The Clippers lost in the worst way possible

The same could be said of the Cavaliers. But at least they are still alive.

The Clippers lost in the worst way possible

Good morning. Let’s basketball.

Our Daily Bread; Anders Zorn; 1886


Scores

Cavaliers 96, Magic 103 (Series tied 3-3) — I have not been an alarmist about the Cavaliers … until now. I thought J.B. Bickerstaff did fine amid difficult circumstances the last two seasons. I thought that while Donovan Mitchell was certainly a flight risk, the window to join the Knicks was closing due to Jalen Brunson’s sudden superstardom and so Mitchell might actually prefer to extend his time in Cleveland a bit longer to let things sort out with teams he might be interested in. I thought that injuries involving the Darius Garland and the twin towers would help clarify a path forward for the front office, one that would likely result in a Jarrett Allen trade this summer and perhaps, if Mitchell re-committed, a deal moving Darius Garland, too.

All that was wrong. This is a disaster for Cleveland, and I should have seen it coming since I thought this series would go seven. Even with Allen sidelined, Evan Mobley was a total non-factor on offense (3 points on 1/5 shooting, how did you get one bucket when you have three offensive rebounds?). Mitchell put up a desperate 50. Desperate, and I mean that as a compliment to him and an insult to the rest of the Cleveland roster.

Garland wasn’t bad — he was the only other Cav to take more than seven shots — but he had an awful fourth filled with bad plays. Like this. And this. This wasn’t great. Didn’t love this. Garland’s fourth quarter: one shot (a desperation heave at the buzzer with the game out of reach), zero points, zero assists, three assessed turnovers plus the completely unforced 8-second violation.

The Cavaliers entered the fourth up seven, with a chance to close out the series and advance to Round 2. No one on Cleveland but Donovan Mitchell scored a single point in the quarter. Mitchell went 7/13 with two turnovers. The rest of the roster went 0/6, no free throws, no assists, six turnovers and zero points. The team outside of Mitchell did literally nothing on offense for an entire quarter of a close-out game. I said desperate, right? Yeah. He was desperate for just a little offensive help, and got none when it counted.

I’d be furious if I were him.