Donovan Mitchell Sends Strong Message Hours Before Cavs-Pistons Game 3

Cleveland Cavaliers star Donovan Mitchell kept it short before one of the biggest games of Cleveland’s season.

Mitchell posted “#LetEmKnow” on X hours before the Cavaliers hosted the Detroit Pistons in Game 3 of their Eastern Conference semifinal series. The Cavaliers reposted the message, giving it even more weight with Cleveland down 0-2 and needing a home response after two straight 10-point losses in Detroit.

The post was not a long speech. It did not need to be. “Let Em Know” has become part of Mitchell’s Cavaliers identity, and the timing made the message clear enough: Cleveland is running out of room in a series that Detroit has controlled through physical defense, fourth-quarter execution and Cade Cunningham’s late-game shot-making.

The Cavaliers are not in a must-win spot mathematically. They are in one practically.


Donovan Mitchell’s Message Comes With Cavaliers Facing Real Pressure

Mitchell’s post landed after Cleveland lost Game 1, 111-101, and Game 2, 107-97. The Cavaliers had chances in both games, but Detroit closed better each time.

In Game 1, the Pistons forced 19 Cleveland turnovers and turned them into 31 points. Detroit also answered Cleveland’s fourth-quarter push with an 18-8 closing run, powered by three straight Jalen Duren dunks. Mitchell scored 23 points in the opener, while James Harden added 22, including 13 in the fourth quarter.

Game 2 followed a different path but led to the same result. Mitchell scored 31 points and Jarrett Allen added 22, but the Cavaliers shot just 7-of-32 from 3-point range and missed all 11 of their fourth-quarter 3-point attempts. Detroit won the final stretch again, with Cunningham scoring 12 of his 25 points in the fourth quarter.

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That is the context behind Mitchell’s post. It was not just a slogan. It was a reminder that Cleveland’s response has to show up on the floor immediately.


Donovan Mitchell’s Scoring Has Held Up as James Harden Struggles

One of the more complicated parts of the series for Cleveland is that Mitchell has not disappeared. He has scored 54 points through the first two games, including a 31-point Game 2 that gave the Cavaliers a chance despite their shooting problems.

The issue is that Cleveland has not gotten enough clean, connected offense around him.

Harden’s Game 2 was especially rough. ESPN’s game story linked to a separate piece on the Cavaliers needing to “figure it out” after Harden’s struggles, and the box score reflected the problem: Harden shot 3-of-13 from the field as Cleveland fell behind 0-2.

That contrast matters. Mitchell is averaging 27 points through two games in the series. Harden is at 16 points per game through the same stretch after scoring 22 in Game 1 and 10 in Game 2. The Cavaliers do not need Harden to outscore Mitchell, but they do need him to stabilize possessions, punish Detroit’s pressure and make the Pistons pay for loading up on Cleveland’s top scorer.

Kenny Atkinson also hinted after Game 2 that Cleveland could need a different spark. He said he had to “look at everything” after another slow start from the starting group and added that the Cavaliers found some tactical positives in the second half.


Cade Cunningham and Pistons Have Outplayed the Cavaliers Late

The Cavaliers’ problem is not only self-inflicted. The Pistons have been the better team through two games, and Cunningham has looked comfortable in the moments that have decided the series.

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Cunningham had 23 points and seven assists in Game 1, then followed with 25 points and 10 assists in Game 2. ESPN noted that he has opened his postseason career with 15 straight 20-point games, the fourth-longest such streak in NBA playoff history behind Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, LeBron James and Anthony Davis.

Pistons coach J.B. Bickerstaff was blunt after Game 2, calling Cunningham “the killer, the closer” after his fourth-quarter surge.

Detroit has also gotten timely support beyond its star. Tobias Harris scored 20 points in Game 1 and 21 in Game 2. Duncan Robinson had 19 in the opener and 17 in Game 2. Duren’s rebounding, finishing and physicality have changed stretches of both games.

That is why Mitchell’s message matters, but also why it cannot be the whole answer. Cleveland needs its best player to set the tone, but the Cavaliers also need to match Detroit’s force for four quarters.


Cavaliers Need More Than a Donovan Mitchell Scoring Night

Mitchell can win a playoff game with shot-making. The Cavaliers may need that version of him in Game 3.

But Cleveland’s path back into the series likely requires more than Mitchell carrying the offense. The Cavs need Harden to clean up his decision-making and shot quality. They need better spacing after Detroit’s pressure disrupted their ball handlers. They need more from the supporting cast from deep after the Game 2 fourth-quarter drought. And they need to keep Cunningham from dictating every late possession.

The good news for Cleveland is that both games in Detroit had windows where the Cavaliers looked capable of turning the series. The bad news is that Detroit has owned the responses.

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Mitchell’s post gave Cavaliers fans the message they wanted to hear before Game 3. Now Cleveland has to make it look like more than a hashtag.

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This article was originally published on HEAVY


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