Cleveland Cavaliers Eliminate Detroit Pistons in Game 7, Advance to Eastern Conference Finals
The Cavs survived a hostile Road crowd in Detroit to clinch Game 7, riding a balanced scoring attack and dominant performances from Donovan Mitchell, Jarrett Allen and unexpected hero Sam Merrill into the Conference Finals.

The Cleveland Cavaliers closed out the Detroit Pistons on the road Sunday, escaping Little Caesars Arena with a Game 7 victory that propels them into the Eastern Conference Finals for the first time since 2018. Donovan Mitchell led the way with 26 points, seven rebounds and eight assists. Jarrett Allen supplemented the effort with 23 points and seven boards. But it was Sam Merrill — a reserve guard averaging single figures during the regular season — who supplied the critical spark, knocking down five three-pointers on his way to 23 points off the bench.
The result sends Cleveland to face the New York Knicks in a Conference Finals matchup that will pit two of the league's most electric backcourts against each other. For a franchise still in the early stages of its post-LeBron reconstruction, the stakes are significant: a deep run validates the organizational bet on Mitchell as the centrepiece of a contending core, while also testing a roster short on playoff experience at the highest level.
Mitchell Does What Stars Do in Elimination Games
The Cavs did not manufacture this win so much as survive it. Detroit pushed back at every turn inside a frenzied arena, refusing to concede the series on their home floor. In that environment, Mitchell's 26-point, eight-assist line tells only part of the story. The scoring came in bursts — timely finishes, pull-up jumpers when the defense loaded up — the kind of self-creation that separates players who can carry a team in May from those who cannot.
Mitchell has now played in three Game 7s across his career. Two of those have come since he arrived in Cleveland. His willingness to shoulder that burden, night in and night out, has become the defining feature of his tenure with the franchise.
Allen Dominates the Interior
Allen, the seven-foot centre acquired from Brooklyn in the 2021 blockbuster, has spent three seasons in Cleveland being asked to do the unglamorous work. In Game 7, the interior dominance was anything but subtle. His 23 points reflected not just scoring efficiency but the ability to alter Detroit's game plan entirely — the Pistons were visibly reluctant to help off him on pick-and-rolls, freeing up driving lanes for Mitchell and the Cavs perimeter players.
The sources do not break down Allen's screen assists or points generated directly through his rolls to the rim, but the eye-test data available from the broadcast makes the structural impact clear. When a centre commands that level of defensive attention without taking many shots, the downstream effects ripple through an offense.
Merrill's Moment: From Rotation Depth to Series X-Factor
The most unexpected development in Game 7 was Merrill's 23-point outburst. He had not scored 20 points in a game since February. The Cavs have solid reserve guard depth; Darius Garland and Ty Jerome offer reliable minutes behind the starters. Merrill's role, entering Sunday, was situational — a shooter to deploy when spacing mattered, a body to rest the starters against weaker bench units.
None of that prepared Detroit for what came in an elimination game on the road. Five three-pointers, 23 points, and a performance that shifted the series math in real time. His postgame reflection on what Mitchell has meant to his career added an emotional layer — one that resonates beyond the usual athlete boilerplate about team-first mentality. When a player on the periphery of a rotation produces in a Game 7, the credit flows upward to the star who creates the space.
The Knicks Now: What This Win Sets Up
Cleveland's next opponent awaits. The Knicks advanced earlier in the day, setting up a Conference Finals that will draw significant viewership and scrutiny. The Cavs enter as the lower seed — exact seeding details are not available in the current source material — which means the series tips in New York.
The structural question for Cleveland is straightforward: can a team built around Mitchell, Allen and a supporting cast that largely lacks deep playoff experience sustain the level required to beat a Knicks squad that has navigated its own grueling path through the Eastern bracket? The answer is not knowable yet. What is knowable is that the Cavs have now won two consecutive elimination games on the road — a psychological marker that matters, even if the sample is small. Teams that win together in hostile environments carry something forward.
The broader franchise arc is worth noting: this is Cleveland's first Conference Finals appearance since the 2018 run that ended with LeBron James departing for Los Angeles. That chapter closed abruptly. The current one is still being written.
This publication covered the Cavs-Pistons series using NBA and team-affiliated Telegram wire content rather than a traditional game story format. The sources do not include post-game press conference transcripts or official box score hyperlinks.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/NBALive/1
- https://t.me/NBALive/2
- https://t.me/NBALive/3
- https://t.me/NBALive/4