Tag: NBA

  • Live Updates: 2026 NBA Playoffs, R1 | Rockets vs. Lakers on NBC/Peacock

    Live Updates: 2026 NBA Playoffs, R1 | Rockets vs. Lakers on NBC/Peacock

    We’re bringing you the best of the 2026 NBA Playoffs, presented by Google, with the NBA.com live blog, featuring all of the meaningful moments, performances, observations, news, notes and highlights from Sunday’s action.

    What we know about Sunday’s games:

    • Teams with a 2-1 lead have historically gone on to win an NBA Playoffs series 80% of the time.
    • With a 3-1 lead, it’s been 95.6% of the time, with 13 teams recovering from such a gap in NBA history.
    • If the series goes to 2-2, the home team for Game 5 has won 73.1% of the time.

     

    What we know after Sunday’s games:

    • Toronto Even Series Against Cleveland: The Raptors took care of both of its home games and have evened up this series. Toronto won that 93-89 grinder by holding Cleveland to 37 percent from the field and 25 percent from 3-point range.
    • San Antonio Takes 3-1 Series Lead Over Portland: The Spurs had one of their most dominant halves of the season, outscoring the Blazers in the second half, 73-35. They now own a 3-1 lead in this series and are headed back home for Game 5.
    • Boston Blows Out Philly in Game 4: The Celtics led by 16 points after the first quarter and never let up from there to take a commanding 3-1 lead in this series. Payton Pritchard scored 32 points off the bench while Jayson Tatum flirted with a 30-point triple-double.

    Final scores

    Raptors 93, Cavaliers 89 (Series tied 2-2)

    Spurs 114, Trail Blazers 93 (SA leads 3-1)

    Celtics 128, Sixers 96 (BOS leads 3-1)


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 9:48 ET

    Celtics Defeat Sixers, 128-96

    Boston led 34-18 after the first quarter and held a double-digit lead for the final three frames.

    The Celtics shot 48 percent from the field and 45 percent from 3-point range.

    Payton Pritchard had a playoff career-high 32 points off the bench.

    Jayson Tatum tallied 30 points, seven rebounds and 11 assists.

    Joel Embiid led Philly with 26 points, 10 rebounds and six assists.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 9:27 ET

    Lakers-Rockets Starters Announced

    Los Angeles and Houston face off in Game 4 shortly.

    The Lakers are looking to complete the sweep here.

    Kevin Durant and Austin Reaves will miss this game.

    See the action on NBC/Peacock.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 9:01 ET

    Celtics Lead Sixers After 3Q, 95-74

    One more good quarter will give Boston a 3-1 lead in this series.

    A 34-18 first quarter opened up this margin, with the Celtics maintaining a double-digit lead since then.

    Boston is shooting 48 percent from the field and 43 percent from 3-point range.

    Payton Pritchard has a playoff career-high 32 points off the bench.

    See the fourth quarter on Peacock. 

     

     


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 8:36 ET

    Celtics-Sixers Second Half Underway on Peacock

    Boston had a great opening half, thanks to 32 bench points.

    They’re looking to take a 3-1 series lead.

    See the second half on Peacock. 


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 8:09 ET

    Celtics Lead Sixers at the Half, 56-38

    Boston got out to a 34-18 lead after the opening quarter and maintained that double-digit lead.

    The Celtics bench scored 32 points.

    Joel Embiid leads the Sixers with 12 points, five rebounds and three assists in his return to action.

    See the second half on Peacock. 


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 7:41 ET

    Celtics Lead Sixers After Q1, 34-18

    Boston got 24 points from its bench in the opening quarter while Philly got none.

    Payton Pritchard provided 13 of those points.

    Joel Embiid made his return and scored the first eight points for the Sixers.

    See the action on Peacock. 


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 7:14 ET

    Celtics-Sixers Tip on Peacock

    Boston and Philly are about to kick off Game 4.

    The Celtics lead this series, 2-1.

    Joel Embiid is making his return to action after missing time due to an appendectomy.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 6:49 ET

    Blazers on the brink after 2H collapse 😨

    The energy inside Moda Center was night and day from the first half to the second. Portland led by 17 at the break and appeared to have the Spurs reeling. That lead was erased halfway through the third quarter, and totally flipped by the fourth. San Antonio outscored Portland 73-35 in the second half, marking the largest playoff win by a team that trailed by 15 or more points.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 6:25 ET

    Spurs versatility on display

    In game three, Stephon Castle and Dylan Harper were the engine behind the Spurs’ victory and tonight it was De’Aaron Fox beside Victor Wembanyama. Fox scored 28 points while Wemby added 27, seven blocked shots and four steals.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 6:15 ET

    Double-technicals late

    Referees and players stepped in to separate Stephon Castle and Deni Avdija in the closing minutes after an and-one finish from Castle on the latter. It comes as San Antonio leads comfortably. Castle made the free throw after review, and starters were pulled out soon after with the game out of reach.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 6:00 ET

    Fox showing off in the 4th 🦊

    De’Aaron Fox is responsible for 10 straight San Antonio points, as the Spurs have flipped this game. The scoring run featured three unanswered buckets from Fox before he dished to Keldon Johnson for 3. Portland trailed by as many as 13 points in the run.

    Wemby’s 6th block 👐


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 5:45 ET

    Spurs reclaim lead

    This sequence from Victor Wembanyama showcases how much of a difference maker he is. He skied for an alley-oop flush from Stephon Castle to give their team the lead in the final frame. On the next play, he scored another reverse lob.

    Before the quarter break, Wemby had this slam off the offensive glass at the buzzer that tied the game.

    Deni Avdija leads Portland with 21 points, while the Trail blazers have also received very timely baskets and playmaking from Jrue Holiday.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 5:20 ET

    Spurs erase deficit after HT

    That didn’t take long! San Antonio opened the third quarter with a 13-0 scoring run to cut Portland’s lead to as low as four points.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 5:01 ET

    Spurs down 17 at half

    It’s been a brilliant showing on both sides of the ball through two quarters for Portland, who leads San Antonio. 58-41 at intermission. The team has a double-digit rebounding advantage while shooting a higher percentage from the field than the Spurs. There’s a big discrepancy in free throws as well, with the Blazers making 11 in the first half compared to San Antonio’s three.

    Victor Wembanyama looks healthy after clearing concussion protocol, but is only 4-of-12 from the floor. Stephon Castle and De’Aaron Fox are the team’s leading scorers with 10 apiece.

    Avdija and-one ⬇️


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 4:45 ET

    18-3 Portland run 😳

    The second quarter has belonged to the Trail Blazers. Portland leads 52-37 in the closing minutes of the first half. Deni Avdija is up to 11 points while pushing the pace and finding teammates like Robert Williams for this strong alley-oop finish.

    Jrue Holiday added to the run with a deep three to beat the shot clock.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 4:20 ET

    Close after 1Q

    Portland leads by two after the first quarter, thanks to a balanced scoring effort. No Trail Blazer is in double figures, but seven different players are in the scoring column already.

    Victor Wembanyama, meanwhile, hasn’t missed a beat in his return from a one-game absence.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 4:07 ET

    Best of 7, now best of 3

    It wasn’t pretty, but Toronto won a pivotal game 4 to avoid being on the brink of elimination. The theme of this game was the Raptors’ execution late in quarters, opposed to Cleveland’s. Toronto manufactured scoring runs at the end of the first half, third, and fourth quarters that ultimately swung the game.

    Scottie Barnes (23 pts, 10 reb, 6 ast) was superb, while Collin Murray-Boyles (15 pts, 10 reb) added a double-double off the bench. RJ Barrett made big shots late, while Brandon Ingram matched Barnes with a game-high 23 points.

    The series returns to Cleveland for game 5 on Wednesday.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 4:02 ET

    Getting to work early


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 3:49 ET

    Toronto on verge of victory 👀


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 3:39 ET

    Wemby is good to go

    After missing game 3, Victor Wembanyama returns today against the Trail Blazers. Here’s the starting lineups for both teams as the action gets going in Portland.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 3:05 ET

    12-2 Raptor run closes 3rd

    Toronto used a late rally to close the gap before the fourth quarter, just like they did before halftime. With Cleveland’s stars struggling from the field, the opportunity is there for Toronto to even the series on their home court.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 2:55 ET

    James Harden is the only Cleveland player in double figures with under 3:00 to play in the 3rd quarter. Evan Mobley found some success early in the third quarter but only has 6 points. Mobley, Donovan Mitchell and Jarrett Allen have just 15 points combined so far.

    The Cavaliers lead 56-53 with the final fram approaching.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 2:20 ET

    Raps close the gap before HT

    This one has teetered on ugly as both teams are shooting below 35% from the field with a combined 18 turnovers. Toronto found its stride late, however, as Brandon Ingram snapped out of his cold spell.

    Listen to the crowd come alive as Ingram hit nothing but net on this buzzer-beating triple.

    APRIL 26, 2026 / 2:13 ET

    Injury updates ⚠️

    According to NBA.com’s Jeff Zillgitt:

    • Victor Wembanyama’s status is still up in the air, hours ahead of game 4 versus Portland. San Antonio Head Coach Mitch Johnson is still unsure of the Kia DPOY’s availability today after entering concussion protocol due to a hard fall in game 2.
    • Donte DiVincenzo is expected to have surgery this afternoon on his ruptured right achilles tendon. The Villanova product started all 82 regular season games for Minnesota before suffering the non-contact injury in the opening moments of game 3 versus Denver.

    APRIL 26, 2026 / 2:08 ET

    Murray-Boyles getting busy 👏

    The Raptors still trail Cleveland with time running out in the first half, but their rookie big man is showing a lot of promise. Collin Murray-Boyles is up to 9 points off the bench today.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 1:48 ET

    Low scoring first quarter

    Each team scored in the closing seconds of the first quarter as the Cavaliers took a 17-14 lead into the break.

    1,144 assists & counting

    James Harden is regarded as one of the best scorers in the league, but he’s also a top distributor. The Beard has made the postseason in 17 years straight, and adds to his legacy while climbing the all-time playoff assists list.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 1:36 ET

    Mitchell shake & bake 3️⃣


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 1:25 ET

    Edwards suffers bone bruise

    Minnesota’s All-Star guard went down in the first half of game 3 between the Timberwolves and Nuggets and will not return for the remainder of the series. Shams Charania reports that Anthony Edwards is expected to miss multiple weeks due to the left knee injury.

    Scuffle under review 🔔

    The Wolves managed to win without Edwards or Donte DiVincenzo, but an altercation broke out just before the final buzzer sounded. Charania adds that rulings are expected to be made before game 5 regarding possible suspensions.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 1:17 ET

    Meet Scottie at the rim 😤

    Scottie Barnes has set the tone early in Toronto. Both teams struggled to find early baskets, until Barnes finished a dunk in transition over Dean Wade.

    Moments later he flushed a two-handed dunk in the half-court, prompting a Cleveland timeout. All of Toronto’s points thus far have come in the paint, as the lead 8-3 with 8:20 to play in the first.

    APRIL 26, 2026 / 12:30 ET

    Starting Lineups: Cavaliers-Raptors, Game 4

    Donovan Mitchell and the Cleveland Cavaliers face the Toronto Raptors in Game 4 of their 2026 NBA Playoffs series at 1 ET on ESPN.


     

    All stats from Thursday’s Game 3, which the Raptors won 126-104.

    Cleveland:

    • PG James Harden (18 pts, 4 ast)
    • SG Donovan Mitchell (15 pts, 5 reb)
    • SF Dean Wade (5 pts, 5 reb, 1 stl)
    • PF Evan Mobley (15 pts, 6 reb, 7 ast)
    • C Jarrett Allen (12 pts, 3 blk)

    Toronto:

    • PG Ja’Kobe Walter (0 pts, 2 reb)
    • SG RJ Barrett (33 pts, 5 reb)
    • SF Brandon Ingram (12 pts, 3 reb, 2 stl)
    • PF Scottie Barnes (33 pts, 11 ast)
    • C Jakob Poetl (8 pts, 6 reb)

    APRIL 26, 2026 / 12:15 ET

    Sunday’s injury report

    Immanuel Quickley is out for the Raptors, while A.J. Lawson is available.

    Jordan McLaughlin and Victor Wembanyama are questionable for the Spurs.

    Joel Embiid is doubtful for the 76ers. Tyrese Maxey is available, while Kelly Oubre Jr. is questionable.

    Luka Dončić is out for the Lakers, while Austin Reaves is questionable. Kevin Durant is questionable for the Rockets.

  • Victor Wembanyama returns to play in Game 4 vs. Blazers

    Victor Wembanyama posts 27 points, 11 rebounds, four steals and seven blocks vs. Trail Blazers as Spurs claim a 3-1 series lead.

    • Download the NBA App

    San Antonio Spurs star Victor Wembanyama was available and returned to play Sunday in Game 4 of the team’s first-round playoff series against the Portland Trail Blazers after clearing the NBA’s concussion protocol.

    Wembanyama, the league’s first unanimous Kia Defensive Player of the Year, missed Game 3 on Friday in Portland while going through the league’s concussion protocol. The Spurs won 120-108 to go up 2-1 in the series.

    Per ESPN’s Shams Charania and Malika Andrews, Wembanyama will play in Game 4 after he received clearance to do so from the Spurs’ medical staff and the NBA.

    Wembanyama sustained the concussion in the first half of Tuesday’s 106-103 loss to the Blazers.

    He traveled to Portland while continuing to complete the steps mandated by the league’s concussion protocol and had been listed as questionable for Sunday’s game.

    Luke Kornet got the Game 2 start against the Trail Blazers in Wembanyama’s absence, finishing with 14 points and 10 rebounds. San Antonio was boosted by Stephon Castle with 33 points and rookie Dylan Harper, who had 27 points and 10 rebounds.

    Players must clear a series of benchmarks before they are allowed to play under the concussion protocol. The results are compared to baseline neurological evaluations players take at the start of the season.

    San Antonio finished with the league’s second-best record behind the versatile 7-foot-4 center from France. It went 12-6 in the regular season without him.

    Wembanyama averaged 25 points, 11.5 rebounds, 3.1 assists and a league-best 3.1 blocks per game this season.

  • 4 takeaways: Cavaliers stars struggle while Scottie Barnes and Collin Murray-Boyles thrive

    The Raptors close Game 4 on a 17-5 run to defeat the Cavaliers and tie their series at 2-2.

    • Download the NBA App

    It was a game in which nobody played well enough to win, until someone finally did.

    The Cleveland Cavaliers and Toronto Raptors endured missed shots and sloppy play for three quarters and at some point, Game 4 demanded composure and clutch play. And the Raptors stepped forward and offered it in the moment of truth.

    As a result, this best-of-seven series is tied at two games each.

    The Raptors responded after trailing by five points with 2 1/2 minutes left to give this series a refreshed outlook with a 93-89 victory. Yes, Toronto, a team that, until now, had no positive playoff answers for Cleveland since the LeBron James days.

    There’s still plenty to do before erasing that stigma, although winning a pair against Donovan Mitchell and James Harden represents a start. Furthermore, the Raptors won despite not bringing their A game; to be fair, neither did Cleveland.

    In the end, Scottie Barnes proved too much to handle and even better for Toronto, there’s a new problem that Cleveland must ultimately address: Collin Murray-Boyles, the Raptors rookie who’s outplaying all other big men.

    Here are the takeaways from Toronto’s four-point Game 4 win:


    1. Mitchell and Harden are thrilled to leave the country.

    To say it wasn’t a fulfilling trip to the North for Mitchell and Harden would be an understatement. For a second straight game in Toronto, the engine of the Cavs couldn’t muster much positive production. And when the Cavs’ starting backcourt has issues, the Cavs don’t stand much of a chance.

    Case in point — the last few minutes of Game 4. Clearly, the Cavs wanted the ball in their hands, and Toronto’s defense recognized as much. The Raptors began trapping them and ignoring the other Cavs, daring Mitchell and Harden to let someone else be the hero.

    This resulted in a key forced turnover by Jamal Shead in the final minute; Mitchell lost the ball as a result and the resulting free throws by Barnes after being fouled put Toronto up for good.

    “[Jamal] being able to make that read and having the clock awareness in that split second shows how smart he is,” said Raptors coach Darko Rajakovic.

    In the two games in Toronto, Mitchell shot 13-for-39 and Harden 11-for-27.

    Mitchell had only eight points in the first three quarters Sunday. Harden also seemed rattled at times Sunday, with seven turnovers compared to just six field goals; he has had more turnovers than field goals for two straight games. And down the stretch of Game 4, they took heavily contested shots; there would be no free looks for them.

    “They just didn’t fall,” said Mitchell.

    Other than a 3-pointer by Sam Merrill, and only because Harden frantically looked for someone with the shot clock winding down, nobody else on the Cavs had a key possession late. It’s a formula that usually works for Cleveland, and a sensible one as well given the reputations and proven results of those two stars, but Toronto was better prepared for it Sunday.

    “We’ve had leads and we’ve had opportunities to go up and we just didn’t do it,” Harden said. “It’s not like they’re doing something crazy.”


    2. Murray-Boyles is manning up

    A game that wasn’t pretty required someone to do the dirty work to help clean up. And what better job description for Murray-Boyles? He did much heavy lifting and earned a spot on the floor in a close game, because he factored in winning.

    Murray-Boyles’ best contribution was offensive rebounds. Five of his 10 rebounds were on the offensive end, and they kept possessions alive. This was crucial, because in a game of so many missed shots, the Raptors could use as many looks at the basket as possible.

    For a rookie in his first taste of the playoffs, Murray-Boyles is ignoring pressure and refusing to be intimidated by the scene. He’s outplaying Jarrett Allen and even Evan Mobley, a pair of Cleveland front-liners who bring far more experience and accomplishments.

    Therefore, his 15 points (by comparison, Mobley and Allen combined for 11 points), 10 rebounds and two steals, was exactly what Toronto needed in a game like this.

    “I’m just cherishing the moment,” he said. “It makes me smile, just being a part of this.”


    3. Beam Scottie up

    The medal for best-player-on-the-floor goes to Scottie Barnes. He played such a splendid all-around game and was seemingly everywhere the Cavs needed him to be.

    The performance he gave was standard for him.

    Barnes made shots, went to the free-throw line, delivered the ball when necessary, helped on the glass, helped on defense. An ace of all trades in Game 4.

    This is the best way for the Raptors to assume the lead in this series or even win it, to have Barnes stand out on a floor shared with Mitchell and Harden. With the Raptors getting mixed results from RJ Barrett and Brandon Ingram, his offense is crucial. And with the Raptors fairly undersized against the Cavs, his work in the post at both ends is needed.

    All told, Barnes was good for 23 points, nine rebounds, six assists and three blocks.

    In a game like this, those were winning numbers.


    4. Offense took a back seat

    Was Game 4 a case of cold shooting or better defense? Perhaps a bit of both, because the Cavs and Raptors conspired to dial back the offense to historical levels.

    Their combined 74 points represented the fewest first-half points in a playoff game in 10 years. The teams also combined to shoot 7-for-39 from deep for the half.

    It was rough all around and nobody was spared, All-Stars and role players.

    As the fourth quarter began, the Raptors sat on 60 points while the Cavs, with 57, couldn’t even muster that much.

    In these situations, possessions suddenly become crucial, because every point tends to matter that much more. And that’s how the Raptors came out ahead.

    Suddenly, it didn’t matter that Ingram once again was inefficient, needing 23 shots to score 23 points. Or that Shead, who was terrific defensively, missed five of his six shots. Or that Ja’Kobe Walter, the replacement for injured starting guard Immanuel Quickley, went 0-for-9.

    What matters is 2-2. That’s where the series stands right now, heading back to Cleveland for the pivotal Game 5 (Wednesday, TBD).

    “This seems like a typical playoff series, 4 vs. 5, tied 2-2,” said Cavs coach Kenny Atkinson. “They did what they were supposed to do. When you’re at home you’re supposed to win in the playoffs.”

    * * *

    Shaun Powell has covered the NBA since 1985. You can e-mail him at spowell@nba.com, find his archive here and follow him on X.

  • Live Updates: 2026 NBA Playoffs, R1 | Spurs-Blazers battle in game 4

    Live Updates: 2026 NBA Playoffs, R1 | Spurs-Blazers battle in game 4

    Scottie Barnes and the Toronto Raptors tie their 2026 NBA Playoffs first-round series on ESPN to open Sunday’s slate.

    We’re bringing you the best of the 2026 NBA Playoffs, presented by Google, with the NBA.com live blog, featuring all of the meaningful moments, performances, observations, news, notes and highlights from Sunday’s action.

    What we know about Sunday’s games:

    • Teams with a 2-1 lead have historically gone on to win an NBA Playoffs series 80% of the time.
    • With a 3-1 lead, it’s been 95.6% of the time, with 13 teams recovering from such a gap in NBA history.
    • If the series goes to 2-2, the home team for Game 5 has won 73.1% of the time.

    Final scores

    Raptors 93, Cavaliers 89 (Series tied 2-2)

    Spurs @ Trail Blazers – Watch (SA leads 2-1)


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 6:15 ET

    Double-technicals late

    Referees and players stepped in to separate Stephon Castle and Deni Avdija in the closing minutes after an and-one finish from Castle on the latter. It comes as San Antonio leads comfortably. Castle made the free throw after review, and starters were pulled out soon after with the game out of reach.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 6:00 ET

    Fox showing off in the 4th 🦊

    De’Aaron Fox is responsible for 10 straight San Antonio points, as the Spurs have flipped this game. The scoring run featured three unanswered buckets from Fox before he dished to Keldon Johnson for 3. Portland trailed by as many as 13 points in the run.

    Wemby’s 6th block 👐


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 5:45 ET

    Spurs reclaim lead

    This sequence from Victor Wembanyama showcases how much of a difference maker he is. He skied for an alley-oop flush from Stephon Castle to give their team the lead in the final frame. On the next play, he scored another reverse lob.

    Before the quarter break, Wemby had this slam off the offensive glass at the buzzer that tied the game.

    Deni Avdija leads Portland with 21 points, while the Trail blazers have also received very timely baskets and playmaking from Jrue Holiday.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 5:20 ET

    Spurs erase deficit after HT

    That didn’t take long! San Antonio opened the third quarter with a 13-0 scoring run to cut Portland’s lead to as low as four points.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 5:01 ET

    Spurs down 17 at half

    It’s been a brilliant showing on both sides of the ball through two quarters for Portland, who leads San Antonio. 58-41 at intermission. The team has a double-digit rebounding advantage while shooting a higher percentage from the field than the Spurs. There’s a big discrepancy in free throws as well, with the Blazers making 11 in the first half compared to San Antonio’s three.

    Victor Wembanyama looks healthy after clearing concussion protocol, but is only 4-of-12 from the floor. Stephon Castle and De’Aaron Fox are the team’s leading scorers with 10 apiece.

    Avdija and-one ⬇️


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 4:45 ET

    18-3 Portland run 😳

    The second quarter has belonged to the Trail Blazers. Portland leads 52-37 in the closing minutes of the first half. Deni Avdija is up to 11 points while pushing the pace and finding teammates like Robert Williams for this strong alley-oop finish.

    Jrue Holiday added to the run with a deep three to beat the shot clock.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 4:20 ET

    Close after 1Q

    Portland leads by two after the first quarter, thanks to a balanced scoring effort. No Trail Blazer is in double figures, but seven different players are in the scoring column already.

    Victor Wembanyama, meanwhile, hasn’t missed a beat in his return from a one-game absence.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 4:07 ET

    Best of 7, now best of 3

    It wasn’t pretty, but Toronto won a pivotal game 4 to avoid being on the brink of elimination. The theme of this game was the Raptors’ execution late in quarters, opposed to Cleveland’s. Toronto manufactured scoring runs at the end of the first half, third, and fourth quarters that ultimately swung the game.

    Scottie Barnes (23 pts, 10 reb, 6 ast) was superb, while Collin Murray-Boyles (15 pts, 10 reb) added a double-double off the bench. RJ Barrett made big shots late, while Brandon Ingram matched Barnes with a game-high 23 points.

    The series returns to Cleveland for game 5 on Wednesday.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 4:02 ET

    Getting to work early


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 3:49 ET

    Toronto on verge of victory 👀


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 3:39 ET

    Wemby is good to go

    After missing game 3, Victor Wembanyama returns today against the Trail Blazers. Here’s the starting lineups for both teams as the action gets going in Portland.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 3:05 ET

    12-2 Raptor run closes 3rd

    Toronto used a late rally to close the gap before the fourth quarter, just like they did before halftime. With Cleveland’s stars struggling from the field, the opportunity is there for Toronto to even the series on their home court.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 2:55 ET

    James Harden is the only Cleveland player in double figures with under 3:00 to play in the 3rd quarter. Evan Mobley found some success early in the third quarter but only has 6 points. Mobley, Donovan Mitchell and Jarrett Allen have just 15 points combined so far.

    The Cavaliers lead 56-53 with the final fram approaching.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 2:20 ET

    Raps close the gap before HT

    This one has teetered on ugly as both teams are shooting below 35% from the field with a combined 18 turnovers. Toronto found its stride late, however, as Brandon Ingram snapped out of his cold spell.

    Listen to the crowd come alive as Ingram hit nothing but net on this buzzer-beating triple.

    APRIL 26, 2026 / 2:13 ET

    Injury updates ⚠️

    According to NBA.com’s Jeff Zillgitt:

    • Victor Wembanyama’s status is still up in the air, hours ahead of game 4 versus Portland. San Antonio Head Coach Mitch Johnson is still unsure of the Kia DPOY’s availability today after entering concussion protocol due to a hard fall in game 2.
    • Donte DiVincenzo is expected to have surgery this afternoon on his ruptured right achilles tendon. The Villanova product started all 82 regular season games for Minnesota before suffering the non-contact injury in the opening moments of game 3 versus Denver.

    APRIL 26, 2026 / 2:08 ET

    Murray-Boyles getting busy 👏

    The Raptors still trail Cleveland with time running out in the first half, but their rookie big man is showing a lot of promise. Collin Murray-Boyles is up to 9 points off the bench today.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 1:48 ET

    Low scoring first quarter

    Each team scored in the closing seconds of the first quarter as the Cavaliers took a 17-14 lead into the break.

    1,144 assists & counting

    James Harden is regarded as one of the best scorers in the league, but he’s also a top distributor. The Beard has made the postseason in 17 years straight, and adds to his legacy while climbing the all-time playoff assists list.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 1:36 ET

    Mitchell shake & bake 3️⃣


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 1:25 ET

    Edwards suffers bone bruise

    Minnesota’s All-Star guard went down in the first half of game 3 between the Timberwolves and Nuggets and will not return for the remainder of the series. Shams Charania reports that Anthony Edwards is expected to miss multiple weeks due to the left knee injury.

    Scuffle under review 🔔

    The Wolves managed to win without Edwards or Donte DiVincenzo, but an altercation broke out just before the final buzzer sounded. Charania adds that rulings are expected to be made before game 5 regarding possible suspensions.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 1:17 ET

    Meet Scottie at the rim 😤

    Scottie Barnes has set the tone early in Toronto. Both teams struggled to find early baskets, until Barnes finished a dunk in transition over Dean Wade.

    Moments later he flushed a two-handed dunk in the half-court, prompting a Cleveland timeout. All of Toronto’s points thus far have come in the paint, as the lead 8-3 with 8:20 to play in the first.

    APRIL 26, 2026 / 12:30 ET

    Starting Lineups: Cavaliers-Raptors, Game 4

    Donovan Mitchell and the Cleveland Cavaliers face the Toronto Raptors in Game 4 of their 2026 NBA Playoffs series at 1 ET on ESPN.


     

    All stats from Thursday’s Game 3, which the Raptors won 126-104.

    Cleveland:

    • PG James Harden (18 pts, 4 ast)
    • SG Donovan Mitchell (15 pts, 5 reb)
    • SF Dean Wade (5 pts, 5 reb, 1 stl)
    • PF Evan Mobley (15 pts, 6 reb, 7 ast)
    • C Jarrett Allen (12 pts, 3 blk)

    Toronto:

    • PG Ja’Kobe Walter (0 pts, 2 reb)
    • SG RJ Barrett (33 pts, 5 reb)
    • SF Brandon Ingram (12 pts, 3 reb, 2 stl)
    • PF Scottie Barnes (33 pts, 11 ast)
    • C Jakob Poetl (8 pts, 6 reb)

    APRIL 26, 2026 / 12:15 ET

    Sunday’s injury report

    Immanuel Quickley is out for the Raptors, while A.J. Lawson is available.

    Jordan McLaughlin and Victor Wembanyama are questionable for the Spurs.

    Joel Embiid is doubtful for the 76ers. Tyrese Maxey is available, while Kelly Oubre Jr. is questionable.

    Luka Dončić is out for the Lakers, while Austin Reaves is questionable. Kevin Durant is questionable for the Rockets.

  • Victor Wembanyama available to play in Game 4 vs. Blazers

    Victor Wembanyama available to play in Game 4 vs. Blazers

    Kia Defensive Player of the Year Victor Wembanyama has not been in the Spurs’ lineup since Game 2 of the series.

    • Download the NBA App

    San Antonio Spurs star Victor Wembanyama is available to play Sunday in Game 4 of the team’s first-round playoff series against the Portland Trail Blazers after clearing the NBA’s concussion protocol.

    Wembanyama, the league’s first unanimous Kia Defensive Player of the Year, missed Game 3 on Friday in Portland while going through the league’s concussion protocol. The Spurs won 120-108 to go up 2-1 in the series.

    Per ESPN’s Shams Charania and Malika Andrews, Wembanyama will play in Game 4 after he received clearance to do so from the Spurs’ medical staff and the NBA.

    Wembanyama sustained the concussion in the first half of Tuesday’s 106-103 loss to the Blazers.

    He traveled to Portland while continuing to complete the steps mandated by the league’s concussion protocol and had been listed as questionable for Sunday’s game.

    Luke Kornet got the Game 2 start against the Trail Blazers in Wembanyama’s absence, finishing with 14 points and 10 rebounds. San Antonio was boosted by Stephon Castle with 33 points and rookie Dylan Harper, who had 27 points and 10 rebounds.

    Players must clear a series of benchmarks before they are allowed to play under the concussion protocol. The results are compared to baseline neurological evaluations players take at the start of the season.

    San Antonio finished with the league’s second-best record behind the versatile 7-foot-4 center from France. It went 12-6 in the regular season without him.

    Wembanyama averaged 25 points, 11.5 rebounds, 3.1 assists and a league-best 3.1 blocks per game this season.

  • Live Updates: 2026 NBA Playoffs, R1 | Cavaliers-Raptors begins Sunday’s action

    Live Updates: 2026 NBA Playoffs, R1 | Cavaliers-Raptors begins Sunday’s action

    Brandon Ingram and the Toronto Raptors look to tie their 2026 NBA Playoffs first-round series on ESPN to open Sunday’s slate.

    We’re bringing you the best of the 2026 NBA Playoffs, presented by Google, with the NBA.com live blog, featuring all of the meaningful moments, performances, observations, news, notes and highlights from Sunday’s action.

    What we know about Sunday’s games:

    • Teams with a 2-1 lead have historically gone on to win an NBA Playoffs series 80% of the time.
    • With a 3-1 lead, it’s been 95.6% of the time, with 13 teams recovering from such a gap in NBA history.
    • If the series goes to 2-2, the home team for Game 5 has won 73.1% of the time.

    APRIL 26, 2026 / 2:08 ET

    Murray-Boyles getting busy 👏

    The Raptors still trail Cleveland with time running out in the first half, but their rookie big man is showing a lot of promise. Collin Murray-Boyles is up to 9 points off the bench today.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 1:48 ET

    Low scoring first quarter

    Each team scored in the closing seconds of the first quarter as the Cavaliers took a 17-14 lead into the break.

    1,144 assists & counting

    James Harden is regarded as one of the best scorers in the league, but he’s also a top distributor. The Beard has made the postseason in 17 years straight, and adds to his legacy while climbing the all-time playoff assists list.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 1:36 ET

    Mitchell shake & bake 3️⃣


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 1:25 ET

    Edwards suffers bone bruise

    Minnesota’s All-Star guard went down in the first half of game 3 between the Timberwolves and Nuggets and will not return for the remainder of the series. Shams Charania reports that Anthony Edwards is expected to miss multiple weeks due to the left knee injury.

    Scuffle under review 🔔

    The Wolves managed to win without Edwards or Donte DiVincenzo, but an altercation broke out just before the final buzzer sounded. Charania adds that rulings are expected to be made before game 5 regarding possible suspensions.


    APRIL 26, 2026 / 1:17 ET

    Meet Scottie at the rim 😤

    Scottie Barnes has set the tone early in Toronto. Both teams struggled to find early baskets, until Barnes finished a dunk in transition over Dean Wade.

    Moments later he flushed a two-handed dunk in the half-court, prompting a Cleveland timeout. All of Toronto’s points thus far have come in the paint, as the lead 8-3 with 8:20 to play in the first.

    APRIL 26, 2026 / 12:30 ET

    Starting Lineups: Cavaliers-Raptors, Game 4

    Donovan Mitchell and the Cleveland Cavaliers face the Toronto Raptors in Game 4 of their 2026 NBA Playoffs series at 1 ET on ESPN.


     

    All stats from Thursday’s Game 3, which the Raptors won 126-104.

    Cleveland:

    • PG James Harden (18 pts, 4 ast)
    • SG Donovan Mitchell (15 pts, 5 reb)
    • SF Dean Wade (5 pts, 5 reb, 1 stl)
    • PF Evan Mobley (15 pts, 6 reb, 7 ast)
    • C Jarrett Allen (12 pts, 3 blk)

    Toronto:

    • PG Ja’Kobe Walter (0 pts, 2 reb)
    • SG RJ Barrett (33 pts, 5 reb)
    • SF Brandon Ingram (12 pts, 3 reb, 2 stl)
    • PF Scottie Barnes (33 pts, 11 ast)
    • C Jakob Poetl (8 pts, 6 reb)

    APRIL 26, 2026 / 12:15 ET

    Sunday’s injury report

    Immanuel Quickley is out for the Raptors, while A.J. Lawson is available.

    Jordan McLaughlin and Victor Wembanyama are questionable for the Spurs.

    Joel Embiid is doubtful for the 76ers. Tyrese Maxey is available, while Kelly Oubre Jr. is questionable.

    Luka Dončić is out for the Lakers, while Austin Reaves is questionable. Kevin Durant is questionable for the Rockets.

  • 4 takeaways: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander dominates Thunder-Suns Game 3 & OKC nears sweep

    The Oklahoma City Thunder defeat the Phoenix Suns, 121-109, to take a 3-0 series lead.

    • Download the NBA App

    The Oklahoma City Thunder are one one of the most dominant, two-year runs in NBA history, and the dominance continued with a 121-109 victory in Game 3 of their first round series with the Phoenix Suns on Saturday afternoon.

    The Thunder were without Jalen Williams, who suffered a hamstring strain three days earlier. But Shai Gilgeous-Alexander didn’t need much help.

    The reigning MVP scored a career-playoff-high 42 points, shooting an amazing 15-for-18 from the field and 11-for-12 from the free throw line, adding eight assists. The Thunder continue to score efficiently against what was a top-10 defense in the regular season, and Gilgeous-Alexander’s performance was just the seventh 40-point playoff game in NBA history where the player had a true shooting percentage over 90%.

    Playing at home for the first time, the Suns led by nine points late in the first quarter. But the Thunder closed the period on an 18-4 run and were in control most of the way after that.

    Here are some notes, numbers and film as the champs improved to 11-0 in first-round games over the last three years:


    1. Gilgeous-Alexander is too much from mid-range

    Even when he won the Kia MVP award last season, Gilgeous-Alexander wasn’t as good of a mid-range shooter as he was this year, when he shot an incredible 197-for-359 (54.9%) between the paint and the 3-point line. That was the fourth-best mark for a player with at least 300 mid-range attempts in the 29 seasons for which we have shot-location data; the only three better ones are held by Kevin Durant.

    On Saturday, Gilgeous-Alexander was 6-for-7 from mid-range, and his best work was done over the last six minutes of the second quarter, when the Thunder took full control of Game 3.

    Collin Gillespie has been Gilgeous-Alexander’s primary defender for most of this series, but he was getting the business. So the Suns actually assigned starting center Oso Ighodaro to the MVP for a stretch late in the second.

    Gilgeous-Alexander proceeded to target Devin Booker in the pick-and-roll, getting to his mid-range pull-up:

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander pull-up jumper vs. Devin Booker

    On the next possession, he rejected a screen, beat Ighodaro off the dribble, and drew a foul on Booker. Then, attacking Booker again, he got an open 3 for Jaylin Williams.

    Grayson Allen made his series debut on Saturday and was not spared. Gilgeous-Alexander attacked him to generate a layup for Alex Caruso and to get to another mid-range pull-up:

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander pull-up jumper vs. Grayson Allen

    Finally, the Suns sent a double-team at Gilgeous-Alexander in the middle of the floor. The result was an open corner 3 for Caruso.

    Again, the Suns ranked ninth defensively, and the Thunder have scored at least 120 points per 100 possessions in all three games of this series. Overall, they’ve scored 10.9 per 100 more than Phoenix allowed in the regular season.


    2. Thunder handle the pressure

    The biggest strength of the Suns’ defense was forcing turnovers. They ranked third in opponent turnover rate, forcing 16.5 per 100 possessions, having seen the biggest jump (by a wide margin) from last season.

    But now they’re facing the team that has committed the fewest turnovers per 100 possessions in each of the last two seasons. And the Thunder have been even better at taking care of the ball in this series.

    Over the three games, the champs have committed just 8.9 turnovers per 100 possessions, what would be tied for the third-lowest rate for any team in any playoff series in the 30 years for which we have play-by-play data. They’ve taken their opponents’ biggest strength and turned it into a major weakness.

    According to tracking data, the Suns rank fourth in these playoffs in average pick-up distance, so they’re applying pressure. But it’s not working on the Thunder, who had just two live-ball turnovers in Game 3 on Saturday.

    Shooting is the most important thing in this game, but you there are other ways to boost your efficiency and the Thunder have done it by taking care of the ball.


    3. Best bench in basketball

    It was a little bit of a surprise that Ajay Mitchell started in place of Jalen Williams on Saturday, given that Cason Wallace started 42 more games than Mitchell (58-16) in the regular season. Mitchell was the Thunder’s second leading scorer (15 points) in Game 3, but shot just 5-for-20, forcing some tough shots along the way.

    The Thunder’s new starting lineup had played just 37 total minutes (over seven games) together in the regular season and was outscored by four points on Saturday. But the champs outscored the Suns by 16 points with at least one reserve on the floor.

    Even without Williams to run the second-unit offense, the Thunder outscored the Suns by two points (20-18) in Gilgeous-Alexander’s 10 minutes on the bench. The shooting wasn’t great (8-for-22, including 1-for-7 from 3-point range), but they didn’t commit any turnovers when the MVP sat.

    They used the same five-man unit (Mitchell, Wallace, Jared McCain, Chet Holmgren and Isaiah Hartenstein) for those entire 10 minutes. Mitchell scored seven of his 15 points and McCain scored all of his seven in those no-SGA minutes, with a couple of SGA-esque buckets included.

    The Thunder have had the league’s No. 1 bench in each of the last two seasons, and though their versatility is a little compromised with the absence of Williams, they’re never dependent on the success of any particular lineup. Still, it will be interesting to see if Mitchell remains the starter going forward.


    4. Booker still can’t get going

    Dillon Brooks (33 points) and Jalen Green (26) were again the Suns’ leading scorers on Saturday, and that’s by the Thunder’s design. The league’s No. 1 defense has made Devin Booker its No. 1 priority, making sure he plays in a crowd and has a hard time finding open shots.

    For this entire series, Booker’s best looks at the basket have come in transition or after offensive rebounds.

    When he’s used a ball-screen, he hasn’t seen any kind of advantage for himself:

    Wall of Thunder defenders facing Devin Booker

    The Suns have bee able to leverage the attention on Booker to get good shots for his teammates. Early in the third quarter on Saturday, there was no weak-side help on an Ighodaro roll to the rim, because Dort stayed attached to Booker in the corner:

    Jalen Green assist to Oso Ighodaro

    But the Suns haven’t been able to find enough of those kinds of openings to keep up with the Thunder. And at 20.3 points per game, this is the lowest-scoring playoff series of Booker’s career. His true shooting percentage of 55.1% would be his third worst mark of the 10 series that he’s played in.

    The Suns first chance to avoid a sweep is Game 4 on Monday (9:30 ET, Peacock).

    * * *

    John Schuhmann has covered the NBA for more than 20 years. You can e-mail him here, find his archive here and follow him on Bluesky.

  • Starting 5: Ayo drops 43 off bench, 42 for Shai, Knicks get even, Magic go up

    The NBA Nightly Recap for April 25, 2026.

    Forty-plus points on 75+% shooting. Twice in one day.

    For the first time in NBA Playoff history, two players have achieved this feat on the same day.

    One, the reigning Kia MVP. The other, the first bench player to drop 40 in the Playoffs in 10 years.

    Read on for history from SGA & Ayo, along with big Ws for the Knicks & Magic and 4 more showdowns today across NBC/Peacock & ESPN.


    5 STORIES IN TODAY’S EDITION 🏀

    “The Ayo Game”: Dosunmu erupts for career-high 43 and 3-1 lead, after Ant & Donte exit

    Thunder Up 3-0: Shai’s efficient 40-ball puts Thunder in control of Suns series

    East Answers: Magic survive Cade’s late rally for 2-1 edge, KAT’s triple-double gets Knicks even

    West Game 4s: LeBron’s experience key to series clinch, while Spurs lead with youth

    East Game 4s: Tatum prepped for Playoff challenges on long road to return; Barnes-Mobley rivalry in focus


    BUT FIRST … ⏰

    Sunday’s four Game 4s

    Scores & Schedule

    The NBA Playoffs continue today with four Game 4s and one potential sweep:

    • ESPN Doubleheader: No. 4 Cleveland at No. 5 Toronto (1 ET | Tap To Watch), followed by No. 2 San Antonio at No. 7 Portland (3:30 ET | Tap To Watch)
    • Sunday Night Basketball On NBC & Peacock: No. 2 Boston at No. 7 Philly (7 ET | Tap To Watch), before the No. 4 Lakers look to advance vs. No. 5 Houston (9:30 ET | Tap To Watch)

    Durant’s Game 4 Status: Rockets coach Ime Udoka said on Saturday KD is receiving treatment on his sprained left ankle “around the clock” but his status is still unclear.

    Playoff Bracket


    1. DOSUNMU STEPS UP FOR INJURED WOLVES WITH CAREER-HIGH 43

    Ayo Dosunmu

    David Sherman/NBAE via Getty Images

    Minnesota’s deadline-addition 6th man Ayo Dosunmu aced Thursday’s Game 3 with 25 big points off the bench.

    Saturday in Game 4, he went full superstar mode – and the Wolves needed every point.

    Wolves 112, Nuggets 96: Dosunmu (13-17, 76.5 FG%) struck for a career-high 43 points with five made 3s, after Minnesota lost Donte DiVincenzo (lower leg) and Anthony Edwards (knee) to injuries. The Wolves took their third straight game in the series to move within one win of advancing.

    Jamal Murray (30 pts, 5 reb, 5 ast) and Nikola Jokić (24 pts, 15 reb, 9 ast) led Denver but combined for just six made field goals in the 2nd half, as the Nuggets head home for Game 5 facing elimination. | Recap

    • Pick-Up Points: Dosunmu scored the first bucket after Ant left the game with 2:36 to go in the 1st half, and ignited for 29 of his 43 from there
    • Team Tribute: The Wolves rallied as a unit after that moment, outscoring Denver by 21 the rest of the way and holding the Nuggets to 42 2nd-half points

    “I was heartbroken. This is for them: Ant, Donte,” Dosunmu said postgame. “They mean so much to the organization… This game, personally, was for them.”

    Mike Conley, Ayo Dosunmu

    David Berding/NBAE via Getty Images

    • Ayo’s 43 – a high for him across pro and college level – are the 2nd-most points off the bench in NBA Playoff history, behind Fred Brown’s 45 for Seattle in 1976
    • Instant Legend: Dosunmu came within one point of Edwards’ franchise Playoff-high of 44 points, recording just the third 40+ point Playoff game in Wolves history
    • “He makes big shots. He’s not afraid,” coach Chris Finch said of Dosunmu. “Just was going to ride him until he collapsed, really.”

    “This definitely ranks No. 1,” Dosunmu said when asked where this performance ranks in his basketball life. “You play the game for moments like this… It’s a dream [I had] as a kid.”

    Minnesota can advance with a win in Denver Monday (10:30 ET, NBC & Peacock). Check NBA.com and the NBA App for official injury updates on Edwards and DiVincenzo as available.


    2. SGA’S 42 POINTS PUT THUNDER UP 3-0 IN PHOENIX

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

    Christian Petersen/NBAE via Getty Images

    Last year, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander totaled 15 30+ point games in OKC’s championship run – tied for 2nd-most in any Playoff run in league history.

    This year, SGA’s back at it, following up Game 2’s 37 points with a 40-ball.

    And the Thunder as a whole? Off to a second straight 3-0 postseason start.

    Thunder 121, Suns 109: Shai piled up 42 points and shot 15-of-18 from the field (83.3 FG%) to lead OKC without Jalen Williams (hamstring), as the Thunder go up 3-0 and can clinch the series in Game 4 on Monday.

    Dillon Brooks (33 pts, 7 reb) and Jalen Green (26 pts, 5 reb, 6 ast) logged big nights to pace the Suns, who must extend the series with a win at home Monday. | Recap

    • Special Start: Shai started out hitting his first nine shots on the way to a 17-point 1st half, with 25 more coming after halftime, helping OKC overcome an early 24-15 hole
    • SGA became just the fifth player in NBA history to collect 40+ points on 80% shooting in a Playoff game, joining Elton Brand, Dirk Nowitzki, Terry Porter and his opponent Devin Booker
    • D-Book’s Counter: Booker (16 pts, 7 ast) dealt with an ankle injury in the 3rd, returning to the game with five quick points to pull the Suns within six at 75-69
    • But OKC responded again, draining the next six points to pull away into a 4th quarter where they never trailed
    • Feeling It: Shai didn’t miss a shot until the 8:19 mark of the 3rd quarter, and missed only one attempt inside the arc all game

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

    “We did a good job of just staying true to who we are,” Shai said. “Through the adversity, through the crowd, through a really good team, on the road… and we came out of here with a W.”

    • OKC’s Finest: SGA joins Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook as the only OKC players with multiple 40+ point Playoff games – and the first to do it on 80% shooting
    • “Just trying to let the game come to me,” Shai said of his approach. “Use my teammates out there as weapons… making the defense have to pick their poison.”
    • “He’s the MVP for a reason,” Alex Caruso said postgame. “That’s what he does. He leads us every night.”

    “We looked pretty good out there.” – Shai.

    OKC can end the series on the road Monday night (9:30 ET, Peacock & NBCSN).


    3. EAST ANSWERS: MAGIC SURVIVE LATE, KNICKS GET EVEN

    Franz Wagner, Paolo Banchero

    Gary Bassing/NBAE via Getty Images

    Up by 17, the 8-seed Magic were 8:42 away from a 2-1 lead over the 1-seed Pistons.

    But with 2:52 to go, they found themselves down 1.

    Then, Franz and Paolo came to the rescue.

    Magic 113, Pistons 105: Franz Wagner (17 ps, 5 reb, 6 ast) sank two quick shots to go back up for good, and Paolo Banchero (25 pts, 12 reb, 9 ast, 3 stl) dropped a high-bouncing dagger 3 as Orlando recovered with a 9-0 closeout to take Game 3 at home. | Recap

    • Focal Point: After 10 1st-half lead changes, Orlando controlled until late, holding Cade Cunningham to 5-of-17 shooting and 15 points through 3 quarters
    • Cade Breaks Loose: Cunningham (27 pts, 5 reb, 9 ast) pushed back in the 4th for 12 points, driving the Pistons’ 26-8 rally for the late lead
    • Orlando Answers: The pair of big 3s from Wagner and Banchero in the 9-0 run ignited the home crowd, lifting the Magic to a 7-1 mark in their last eight postseason home games
    • “This is super great,” Banchero said postgame. “Early afternoon game here in Orlando, you can hear the crowd… Excited to get back here in front of these fans…
    • One dime shy of a triple double, Banchero’s 9 assists were a Playoff career-high, and Desmond Bane (25 pts, 7 reb, 7 3s) tied Dennis Scott’s record for most 3s in a Magic postseason game

    “We’re looking forward to Monday. These fans are awesome.”

    Orlando is just the third 8-seed in the last decade to take a 2-1 series lead over the 1-seed, going for 3-1 in Game 5 (8 ET, NBC & Peacock).

    Karl-Anthony Towns

    109-108, 107-106.

    After back-to-back one-point losses, the Knicks made sure Game 4 had some breathing room.

    Knicks 114, Hawks 98: Karl-Anthony Towns (20 pts, 10 reb, 10 ast) collected his first-career Playoff triple-double and OG Anunoby (22 pts, 10 reb) led all scorers as New York never trailed past 6 minutes in to even the series 2-2.

    CJ McCollum (17 pts) led six Hawks in double-figures, but the Knicks D prevented him from making any 3s (0-4) after he hit nine in the series’ first three games. | Recap

    • “My teammates made it happen,” Towns said of his triple-double. “Great cuts by OG and curls and all those things that allowed me to playmake. I was aggressive in my playmaking today.”
    • “It’s one of the coolest things that I’ll always remember when I’m done playing,” Jalen Brunson (19 pts) said of the Knicks’ traveling fans, who got loud in the 4th with a 20+ point lead
    • Most Improved History: Newly-named Kia Most Improved Player Nickeil Alexander-Walker (15 pts, 5 3s) made history in the second-ever starting lineup to feature three MIP Award winners, with Dyson Daniels and McCollum

    New York brings the 2-2 series back to its home fans on Tuesday (8 ET, NBC & Peacock).


    4. WEST GAME 4s: LEBRON, LAKERS CAN ADVANCE, SPURS LEAD WITH YOUTH

    LeBron James, Stephon Castle, Dylan Harper

    Kenneth Richmond + Michael Gonzales/NBAE via Getty Images

    The first-timers… and the first to get there 19 times.

    Today’s West series leaders are proving postseason wins can come from opposite ends of the experience spectrum:

    • Historic Youth: In driving San Antonio’s Game 3 win, Stephon Castle (21y, 174d) and Dylan Harper (20y, 53d) became the youngest duo in NBA history to each score 25+ points in a postseason game
    • Historically Seasoned: Having scored more postseason points than anyone in NBA history, LeBron James added two more clutch Playoff field goals in L.A.’s Game 3 win to his all-time lead in that category as well (151)

    Sunday brings another chance for each to make a statement against time.

    Lakers at Rockets (9:30 ET, NBC & Peacock): Up 3-0, the 4-seed Lakers are on the cusp of the West Semis for the first time since the 2022-23 season.

    This season’s best team in the Clutch (22-8) struck again Friday, as L.A. became just the second Playoff team since 1997-98 to win after trailing by 6+ with 30 seconds left in regulation.

    The quick-strike comeback required quicker thinking and floor awareness, two signature traits of one the most cerebral players the game has ever known.

    LeBron’s playmaking and basketball IQ have been on full display in this series:

    Playing off-ball, LeBron anticipates where his driving teammates will need an open target to kick to, and cuts to that spot

    Playing off-ball, LeBron anticipates where his driving teammates will need an open target to kick to, and cuts to that spot.

    In the pick-and-roll set, LeBron reads the help defenders and reacts accordingly, passing out to shooters when the help stays, or playing downhill when they sag.

    Houston was 30 seconds away from a 2-1 series. Now, facing elimination with KD’s status (ankle) unclear, the hosts have a near-win Game 3 rally they can take a few keys from.

    • The Climb Back: Rallying from a 15-point deficit, the Rockets won the 2nd half 49-38, holding the Lakers to fewer points than they scored in the 1st quarter (39)
    • Clutch Candidate: Alperen Sengun stepped up to fill KD’s closer role with 12 of his 33 points in the 4th, rattling off 8 in a row for the late two-possession lead
    • Built To Bother: Houston’s length and athleticism forced LeBron, L.A.’s primary playmaker, into four 4th-quarter turnovers, including two in the final minute — before Bron helped ignite the historic comeback
    Stephon Castle, Dylan Harper

    Grant Burke/NBAE via Getty Images

    In Sunday’s other West series, the Spurs are buzzing from the Game 3 play of their breakout backcourt, whose combined age equals LeBron’s 41 years.

    Spurs at Blazers (3:30 ET, ESPN): With Wemby (concussion protocol) questionable, San Antonio has shown it can win multiple ways, looking for a commanding 3-1 edge, while Portland can still channel homecourt advantage to reset the series.

    • Game 3’s two-man takeover made Castle the youngest Spur to ever score 30+ points in a postseason game,
    • At the same time, Harper became the second-youngest player ever to score 20+ off the bench in the postseason, behind Kobe Bryant
    • Portland’s Tandem: Jrue Holiday (29 pts) provided a scoring lift while San Antonio keyed on Deni Avdija (3-15 FG) with double-teams
    • Focus On Finishing: After winning the 1st half, the Blazers were up 82-67 with 17 minutes to go, before the Spurs closed Game 3 with a 53-26 sprint to victory

    5. EAST GAME 4s: TATUM DELIVERING IN TIGHT SERIES, BARNES & MOBLEY’S RIVALRY

    Jayson Tatum

    What’s more thrilling than draining a Playoff dagger 3 on the road for a Game 3 win?

    For Jayson Tatum, 51 days into his NBA return, it’s a thrill just to be on the court.

    Celtics at Sixers (7 ET, NBC & Peacock): With Boston leading 2-1, Game 4 marks the 120th head-to-head postseason matchup between these rivals, with an all-time average margin of victory of just 3.4 points.

    • Close finishes have been this matchup’s theme all season, and Game 3 was a 1-point contest with under 2 to play when Tatum called game
    • In his 19th career Playoff game against Philly, Tatum hit two clutch 3s in 90 seconds and crossed the 3,000 career Playoff-point mark, joining Larry Bird, John Havlicek and Kevin McHale as the only Celtics to do so in the postseason

    In his 19th game back from his Achilles injury (21.9 ppg in 19 games), Tatum said he’s kept that journey top-of-mind throughout his comeback.

    • “I’ve been able to do a really good job of just keeping things in perspective,” Tatum said. “It was a very very long time for me not to be doing what I love… Just being out there with my teammates is all I can think about.”
    • Just weeks away from the one-year mark since his injury, Tatum matched season minutes leader Tyrese Maxey (38.0 mpg) with 42 minutes played in Game 3
    • “I’ve been here before,” Tatum said with a grin after being asked about meeting the moment on the road in Game 3

    Defense will be a key for Maxey (27.0 ppg this series) and the Sixers in Game 4, who’ve held the Celtics under 100 points once in this series; their Game 2 win.

    Evan Mobley, Scottie Barnes

    Cole Burston/NBAE via Getty Images

    In The North, the Raptors look to even a 2-1 series that may have just found its next breakout star.

    Cavaliers at Raptors (1 ET, ESPN): After Scottie Barnes went wild in front of Jurassic Park with a Playoff career-high 33 points in a Game 3 win, Cleveland will turn to last season’s Kia Defensive Player of the Year Evan Mobley to prevent a repeat.

    From Under-19 World Cup teammates for Team USA in 2019, to draft neighbors, Rookie of the Year Award rivals, and now, First Round opponents, Barnes and Mobley seem constantly linked in basketball.

    As Eric Koreen writes for The Athletic and NBA.com, the first one to break away – and break through, on the heightened Playoffs stage – could win this series for his team:

    “Their careers, dating back to the draft in 2021, have lined up nicely. Mobley went third in the draft, while Barnes went fourth. Barnes edged out Mobley for Rookie of the Year in one of the closest votes for the award ever [2022].

    ‘Scottie was boisterous. He was talking.’ said Bruce Weber… head coach for that Under-19 team.

    ‘You knew when Scottie came into the building,’ Weber said. ‘Evan could sneak in, even at 6-10, 6-11. He could sneak in quietly, and you wouldn’t even know he’s there.’

    ‘I said, ‘That’s what it had to look like when Wilt (Chamberlain) played,’’ said LeVelle Moten, an assistant coach on that team… ‘That’s how dominant he was.’” | Read More

    Toronto can send the series back to Cleveland tied, while the Cavs go for a commanding 3-1 series lead.

     

  • 4 takeaways: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander dominates Thunder-Suns Game 3 & OKC nears sweep

    The Oklahoma City Thunder defeat the Phoenix Suns, 121-109, to take a 3-0 series lead.

    • Download the NBA App

    The Oklahoma City Thunder are one one of the most dominant, two-year runs in NBA history, and the dominance continued with a 121-109 victory in Game 3 of their first round series with the Phoenix Suns on Saturday afternoon.

    The Thunder were without Jalen Williams, who suffered a hamstring strain three days earlier. But Shai Gilgeous-Alexander didn’t need much help.

    The reigning MVP scored a career-playoff-high 42 points, shooting an amazing 15-for-18 from the field and 11-for-12 from the free throw line, adding eight assists. The Thunder continue to score efficiently against what was a top-10 defense in the regular season, and Gilgeous-Alexander’s performance was just the seventh 40-point playoff game in NBA history where the player had a true shooting percentage over 90%.

    Playing at home for the first time, the Suns led by nine points late in the first quarter. But the Thunder closed the period on an 18-4 run and were in control most of the way after that.

    Here are some notes, numbers and film as the champs improved to 11-0 in first-round games over the last three years:


    1. Gilgeous-Alexander is too much from mid-range

    Even when he won the Kia MVP award last season, Gilgeous-Alexander wasn’t as good of a mid-range shooter as he was this year, when he shot an incredible 197-for-359 (54.9%) between the paint and the 3-point line. That was the fourth-best mark for a player with at least 300 mid-range attempts in the 29 seasons for which we have shot-location data; the only three better ones are held by Kevin Durant.

    On Saturday, Gilgeous-Alexander was 6-for-7 from mid-range, and his best work was done over the last six minutes of the second quarter, when the Thunder took full control of Game 3.

    Collin Gillespie has been Gilgeous-Alexander’s primary defender for most of this series, but he was getting the business. So the Suns actually assigned starting center Oso Ighodaro to the MVP for a stretch late in the second.

    Gilgeous-Alexander proceeded to target Devin Booker in the pick-and-roll, getting to his mid-range pull-up:

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander pull-up jumper vs. Devin Booker

    On the next possession, he rejected a screen, beat Ighodaro off the dribble, and drew a foul on Booker. Then, attacking Booker again, he got an open 3 for Jaylin Williams.

    Grayson Allen made his series debut on Saturday and was not spared. Gilgeous-Alexander attacked him to generate a layup for Alex Caruso and to get to another mid-range pull-up:

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander pull-up jumper vs. Grayson Allen

    Finally, the Suns sent a double-team at Gilgeous-Alexander in the middle of the floor. The result was an open corner 3 for Caruso.

    Again, the Suns ranked ninth defensively, and the Thunder have scored at least 120 points per 100 possessions in all three games of this series. Overall, they’ve scored 10.9 per 100 more than Phoenix allowed in the regular season.


    2. Thunder handle the pressure

    The biggest strength of the Suns’ defense was forcing turnovers. They ranked third in opponent turnover rate, forcing 16.5 per 100 possessions, having seen the biggest jump (by a wide margin) from last season.

    But now they’re facing the team that has committed the fewest turnovers per 100 possessions in each of the last two seasons. And the Thunder have been even better at taking care of the ball in this series.

    Over the three games, the champs have committed just 8.9 turnovers per 100 possessions, what would be tied for the third-lowest rate for any team in any playoff series in the 30 years for which we have play-by-play data. They’ve taken their opponents’ biggest strength and turned it into a major weakness.

    According to tracking data, the Suns rank fourth in these playoffs in average pick-up distance, so they’re applying pressure. But it’s not working on the Thunder, who had just two live-ball turnovers in Game 3 on Saturday.

    Shooting is the most important thing in this game, but you there are other ways to boost your efficiency and the Thunder have done it by taking care of the ball.


    3. Best bench in basketball

    It was a little bit of a surprise that Ajay Mitchell started in place of Jalen Williams on Saturday, given that Cason Wallace started 42 more games than Mitchell (58-16) in the regular season. Mitchell was the Thunder’s second leading scorer (15 points) in Game 3, but shot just 5-for-20, forcing some tough shots along the way.

    The Thunder’s new starting lineup had played just 37 total minutes (over seven games) together in the regular season and was outscored by four points on Saturday. But the champs outscored the Suns by 16 points with at least one reserve on the floor.

    Even without Williams to run the second-unit offense, the Thunder outscored the Suns by two points (20-18) in Gilgeous-Alexander’s 10 minutes on the bench. The shooting wasn’t great (8-for-22, including 1-for-7 from 3-point range), but they didn’t commit any turnovers when the MVP sat.

    They used the same five-man unit (Mitchell, Wallace, Jared McCain, Chet Holmgren and Isaiah Hartenstein) for those entire 10 minutes. Mitchell scored seven of his 15 points and McCain scored all of his seven in those no-SGA minutes, with a couple of SGA-esque buckets included.

    The Thunder have had the league’s No. 1 bench in each of the last two seasons, and though their versatility is a little compromised with the absence of Williams, they’re never dependent on the success of any particular lineup. Still, it will be interesting to see if Mitchell remains the starter going forward.


    4. Booker still can’t get going

    Dillon Brooks (33 points) and Jalen Green (26) were again the Suns’ leading scorers on Saturday, and that’s by the Thunder’s design. The league’s No. 1 defense has made Devin Booker its No. 1 priority, making sure he plays in a crowd and has a hard time finding open shots.

    For this entire series, Booker’s best looks at the basket have come in transition or after offensive rebounds.

    When he’s used a ball-screen, he hasn’t seen any kind of advantage for himself:

    Wall of Thunder defenders facing Devin Booker

    The Suns have bee able to leverage the attention on Booker to get good shots for his teammates. Early in the third quarter on Saturday, there was no weak-side help on an Ighodaro roll to the rim, because Dort stayed attached to Booker in the corner:

    Jalen Green assist to Oso Ighodaro

    But the Suns haven’t been able to find enough of those kinds of openings to keep up with the Thunder. And at 20.3 points per game, this is the lowest-scoring playoff series of Booker’s career. His true shooting percentage of 55.1% would be his third worst mark of the 10 series that he’s played in.

    The Suns first chance to avoid a sweep is Game 4 on Monday (9:30 ET, Peacock).

    * * *

    John Schuhmann has covered the NBA for more than 20 years. You can e-mail him here, find his archive here and follow him on Bluesky.

  • 4 takeaways: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander dominates Thunder-Suns Game 3 & OKC nears sweep

    The Oklahoma City Thunder defeat the Phoenix Suns, 121-109, to take a 3-0 series lead.

    • Download the NBA App

    The Oklahoma City Thunder are one one of the most dominant, two-year runs in NBA history, and the dominance continued with a 121-109 victory in Game 3 of their first round series with the Phoenix Suns on Saturday afternoon.

    The Thunder were without Jalen Williams, who suffered a hamstring strain three days earlier. But Shai Gilgeous-Alexander didn’t need much help.

    The reigning MVP scored a career-playoff-high 42 points, shooting an amazing 15-for-18 from the field and 11-for-12 from the free throw line, adding eight assists. The Thunder continue to score efficiently against what was a top-10 defense in the regular season, and Gilgeous-Alexander’s performance was just the seventh 40-point playoff game in NBA history where the player had a true shooting percentage over 90%.

    Playing at home for the first time, the Suns led by nine points late in the first quarter. But the Thunder closed the period on an 18-4 run and were in control most of the way after that.

    Here are some notes, numbers and film as the champs improved to 11-0 in first-round games over the last three years:


    1. Gilgeous-Alexander is too much from mid-range

    Even when he won the Kia MVP award last season, Gilgeous-Alexander wasn’t as good of a mid-range shooter as he was this year, when he shot an incredible 197-for-359 (54.9%) between the paint and the 3-point line. That was the fourth-best mark for a player with at least 300 mid-range attempts in the 29 seasons for which we have shot-location data; the only three better ones are held by Kevin Durant.

    On Saturday, Gilgeous-Alexander was 6-for-7 from mid-range, and his best work was done over the last six minutes of the second quarter, when the Thunder took full control of Game 3.

    Collin Gillespie has been Gilgeous-Alexander’s primary defender for most of this series, but he was getting the business. So the Suns actually assigned starting center Oso Ighodaro to the MVP for a stretch late in the second.

    Gilgeous-Alexander proceeded to target Devin Booker in the pick-and-roll, getting to his mid-range pull-up:

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander pull-up jumper vs. Devin Booker

    On the next possession, he rejected a screen, beat Ighodaro off the dribble, and drew a foul on Booker. Then, attacking Booker again, he got an open 3 for Jaylin Williams.

    Grayson Allen made his series debut on Saturday and was not spared. Gilgeous-Alexander attacked him to generate a layup for Alex Caruso and to get to another mid-range pull-up:

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander pull-up jumper vs. Grayson Allen

    Finally, the Suns sent a double-team at Gilgeous-Alexander in the middle of the floor. The result was an open corner 3 for Caruso.

    Again, the Suns ranked ninth defensively, and the Thunder have scored at least 120 points per 100 possessions in all three games of this series. Overall, they’ve scored 10.9 per 100 more than Phoenix allowed in the regular season.


    2. Thunder handle the pressure

    The biggest strength of the Suns’ defense was forcing turnovers. They ranked third in opponent turnover rate, forcing 16.5 per 100 possessions, having seen the biggest jump (by a wide margin) from last season.

    But now they’re facing the team that has committed the fewest turnovers per 100 possessions in each of the last two seasons. And the Thunder have been even better at taking care of the ball in this series.

    Over the three games, the champs have committed just 8.9 turnovers per 100 possessions, what would be tied for the third-lowest rate for any team in any playoff series in the 30 years for which we have play-by-play data. They’ve taken their opponents’ biggest strength and turned it into a major weakness.

    According to tracking data, the Suns rank fourth in these playoffs in average pick-up distance, so they’re applying pressure. But it’s not working on the Thunder, who had just two live-ball turnovers in Game 3 on Saturday.

    Shooting is the most important thing in this game, but you there are other ways to boost your efficiency and the Thunder have done it by taking care of the ball.


    3. Best bench in basketball

    It was a little bit of a surprise that Ajay Mitchell started in place of Jalen Williams on Saturday, given that Cason Wallace started 42 more games than Mitchell (58-16) in the regular season. Mitchell was the Thunder’s second leading scorer (15 points) in Game 3, but shot just 5-for-20, forcing some tough shots along the way.

    The Thunder’s new starting lineup had played just 37 total minutes (over seven games) together in the regular season and was outscored by four points on Saturday. But the champs outscored the Suns by 16 points with at least one reserve on the floor.

    Even without Williams to run the second-unit offense, the Thunder outscored the Suns by two points (20-18) in Gilgeous-Alexander’s 10 minutes on the bench. The shooting wasn’t great (8-for-22, including 1-for-7 from 3-point range), but they didn’t commit any turnovers when the MVP sat.

    They used the same five-man unit (Mitchell, Wallace, Jared McCain, Chet Holmgren and Isaiah Hartenstein) for those entire 10 minutes. Mitchell scored seven of his 15 points and McCain scored all of his seven in those no-SGA minutes, with a couple of SGA-esque buckets included.

    The Thunder have had the league’s No. 1 bench in each of the last two seasons, and though their versatility is a little compromised with the absence of Williams, they’re never dependent on the success of any particular lineup. Still, it will be interesting to see if Mitchell remains the starter going forward.


    4. Booker still can’t get going

    Dillon Brooks (33 points) and Jalen Green (26) were again the Suns’ leading scorers on Saturday, and that’s by the Thunder’s design. The league’s No. 1 defense has made Devin Booker its No. 1 priority, making sure he plays in a crowd and has a hard time finding open shots.

    For this entire series, Booker’s best looks at the basket have come in transition or after offensive rebounds.

    When he’s used a ball-screen, he hasn’t seen any kind of advantage for himself:

    Wall of Thunder defenders facing Devin Booker

    The Suns have bee able to leverage the attention on Booker to get good shots for his teammates. Early in the third quarter on Saturday, there was no weak-side help on an Ighodaro roll to the rim, because Dort stayed attached to Booker in the corner:

    Jalen Green assist to Oso Ighodaro

    But the Suns haven’t been able to find enough of those kinds of openings to keep up with the Thunder. And at 20.3 points per game, this is the lowest-scoring playoff series of Booker’s career. His true shooting percentage of 55.1% would be his third worst mark of the 10 series that he’s played in.

    The Suns first chance to avoid a sweep is Game 4 on Monday (9:30 ET, Peacock).

    * * *

    John Schuhmann has covered the NBA for more than 20 years. You can e-mail him here, find his archive here and follow him on Bluesky.