
For 24 minutes, Game 4 between the Cleveland Cavaliers and Detroit Pistons was another tight struggle. Then Donovan Mitchell and the Cavs came out of the locker room with guns blazing and put the game away in the first six minutes of the second half.
Mitchell scored 15 points in a 23-0 run as broadcaster Noah Eagle declared, "It's a Cav-alanche!" The Pistons didn't score until the 5:57 mark and went on to lose, 112-103.
The Cavaliers did an excellent job of stopping Cade Cunningham and the Pistons offense after halftime, but it was Mitchell's unstoppable offense that really fueled Cleveland's big third-quarter run. He made his first five shots and went 8-for-9 in the quarter overall, scoring on stepbacks, floaters and drives to the basket.
Mitchell finished with 43 points in the win, his third straight game with 30 or more points. He's broken out of a mini-slump that saw him average 20.5 points over six games, a stretch where his outside shot wasn't falling and he attempted just 10 free throws. He struggled before halftime Monday, scoring just four points, then dropped 39 after halftime — the most in a playoff half in the last 30 years.
SPIDA SCORED 39 OF HIS 43 POINTS IN THE 2ND HALF
— NBA (@NBA) May 12, 2026
IT'S THE MOST POINTS IN ANY HALF IN A POSTSEASON GAME IN THE PLAY-BY-PLAY ERA!
CAVS WIN GAME 4 TO EVEN THE SERIES AT 2-2 IN THE EAST SEMIS pic.twitter.com/0ZUmxWGRQu
It didn't matter who the Cavaliers put on Mitchell. In the second half, he scored on Tobias Harris, Duncan Robinson, Caris LeVert, Jalen Duren, Cade Cunningham, Ausar Thompson and Paul Reed — sometimes getting past three of them on one play.
Mitchell made 13 free throws in Game 4, while the entire Pistons team attempted just 12. The Cavs finished 30-for-34 from the foul line while the Pistons were 9-for-12, an incredible disparity.
It wasn't the referees either, though the frustrated Pistons may have thought so. The Pistons have been fouling excessively on rebounds and screens, with Isaiah Stewart picking up three in seven minutes. Mitchell took advantage of the Cavaliers getting into the penalty early in quarters, turning touch fouls far from the basket into foul shots.
The Pistons didn't quit, but Mitchell answered every time they went on a small run in the last quarter. Now the series is tied, and the Pistons need to find an answer for Mitchell — and their own scorer to kick off big runs.
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