Miami

Cavaliers vs. Heat: Can Miami pull off massive upset? Series keys, schedule and prediction


The Eastern Conference’s top seed, the Cleveland Cavaliers, will take on the eighth-seeded Miami Heat, who advanced out of the play-in tournament, in the first round of the 2025 NBA playoffs. This marks the first time the two franchises will square off in the postseason. Which is good, because they haven’t really had anything in common until now.


What we know about the Cavaliers

After white-knuckling it through a seven-game, first-round slugfest with the Magic before getting drummed out in Round 2 by the eventual champion Celtics, the Cavs entered this season with reason to believe. Sure, it would require healthier seasons from stars Donovan Mitchell, Darius Garland and Evan Mobley, who missed a combined 84 games in 2023-24, and new head coach Kenny Atkinson finding fresh ways to wring more efficient offensive production out of the roster than predecessor J.B. Bickerstaff. If it all broke right, though, Cleveland could be pretty good!

Advertisement

Um … it all broke right. Like, really, really right.

The Cavs opened the season with 15 straight wins and never looked back, rampaging to a 64-18 record — the highest win total of any Cleveland squad without LeBron James — and the No. 1 seed in the East.

They did get better health: from Mitchell and Mobley, both of whom will likely earn All-NBA recognition; from Garland, who reminded those who’d downgraded him during an injury-ravaged campaign that he might be the most underrated star in the league; and from Ty Jerome, who spent his first three pro seasons as a fringe rotation player bouncing from team to team, who missed nearly all of last season with an ankle injury, and who blossomed this season into one of the NBA’s best backup guards, a legitimate Sixth Man of the Year candidate.

Advertisement

Atkinson did revamp Cleveland’s offense, moving Mitchell and Garland off the ball more frequently, taking advantage of their shooting gravity and opening up wider driving and cutting lanes while diverting some on-ball reps elsewhere — most notably Mobley, whose leap on the offensive end turned him into one of the best all-around players in the league. It worked: Cleveland led the NBA in points scored per possession, fielding one of the most efficient offenses of the last 50 years.

They were balanced, too: With Defensive Player of the Year candidate Mobley and perennially unsung interior deterrent Jarrett Allen leading the way, the Cavs boasted a top-eight defense. It all adds up to excellence; Cleveland finished with the 13th-highest margin of victory in NBA history.

For six months, the Cavs checked every box, including an elite record against good teams, with splits of their season series against both Boston and Oklahoma City. Everything points toward them being a championship-caliber team. All that’s left now is to prove it.


What we know about the Heat

Well, they spent most of the first three and a half months of the season in a spiritual tables, ladders and chairs match with their best player, which wasn’t particularly fun. Then, after they traded Jimmy Butler away, the Heat lost 17 of their next 21 games, including a 10-game losing streak — the franchise’s longest skid in 17 years, since before Erik Spoelstra took the clipboard from Pat Riley, with a frankly unbelievable number of blown leads.

Advertisement

That wasn’t particularly fun, either.

Given how abysmal the bottom of the East was, though, even that horrendous stretch wasn’t enough to totally sink the Heat … which afforded Spoelstra and his mish-mash crew of Finals-run-era holdovers and post-Jimmy-deal newcomers an opportunity to find themselves.

Miami took advantage of a friendly closing slate, with linchpin All-Stars Tyler Herro and Bam Adebayo leading an 8-4 run over the final 12 games of the regular season. The Heat hammered the feckless Bulls in Chicago in their play-in opener, behind 38 from an unfettered Herro … and survived blowing a 17-point lead on Friday in Atlanta, thanks to a heroic overtime performance by Davion Mitchell — a Sacramento cast-off who’d gone through the motions on an underwhelming Raptors team before landing in Miami as the Jimmy trade grew into a five-team monster, promptly proved himself a hand-in-glove fit for a hard-charging defensive culture, and then saved the friggin’ season:

The Heat, who spent the first five months of the season stinking at offense, have scored nearly 122 points per 100 possessions over their last dozen games. They have Adebayo leading a defense that finished the regular season ninth in points allowed per possession, and that has clamped down at a near-top-five level with Bam, Davion Mitchell and Andrew Wiggins on the floor together. And they have Spoelstra, still one of the league’s most meticulous game-planners, with eight or nine guys he trusts.

Advertisement

I’m not sure that’s enough to put a scare into one of the best regular-season teams we’ve seen in ages. Be honest, though: Are you sure it’s not?



Source link