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The Detroit Pistons will host the Cleveland Cavaliers tonight at 8 PM EST for a pivotal Game 5. This series will return to Detroit tied up with two wins apiece.
On DraftKings Sportsbook, the Pistons are favored by 3.5 points and this game carries a total of 212.5 points.
Let’s dive into three of my favorite player prop bets for tonight’s Game 5 matchup.
Donovan Mitchell exploded for 43 points in a pivotal Game 4 victory against the Pistons. He shot 13/26 from the field and launched 12 treys, of which he cashed four. His role on this team is to score, a lot. I’m anticipating this to continue for the rest of the Cavs’ postseason run. Mitchell has gone for more than 30 in three straight games now, and Detroit’s been trying to throw different types of coverages at him. They’ve leaned heavily on Ausar Thompson as the primary on-ball defender when they can keep him attached, then scrambled into a mix of switches and extra help to crowd Mitchell’s first step and take away drives.
The problem is that Mitchell has adjusted on the fly: when Thompson gets screened off or Detroit switches a weaker defender onto him, he’s immediately hunting that matchup. When the Pistons show extra bodies early, he’s countering by rejecting screens, pulling up before the help can set, or passing out of the double while relocating and taking the shot anyway. If Detroit keeps changing coverages but can’t consistently keep Thompson on him for an entire possession, he should easily get to 26.5 due to the volume alone.
This under is about how narrow Duren’s scoring diet becomes when Cleveland is set with size in Evan Mobley and Jarrett Allen. Over his last four games against the Cavs, he’s averaged 9.5 points, and the individual lines in that stretch show how quickly his touches vanish once Detroit’s offense turns into Cade Cunningham creation without Duren’s efficacy as a rim roller. Duren is simply asked to finish what’s left at the rim. Cleveland’s front line can keep two massive paint bodies on the floor, which makes rolls and dump-offs feel crowded. Duren’s effectively neutralized in this matchup, similar to the Orlando Magic matchup. The gap between his regular-season baseline and this matchup is exactly why the under is appealing: he scored 19.5 PPG in the regular season, but this series has repeatedly pushed him into low-volume looks.
Harden’s road scoring has been suspect, and Detroit can ensure that leak stays a problem for the Cavs. In this postseason, Harden has gone Under 19.5 in four out of five road games. He hit for 18, 19, and 16 points against Toronto, and 10 points in Game 2 at Detroit where he went 3/13 with four turnovers. The matchup matters too: Detroit’s defensive game plan is built to crowd ball handlers and live with the pass rather than letting Harden walk into his rhythm dribble package, which is how you get these low-shot and low-efficiency Harden nights. Harden’s all-time playoff road scoring is actually strong, but he’s not the score-first combo guard that he once was.
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