster. The weaknesses are clear, the Lakers understand them and this is the time of year to address them.

Hopefully, they can get it done.

You can follow Edwin on Twitter at @ECreates88 or on Bluesky at @ecreates88.bsky.social.

Jason Collins celebrated as 'a trailblazer' by out LGBTQ athletes

John Amaechi’s favorite memory of Jason Collins is one for which Collins wasn’t physically present.

Not long after Collins became the first openly gay athlete to play in any of the major North American men’s sports leagues in 2013, Amaechi was giving a speech in a city he can’t quite recall – Chicago, maybe – when he met a young man in the audience. He vividly remembers what happened next.

The man told Amaechi, who came out as gay in 2007 after retiring from professional basketball, that he deeply related to Collins’ story.

“Not just relating. It was like he was feeding his soul,” Amaechi recalled. “To watch as somebody is lifted, literally like made more tall and substantial, from listening to what somebody else said, is remarkable. And he was. You could see, even as he recounted the things that he heard, he rose. That tells you something about a person.”

Collins, a 13-year NBA veteran, died May 12 after an eight-month battle with brain cancer. He was 47.

His death was mourned by other out queer male athletes, who remember Collins as a kind spirit and a pioneer for LGBTQ inclusion in sports.

“Every player that comes out here afterwards, whether it’s professionally or just in their own lives, stand on the shoulders of Jason Collins, as I do myself,” said former NFL player R.K. Russell, who came out publicly as bisexual in 2019.

“Jason was a trailblazer,” said soccer player Collin Martin, who came out as gay while playing for MLS club Minnesota United in 2018. “Without him, I don’t know if the rest of us that came out after him, if it would have been as easy.”

Jason Collins 'changed the minds of players' in coming out

Collins’ courageous decision to come out in a Sports Illustrated essay in April 2013 paved the way for more queer athletes in men’s sports to do the same: Martin, Russell, NFL players Carl Nassib and Ryan O’Callaghan, hockey player Luke Prokop, NCAA basketball player Derrick Gordon, and minor league baseball players Solomon Bates and Anderson Comas.

When Collins was considering coming out, Amaechi was one of the people he reached out to for advice and support. Amaechi was an NBA teammate of Jason’s twin brother, Jarron Collins, and had come out in his post-retirement memoir. They kept in touch over the years, and Amaechi received email updates on Collins’ health as he sought treatment for stage 4 glioblastoma.

Amaechi remembers Collins as eloquent and smart, someone who understood how his personal revelation could foster inclusion in sports and beyond.  

“His presence, his tone, his dignity, his warmth, his humor, changed the minds of players, too – and not just the players who played with him,” Amaechi said. “Other players who might otherwise not have advanced their thinking, evolved their understanding. So he did an amazing gift for the league as well as for all those players out there who were looking for a better role model. And they couldn’t have picked a better one, right?”

Brooklyn Nets center Jason Collins during game action against the Los Angeles Lakers during the first half at Staples Center.

Martin and Russell describe the community of publicly out male professional athletes as a small, tight-knit fraternity. Collins acted as the connective tissue.

Right before Russell came out, he reached out to Collins to ask about his experience coming out as a professional athlete and a Black man. Watching Collins navigate the publicity with such ease and grace inspired Russell, who was playing college football at Purdue when Collins came out.

“Having that friendship, because that’s what it became, was just so vital in my decision to live my life truly and authentically,” Russell said, “but also in trying to shape sports culture for the better and for all of us, which is something that he dedicated his life to.”

In 2020, Martin’s San Diego Loyal FC team walked off the field and forfeited a game in protest after an opposing player called Martin a homophobic slur. After the incident, Collins reached out to Martin online to make sure he was OK.

“That just speaks to the person that Jason was, always lifting others up and considering how other people are doing in moments of pain like the one I was in,” Martin said. “He made a huge effort in connecting people, having conversations, supporting athletes at different times in their careers. I can’t commend him enough for how he took the time to reach out and think beyond himself.”

Jason Collins' in-career announcement showed a path for others to follow

Former professional athletes who came out publicly after they retired include Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Billy Bean and NFL player Wade Davis. Los Angeles Galaxy player Robbie Rogers came out after he retired but then returned to play for the Galaxy a few months later. The fact that Collins announced his sexuality during his playing career was an important distinction, Gordon said.

In April 2014, Gordon became the first openly gay Division I men’s college basketball player when he came out following his sophomore season at UMass. Two months earlier, Gordon had watched a video of Collins checking into a game for the Brooklyn Nets – Collins’ first game since he publicly came out.

“When he checked into the game for the Brooklyn Nets, everybody in the arena stood up and started clapping,” Gordon said. “And when I saw that, I was like, ‘I want that to be me.’”

Gordon and Collins met later through the You Can Play Project, which promotes LGBTQ inclusion in sports. At the time, Gordon had not come out yet but he confided in Collins that he was being verbally harassed by teammates who had found out he was gay.

“It got to a point it was either I quit basketball or I come out publicly, and Jason was just very adamant on, ‘Don’t let them win,’” Gordon said. “Jason was one of the main reasons why I decided to come out. … If I could do it all over again, I would, because just knowing that I don’t have to hide is amazing.”

Derrick Gordon, No. 32 of the Seton Hall Pirates, celebrates after hitting a basket against the Villanova Wildcats during the Big East Basketball Tournament Championship at Madison Square Garden on March 12, 2016 in New York City.

Amaechi, who is British, played professional basketball for eight seasons, including five seasons in the NBA with the Cleveland Cavaliers, Orlando Magic and Utah Jazz. He recalled the cognitive dissonance of knowing that his teammates loved him as a teammate while hearing them say awful things about gay people.

Six years passed between when Amaechi publicly came out and when Collins did. But Collins still faced backlash.  

“I think it’s a mistake to imagine that Jason walked into an easier time,” Amaechi said. “He had threats from people. He had people who wished to do him harm just for speaking up and being a dignified spokesperson.”

'That's my big brother.' Jason Collins 'a lesson in authenticity'

Beyond breaking barriers, Collins was known for being a gentle giant whose beaming smile lit up every room he walked into. At 7 feet tall, he cut an imposing figure, but he could make anyone feel welcome and special.

“That’s my big brother, someone who I could literally call any given day in a week and he’d pick up,” Gordon said. “Yes, he helped me come out, but when you lose your brother it’s much more than sports. He had such an impact on my life in general as a whole.”

“It’s the damnation of being a wonderful human being is that when you die, the people closest to you are more wounded than if you’ve just been OK, average,” Amaechi said. “And he was certainly not that.”

Those who have walked the same path as Collins say it is undeniable that he left a legacy of love that will persist for generations.

“He made sport more inclusive, which is no small feat,” Martin said. “He showed that it doesn’t matter what your sexuality is, you can be an important member of a team, of an organization, an important person in a sport.”

In the 13 years since Collins came out, the NBA has not had another openly gay player. It’s a reminder that there is still progress to be made.

That starts with changing toxic language and behavior in men’s sports at the high school and college levels, Russell said, which will increase the chances that gay athletes stay in sports long enough to make it to the pros. Russell said he would love for the NBA, one of the more progressive leagues, to create an initiative in Collins’ name. He also encourages men’s sports leagues to emulate women’s sports leagues, which often are more inclusive.

“Jason Collins is always a lesson in authenticity, in sports and beyond,” Russell said. “And if anything, this shows how fragile life is and how short it is, and we cannot spend our unknown and very precious moments, years, months, weeks, days, not being our true selves. So I definitely see the progress. I definitely want more and I know Jason wants more, and we keep fighting and striving for more.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Jason Collins death: NBA player inspired gay athletes' authenticity

Pistons guard Duncan Robinson out with sore back against Cavs in Game 5

DETROIT (AP) — The Detroit Pistons ruled out Duncan Robinson with a sore lower back against the Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 5 of their Eastern Conference semifinal series.

The shooting guard was replaced in the starting lineup Wednesday night by Daniss Jenkins.

Robinson is averaging 12.2 points in the playoffs and brings efficient 3-point shooting to the lineup.

Jenkins, who was on a two-way contract just a few months ago, entered the pivotal game against the Cavs averaging 7.5 points and 3.3 assists in the series.

Robinson was limited to four points in 29 minutes on Monday night, when Cleveland evened the series. He scored at least 15 points in each of the first three games against the Cavs.

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AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/NBA

Cavs at Pistons Game 5 open gamethread

CLEVELAND, OHIO - MAY 09: Donovan Mitchell #45 celebrates with Sam Merrill #5 of the Cleveland Cavaliers during the fourth quarter of Game Three of the Second Round of the NBA Eastern Conference Playoffs against the Detroit Pistons at Rocket Arena on May 09, 2026 in Cleveland, Ohio. The Cavaliers defeated the Pistons 116-109. 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. (Photo by Jason Miller/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers will try to do something they haven’t done all postseason in Game 5: Win on the road.

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