Donovan Mitchell expected to be ready for Cavaliers' playoff run despite missing last 4 games
Cleveland Cavaliers' Donovan Mitchell cheers his Cavaliers team near the end of the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Chicago Bulls in Cleveland, Tuesday, April 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Phil Long)
Cleveland Cavaliers guard Donovan Mitchell reacts before walking off the court after an NBA basketball game against the Los Angeles Clippers, Sunday, March 30, 2025, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/David Dermer)
Cleveland Cavaliers guard Donovan Mitchell reacts before walking off the court after an NBA basketball game against the Los Angeles Clippers, Sunday, March 30, 2025, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/David Dermer)
Cleveland Cavaliers' Donovan Mitchell cheers his Cavaliers team near the end of the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Chicago Bulls in Cleveland, Tuesday, April 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Phil Long)
Cleveland Cavaliers guard Donovan Mitchell reacts before walking off the court after an NBA basketball game against the Los Angeles Clippers, Sunday, March 30, 2025, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/David Dermer)
CLEVELAND (AP) — Donovan Mitchell is expected to be ready for the Cleveland Cavaliers' playoff run despite missing the last four games of the regular season with a sprained left ankle.
The all-star guard was injured on April 6 during the second half against the Sacramento Kings. He worked out on the court before Sunday's game against the Indiana Pacers after getting a full workout in at the team's training facility on Saturday.
Advertisement
'I think he'll be full on with practice. We're going to have to scrimmage at some point, probably inter-squad with refs, so he'll participate in that,' coach Kenny Atkinson said. 'The most important thing is how we build him up with the ankle rehab and then conditioning.'
Mitchell was one of nine players, including four starters, that Cleveland sat out for Sunday's regular-season finale. The Cavaliers (63-18) will go into the playoffs as the top seed in the Eastern Conference for only the fourth time in franchise history and first since winning the NBA title in 2016.
As the No. 1 seed, Cleveland's first playoff game is not expected to be until April 20 since the eighth seed in the East won't be determined until the final play-in tournament games on Friday.
Mitchell leads the Cavaliers in scoring, averaging 24 points per game. He is the only player in the league averaging at least 24 points in 32 minutes or fewer.
___
AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/nba

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fox Sports
19 minutes ago
- Fox Sports
Game 2: Thunder will try to tie up the NBA Finals, while Pacers will seek complete control of series
Associated Press OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Oklahoma City guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander will almost certainly reach a milestone on Sunday night. The reigning NBA MVP from the Thunder enters Game 2 of the NBA Finals against the Indiana Pacers just two points away from 3,000 for the season, including the regular season and playoffs. That's a total that has been reached 24 other times in league history — 10 by Michael Jordan, five by Wilt Chamberlain and once by nine other players. Gilgeous-Alexander would be the 12th to reach the milestone. But there's a bigger milestone that Gilgeous-Alexander would like to get Sunday as well: His first finals win. That'll be his only priority in Game 2. 'I said this so many times, I don't play for the individual stuff,' Gilgeous-Alexander said. 'I don't play for anything else besides winning. I never have in my whole life.' The Thunder, the NBA's top overall seed entering the playoffs after going 68-14 in the regular season, lost Game 1 to the Pacers on Thursday night 111-110 — and with it, lost the home-court advantage in this series as well. If the Pacers win Game 2, they'll likely become overwhelming favorites. Only two teams — the 1993 Chicago Bulls and 1995 Houston Rockets — won the first two games of a finals on the road, and both went on to win the NBA title in those seasons. And teams that open the finals with a 2-0 lead go on to win the series 86.5% of the time (32 times in 37 chances). 'The journey to get here all year has not been about getting to the finals,' Pacers guard Tyrese Haliburton said. 'It's a day at a time, especially after the start of the year. And it's hard — we have social media and friends and family that tell us all the numbers of if you can win the two games at home, whatever it will look like, or on the road or whatever the case.' The series will shift to Indianapolis for Games 3 and 4 on Wednesday and Friday. ___ AP NBA: recommended

NBC Sports
43 minutes ago
- NBC Sports
Adam Silver says Larry O'Brien Trophy logo could return to NBA Finals court in 2026
OKLAHOMA CITY — Tune into a December NBA Cup game, and you instantly know it's an NBA Cup game by looking at the specially designed court (teams also wear special uniforms for those games). There are clear visual designations this is something special. Tune into Game 1 of the NBA Finals and the court looked like the one the Oklahoma City Thunder would use for a random Tuesday night game in January. There was no Larry O'Brien trophy logo on the court, no NBA Finals logo on the court, just the usual Paycom logo. NBA Twitter took notice and it became a discussion point during Game 1. The court looked plain. While it has been that way for a few years, people are now discussing it, and NBA Commissioner Adam Silver suggested that the Larry O'Brien Trophy logo, or something similar, will return to the court next season. Quote via Sam Amick at The Athletic. 'To be honest, I hadn't thought all that much about it until I (saw) it (on social media). I'm nostalgic, as well, for certain things. And also, I think for a media-driven culture, whether it's people watching live or seeing those images on social media, it's nice when you're looking back on highlights and they stand out because you see that trophy logo or some other indication that it's a special event. So, we'll look at it.' There hasn't been a large Larry O'Brien logo on the court since 2014, primarily due to player safety concerns — the decal logos placed on top of the court were slippery. With the NBA Cup and plenty of lead time, specially-designed courts are made with all the paint and logos under a thin polyurethane coating, just like every other NBA court. However, for the Finals — where the participants are not locked in until about a week before the games start (often less) — there isn't time for that, so decals were placed on top of the court. Those can get slippery. While the league moved away from the larger center-court logos, it did try smaller ones on parts of the court in 2017 and in the bubble in 2020. However, it has been a while since the court had a logo. This year, the Internet took notice, and with that so did the league. In a world where player statistics and other graphic information can be added to a broadcast in real-time, there may be technological ways to add a court logo without potentially endangering the players. However it gets done, expect there to be some kind of Finals logo on the court for the 2026 NBA Finals. Just not this year.


Newsweek
an hour ago
- Newsweek
NBA Finals Game 2 Betting Odds, Picks, Best Bets: OKC Heavy Home Favorites
After a stunning comeback win in Game 1, the Pacers are once again heavy underdogs vs. the Thunder in Game 2 of the NBA Finals on Sunday night. After a stunning comeback win in Game 1, the Pacers are once again heavy underdogs vs. the Thunder in Game 2 of the NBA Finals on Sunday night. Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The Pacers continued their remarkable run of dramatic upsets this postseason on Thursday night in Game 1 of the NBA Finals. On the road against a Thunder team that has been heavily favored to win the NBA Finals for months, Indiana trailed 94-79 with just under 10 minutes to play in Game 1. But the Pacers once again refused to quit, and they ended up outscoring the Thunder 35-25 in the fourth quarter. When Tyrese Haliburton's game-winning jumper ripped the net with 0.3 seconds remaining, Indiana had completed its fourth historic comeback of the playoffs. The Pacers also stunned Milwaukee in the first round, Cleveland in the Eastern Conference semis and New York in the Eastern Conference Finals with furious late rallies. NBA Finals Game 2 Odds: Spread, ML, Total Despite their Game 1 collapse down the stretch, the Thunder are favored by even more in Game 2 than they were in Game 1. On one hand, that makes plenty of sense to anyone who watched OKC bounce back from a similar Game 1 loss at home to Denver in the second round with a 149-106 win in Game 2 of that series. On the other, betting against Haliburton and the Pacers has proven costly throughout these playoffs. DK FD bet365 IND spread +11 (-112) +11 (-110) +11 (-110) OKC spread -11 (-108) -11 (-110) -11 (-110) IND ML +390 +410 +425 OKC ML -520 -560 -575 Total 228.5 (o-112; u-108) 228.5 (o-114; u-106) 228.5 (o-110; u-110) How to Watch NBA Finals Game 2: Pacers vs. Thunder Tipoff: 8 p.m. ET Channel: ABC NBA Finals Series Winner Odds: OKC Remains Heavy Favorite Oklahoma City's odds to win the Finals are much shorter than they were prior to Game 1, but the Thunder remain heavily favored in this series. DraftKings : OKC -300; IND +245 FanDuel : OKC -330; IND +265 bet365 : OKC -330; IND +265 NBA Finals Game 2 Betting Picks, Analysis Why The Thunder Could Win (And/Or Cover) The Thunder lost Game 1 largely because they went cold (7-for-19, 0-for-5 from 3 in the fourth quarter) while allowing the Pacers to get hot at the wrong time (4Q FG shooting: 12-for-24, 6-for-10 3pt). OKC had a number of other issues in Game 1, though, but those problems should be fixable for a team that has been dominant throughout the regular season and playoffs. First of all, the Thunder allowed the Pacers to grab 13 offensive rebounds on just 43 missed shots in Game 1. That includes nine OREBs by Indiana on just 23 missed FGs in the second half. On the other end, the Thunder recorded just 10 offensive rebounds on 59 missed shots The Pacers were 29th in the league in offensive rebounding rate in the regular season, so it's hard to imagine OKC losing this battle throughout the series. In Game 1, Indiana not only got big rebounding nights from bigs Myles Turner (9 boards, including 5 offensive) and Pascal Siakam (10 rebounds, including 4 offensive), but also forward Aaron Nesmith (12 rebounds) and Haliburton (10 rebounds). The turnover battle will be the bigger talking point tonight. Though they already pulled it off once, the Pacers are (obviously) unlikely to upset OKC again if they regularly turn the ball over. But my question is about what OKC does with those Pacers TOs. In Game 1, Indiana survived its 24 turnovers largely because the Thunder only turned those into 11 points off turnovers. Will OKC be able to take better advantage of the turnovers it forces tonight? The last reason to like the Thunder tonight (and in this series) comes with a caveat. If we assume Jalen Williams (17 points on 6-for-19 shooting) and Chet Holmgren (6 points on 2-for-9 shooting, including an abysmal 2-for-8 from within 4 feet of the rim) will play as well as they're capable of playing throughout the rest of this series, OKC should have too much firepower for the Pacers. Related: as a team, the Thunder shot just 22-for-47 (46.8 percent) from less than 10 feet in Game 1, per Indiana went 15-for-29 on its shots from less than 10 feet. On the other hand, if this proves to be a bad matchup for both Williams (20.2 ppg on 44.8 percent FG shooting in the playoffs) and Holmgren (15.8 ppg on 47.7 FG shooting in the playoffs), the Thunder could be in real trouble. Why The Pacers Could Win (And/Or Cover) The case for Indiana starts with the fact that right now, Haliburton and Co. are terrifying if it's close in the closing minutes. Regardless of what happens in the rest of this series, Indiana has already put together a historically good run of clutch play this postseason. From an X's and O's standpoint, a strength throughout the playoffs for Indiana has been not only its 3-point shooting in general, but its ability to create and knock down open corner 3s. In Game 1, OKC's aggressive perimeter defense did force a slew of turnovers. Unfortunately for the Thunder, that aggression was also a big reason why the Pacers were able to shoot 10-for-16 on corner treys. Going forward, whether OKC can limit those looks will be one of the most interesting and significant questions of this series. Indiana's success on that front shouldn't have shocked anyone who watched the Pacers' run through the East. The play of the Indiana bench, however, was a pleasant surprise in Game 1. For all of the Thunder's star power, they were (and still are) so heavily favored in this series partly because of the perceived depth advantage they have. Few would argue that Cason Wallace (who started Game 1 but typically comes off the bench), Alex Caruso, Isaiah Joe and Aaron Wiggins give OKC one of the best bench units in the NBA. But in the series opener, the Indiana bench outscored OKC's 39-28 thanks to a 17-point night by Obi Toppin. The former Knick bounced back in a huge way after turning it over three times in the first quarter. He finished with five made 3-pointers and a game-high plus/minus of +13 in 25 minutes. Toppin played over 20 minutes just twice in the first 15 games of the playoffs. But dating back to Game 6 of the Eastern Conference Finals, he has now scored 35 total points over 50 minutes of action in Indiana's last two games on 13-for-20 FG shooting (7-for-12 3pt). NBA Finals Game 2 Best Bets: Will OKC Bounce Back? I'm going to resist the urge to take the Thunder to win big in this series until at least Game 3. Indiana is just too deep, and too well-coached, for me to rule out another fourth-quarter rally, even if OKC jumps out to a big lead. The Pacers were efficient when they weren't turning the ball over in Game 1. In fact, they finished with a much better assist rate than OKC (61.5 compared to 33.3 for OKC), and they also won the true shooting (60.8 percent to 50.7) and effective field goal percentage (58.5 to 45.4) battles convincingly. As concerning as it was for Indiana backers to see this team turn it over 19 times in the first half, the fact they only turned it over 5 times in the second half provided reason to believe they won't be overwhelmed by the Thunder's ball pressure throughout the series. The best Pacers vs. Thunder ATS bet tonight is the Thunder to start off hot and cover the first-half spread. I also like the Over, as I expect a faster pace tonight after the Pacers seemed to realize after halftime of Game 1 that shorter possessions were better for their chances of not only A) avoiding turnovers, but also B) generating quality looks. Thunder alt 1H -7.5 (-112 at FanDuel) -- 1 unit Over 228.5 (-110 at bet365) -- 1 unit Newsweek may earn an affiliate commission if you sign up through the links in this article. See the sportsbook operator's terms and conditions for important details. Sports betting operators have no influence over newsroom coverage.