
Monday night in the NBA playoffs, the Cleveland Cavaliers roared back to tie their second-round series with the Detroit Pistons, while LeBron James missed a go-ahead shot in the final seconds as the Oklahoma City Thunder swept the Los Angeles Lakers.
Here are the winners and losers from Monday night's playoff tilts.
The Cavs' All-NBA guard scored 39 of his 43 points after halftime of Cleveland's 112-103 win. That's the most points in a playoff half since the NBA started tracking play-by-play data in the 1996-97 season.
Mitchell scored on a variety of shots and on a variety of defenders. He and the Cavaliers started off the second half with a 24-0 run that buried the Pistons, with Mitchell contributing 15 in the run. By the end, the Pistons were digging deep in their bench to find anyone who could slow down Cleveland, and the Cavs had evened the series at 2-2.
LeVert led the Pistons with 24 points, which is 10 more points than he scored in Games 1-3. He scored and played effective defense on his former Cleveland teammate Mitchell, outscoring Spida 17-4 before halftime.
Caris LeVert is locked in on defense
— NBA (@NBA) May 12, 2026
Pistons have the lead in Q2 of Game 4! pic.twitter.com/MBMZH53QUh
That didn't continue in the second half, where Mitchell went off and the Cavs — and his own teammates — denied LeVert the ball.
Caris LeVert just yelled at his Pistons teammates to “feed him”
— SM Highlights (@SMHighlights1) May 12, 2026
The Cavs went on a 23-0 run while he wasn’t on the floor. pic.twitter.com/hFnzNfNuZR
One day after his old team got swept out of the second round, OKC's Jared McCain scored 13 points and logged a staggering plus/minus of +27 in just 16 minutes of the Thunder's 115-110 win. McCain hit three three-pointers on a night where his Thunder teammates weren't making shots from distance.
Jared McCain with a big-time three
— NBA on Prime (@NBAonPrime) May 12, 2026
Watch the Game 4 fourth quarter through Prime Vision on @primevideo pic.twitter.com/hqHGLJkyXt
That is, except for former Laker Alex Caruso, who shot 3-for-5 from deep, finishing with nine points and two steals. The Lakers tried to lowball Caruso when he was a free agent in 2021, and since then, he's made two All-Defensive teams, won a second ring with the Thunder and could earn a third this season.
The Cavs have worn their blue throwback jerseys in four playoff games. They're 4-0 in the blue duds, 2-5 in every other outfit. We're not saying the blue jerseys have some kind of magic powers, but should the Cavaliers really be gambling that they don't by wearing other alternate uniforms?
During the season, Isaiah Stewart was one of the NBA's best backup bigs, finishing seventh in the Sixth Man of the Year voting. In the playoffs, he's been far from it, averaging only 4.1 points and 2.8 rebounds and committing 7.6 fouls per 36 minutes. In a Game 4 where the Pistons desperately needed rim protection, "Beef Stew" couldn't stay on the court.
Ayton received a buyout from the Portland Trail Blazers before this season and signed with the Lakers on a two-year, $16.2M deal with a player option for 2026-27. The idea was for Ayton to rebuild his value and test the free-agent market again, but after averaging 7.3 points in the Thunder series, will he have any suitors? The Lakers and Ayton may be stuck with each other for another season.
The Thunder's sweep means that ESPN will miss the ratings bonanza of a Lakers playoff Game 5, plus an excuse to debate the legacy of LeBron James for two more days on their various debate shows. ESPN may need to rush an emergency Austin Reaves documentary into production just to preserve their ratings for May sweeps.
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