Cleveland Cavaliers End Eight-Year Playoff Drought, Set Sights on Knicks in Eastern Conference Finals
Donovan Mitchell's 26-point, 8-assist masterclass in Game 7 sent the Cavs to their first Eastern Conference Finals since 2018, but the supporting cast's collective effort is what transformed a rebuild into a championship window.

Donovan Mitchell rose for a layup in the closing minutes at Madison Square Garden on May 17, 2026, and Coco Jones — his fiancée, seated courtside — rose with him, both arms thrust skyward. The moment crystallized what had been building across seven games: a Cavs team that arrived in New York as a young contender had finished as something far more dangerous. Cleveland closed out the Knicks 106-95 in Game 7, advancing to the Eastern Conference Finals for the first time since 2018, when LeBron James carried a different version of this franchise to within two wins of a championship.
The 2026 version is built differently — and that distinction matters. Mitchell averaged 28.1 points across the seven-game series, including a 43-point second-half explosion in Game 4 that leveled the set after Cleveland had dropped the first two matchups at home. He finished Game 7 with 26 points and eight assists against a Knicks defense that had keyed on him all series. But what separates this run from Mitchell's previous playoff campaigns in Utah is the caliber of help alongside him — and how deliberately head coach Kenny Atkinson constructed an offense that weaponizes everyone on the floor.
The Supporting Cast That Changed Everything
Sam Merrill scored 23 points off the bench in Game 7, drilling five three-pointers, and pulled down five rebounds. Bigjayy_ — the Cavs' internal account for guard Darius Garland — added 23 points and seven rebounds. Center Jarrett Allen, the defensive anchor Atkinson builds his game-plans around, was a presence at both ends of the floor throughout the series. Merrill, speaking after the game, captured the locker-room sentiment with unusual directness: "You're not going to find a guy more happy for him than I am," he said of Mitchell, per NBALive's post-game notes. The comment landed because it was plainly true — this was not a one-man carry job.
That matters for how Atkinson wants this team to operate. The Cavs finished the regular season with the sixth-ranked offense in the league, a figure that reflects the head coach's emphasis on ball movement and floor spacing over isolation sets. Against a Knicks team that finished third in defensive rating, Cleveland consistently found the secondary receiver when New York collapsed on Mitchell. Garland's playmaking improved as the series wore on; Merrill's shooting provided the kind of instant-offense bench production that separates deep contenders from first-round exits. The result is a Cavs offense that, when it functions as designed, is difficult to scout because it does not depend on a single action to generate good looks.
What New York Got Right — and Why It Wasn't Enough
The Knicks deserve credit for how they opened the series. Winning the first two games in Cleveland was not a fluke — their defensive gameplan, built around aggressive hedging on pick-and-rolls and doubling Mitchell at mid-court, disrupted the Cavs' offensive flow in Games 1 and 2. Head coach Tom Thibodeau's team finished the regular season ranked third in defensive rating, and the roster construction — anchored by Jalen Brunson's individual scoring and a collective commitment to physical defense — made them a legitimate threat to any opponent in the East.
Brunson averaged 32.4 points across the first five games of the series before cooling in the final two. That decline was not accidental. Atkinson's defensive adjustments — sliding Allen into drop coverage to protect the rim while using mobile wings to body Brunson at the point of attack — forced the Knicks' primary scorer into contested mid-range attempts. Without Brunson's efficiency, New York's half-court offense became predictable. The Knicks managed just 95 points in Game 7, their lowest output of the series. Thibodeau's team was never rebuilt for a seven-game grind; the roster depth that carried them through the regular season thinned considerably by the conference semifinals.
A Franchise Reset Complete — Now the Hard Part
Cleveland's front office has executed a careful, deliberate rebuild since trading away the remnants of the post-LeBron roster. The Cavs drafted Evan Mobley third overall in 2021 and acquired Mitchell in a trade with Utah before the 2023-24 season. The payroll has been constructed to allow flexibility for a max contract extension for Mitchell — a move league sources have anticipated for months — while keeping the core of Allen, Garland, and Mobley intact. That core is young: Mitchell is 29, Allen is 27, Garland is 25, and Mobley is 24. The championship window Atkinson speaks of is not a metaphor.
Eight years is a long time for a franchise that reached four straight NBA Finals between 2015 and 2018. The drought is now over. But the Knicks, even in loss, exposed something about this Cavs team: its depth is real but its ceiling depends on Mobley's development as a two-way force and on Mitchell's continued health. A seven-game series against a team built to exploit a single star is survivable. A potential NBA Finals matchup against the Western Conference champion — whether that is Denver, Phoenix, or Golden State — will demand more.
Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals tips off Tuesday, May 19, 2026, at 8:00 p.m. ET on ESPN. The Cavs will host at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse. Atkinson was direct in the locker room after Game 7: "Tonight you deserve the praise," he told Mitchell, per NBALive. The praise is earned. The harder question — whether this group has enough to finish what the 2018 team started — will begin to answer itself on Tuesday.
Desk note: The wire services framed Mitchell's individual scoring as the dominant narrative of the series. This desk led with the supporting cast's production in Games 3 through 7 as a structural counterpoint — not to diminish Mitchell's performance, but because the Cavs' championship viability depends on that cast being real, not symbolic.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/NBALive/8472
- https://t.me/NBALive/8473
- https://t.me/NBALive/8474
- https://t.me/NBALive/8476
- https://t.me/NBALive/8478
- https://t.me/NBALive/8480