
Seven years ago, Kawhi Leonard sent the Toronto Raptors to the Eastern Conference Finals with a game-winning shot that took a fortunate bounce through the hoop. Friday night, RJ Barrett kept the Raptors alive in the first round with his own improbable bounce.
Barrett hit a go-ahead three-pointer with 1.2 seconds left in overtime, and the Raptors forced a Game 7 with a 112-110 win over the Cleveland Cavaliers. Toronto had scored just 17 points in the fourth quarter and overtime, but they got the basket and the bounce they needed to avoid elimination.
While Barrett's shot got a fortunate bounce, it was the Raptors' frantic defense that forced a turnover that gave them the opportunity to win the game in the first place. Thanks to energetic defense from rookie Collin Murray-Boyles and third-year guard A.J. Lawson, the Raptors forced Dennis Schroder to turn the ball over with a one-point lead.
Barrett, a Toronto native, hit his fourth three-pointer of the game to finish with 24 points. The shot capped a gutty win where the short-handed Raptors forced 18 Cavaliers turnovers, got steals from seven different players and got 14 assists, three steals and three blocks from Scottie Barnes.
After the clutch turnover, the Raptors needed a big shot — and some very forgiving spin on Barrett's miracle.
RJ BARRETT HITS THE GO-AHEAD 3 IN OT TO WIN IT FOR THE RAPTORS AND FORCE GAME 7
— NBA (@NBA) May 2, 2026
WHAT A SHOT WITH THE SEASON ON THE LINE pic.twitter.com/FI6yKSWCaq
The gravity of the moment, the ball's slow journey off the rim and the explosion of the Toronto crowd — all evoked Leonard's own game-winner, in a postseason where the Raptors won their only NBA title.
2 years ago today, Kawhi Leonard hits The Shot in the ECSF Game 7 against the @sixers in the #NBAPlayoffs #TodayInSports @Raptors pic.twitter.com/6K45nzZao3
— TodayInSports (@TodayInSportsCo) May 12, 2021
With starters Brandon Ingram and Immanuel Quickley both out with injuries, the Raptors needed to get help from their backups.
They got it from Murray-Boyles, the No. 9 pick in last year's draft, who had 17 points, seven rebounds, three blocks and two steals in 40 minutes off the bench. Second-year guard Ja'Kobe Walter scored 24 points and sank four threes of his own. It was his second straight playoff game with at least 20 points, three steals and four three-pointers.
Ja'Kobe Walter blocks Donovan Mitchell from behind, hits a clutch 3, and Evan Mobley answers with a clutch 3 of his own at the other end pic.twitter.com/fBheJPTqvv
— MrBuckBuck (@MrBuckBuckNBA) May 2, 2026
Second-year guard Jamal Shead shot only 2-for-9 but played stellar defense and passed out six assists. Lawson scored six points in the win, after putting up four points in the series so far. It was a game where the Raptors had a myriad of reasons why they shouldn't have won, but fought through all of them anyway.
They might be short-handed again in Sunday's Game 7 in Cleveland, but the Raptors won't be short on effort. And as Game 6 showed, you never know which way the ball might bounce.
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