The Cavs game shown again at the Grand Rex by Trashtalk was not pretty, not smooth and, at times, close to a mess. But in the playoffs, some wins matter more than how they look.
GOOD PLAYOFF NIGHT TO EVERYONE!!!
WE ARE TAKING OVER THE GRAND REX TONIGHT LETS GOOOO !!! 😍😍😍 pic.twitter.com/GuXJqyKfoP
— TrashTalk (@TrashTalk_fr) April 26, 2026
Toronto just earned one, the hard way, the tense way, the survive-and-advance way. 93-89 against Cleveland, the series tied, and the feeling is building. The balance of power is starting to tilt.
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Scottie Barnes keeps his cool in the chaos
In a game where every shot felt like it weighed a ton, Scottie Barnes did what leaders do when everything gets messy. He kept it simple, finishing with 23 points, 9 rebounds and 6 assists, and, most importantly, those two free throws in the last minute that can swing an entire night.
No flashy play. No Hollywood moment. Just composure. A perfect read on the tempo, and that kind of calm you cannot buy. Barnes did not overpower the Cavs. He controlled them.
An attack that kept stalling, a group that kept pushing
This win was almost a statistical oddity. Toronto finished 4 for 30 from three, missing 14 straight long-range attempts to start the game. An offence searching for answers, hesitating at times, doubting itself at others.
And yet it held together. First because Brandon Ingram eventually found his touch after a rough start, but also because RJ Barrett kept attacking the rim and Collin Murray-Boyles brought energy at both ends. Toronto refused to leave the fight, and every possession turned into a scrap, every defensive stop into a small victory.
The Cavs let it slip
Cleveland had this game in its hands. In stretches, in bursts. Donovan Mitchell tried to force the issue, especially in the fourth quarter with 12 of his 20 points. James Harden swung between flashes of genius and maddening turnovers (7 turnovers)
Donovan Mitchell FOUL BAITING down 3 points instead of just going out there and getting a bucket is disrespectful to the game of basketball. pic.twitter.com/EeHlVRWkwu
— Hater Report (@HaterReport) April 26, 2026
But nothing really held up with 18 turnovers. Too many giveaways, and too many chances wasted. Mitchell knows it too. A shot to tie, missed, after he seemed more interested in drawing a foul than taking the better look he actually had. Then a sloppy late possession and an eight-second violation by Mitchell with under a minute left. Small things, sure. In the playoffs, they decide everything.
The final two minutes said it all
There are 49 seconds left and Barrett cuts the gap. The pressure rises, the Cavs wobble, and suddenly even the clock is against them. Eight-second violation forced by Jamal Shead. Ball back over.
JAMAL SHEAD’S PLAY THAT COULD CHANGE EVERYTHING! pic.twitter.com/5sFNCjFlQc
— TrashTalk (@TrashTalk_fr) April 26, 2026
After that, Barnes attacks, draws the foul, sinks both free throws and Toronto goes ahead. What follows is a summary of Cleveland’s frustration. Open looks, missed. Solid defence, not enough. And a 10-2 run conceded in the closing minutes that flips the game on its head.
A series that has turned into a slugfest
Game 4 does not hand out neat tactical answers. It tells you something else. An emotional shift. Toronto have found a clear identity: physical, intense, almost suffocating.
The Cavs, meanwhile, have lost a little of their flow. A little of their comfort. As Harden put it, the series is now a short-format battle. Best-of-three, three games to settle it.
Back to Cleveland, with answers and question marks
Game 5 will be played in Ohio. On paper, home-court advantage swings back to the Cavs. But the momentum is clearly with Canada. Toronto have won back-to-back playoff games for the first time since 2022. That is no small thing, and it says plenty about a team that is learning, adapting and getting tougher.
And in a series where every point is fought for, where every mistake hurts, that kind of momentum can matter far more than any stat line.
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