The Cavaliers are 0-2 and the math is brutal: no team has ever crawled out of an 0-3 hole. They get Rocket Arena, they get a 2-point cushion from the books, and they get a Knicks team that hasn't lost in 9 games. Pick your poison.
Game 1 was the gut-punch — Cleveland led by 22 with under 8 minutes left and watched Jalen Brunson hang 38 to drag it to overtime, where the Knicks never trailed. Game 2 was just a beating: 109-93, Josh Hart with a playoff career-high 26, Brunson sliding into a 19-and-14 distributor game. New York has answers on both ends right now.


Donovan Mitchell is the asterisk. There were whispers of a leg issue after Game 1, then he came out flat in Game 2 with 7 first-half points. He's not on the injury report, but if he's compromised, Cleveland's ceiling drops through the floor. OG Anunoby is fully off the report after returning from a hamstring strain, which gives Tom Thibodeau his preferred starting 5 intact.
The Cavs being -2 at home tracks with normal home-court math, but the moneyline implying a 55% Cleveland win feels generous given how the first 2 games actually looked. The total at 215 is the more interesting number — Game 2 went under by 13 because New York strangled Cleveland's perimeter looks, and there's no reason to think the Knicks suddenly stop doing that.
Cleveland's path is the same one every desperate home team uses: hit first, get the building loud, force the road team to play through bodies on every possession. If Mitchell is healthy and the threes finally drop, this is a series again. If not, we're previewing an elimination game on Monday.

