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Kenny Atkinson admits Cavaliers still searching for answers after Pistons take 2-0 lead

Published on: 2026-05-10 | Author: admin

The Cleveland Cavaliers left Little Caesars Arena with an unresolved issue following Thursday’s 107-97 defeat to the Detroit Pistons. Head coach Kenny Atkinson openly criticized nearly every aspect of Cleveland’s performance as the Cavaliers slipped to a 2-0 deficit in the Eastern Conference semifinal series.

Detroit erased a brief fourth-quarter lead held by Cleveland with relentless rebounding and timely shot-making. Atkinson highlighted one key factor that turned the game.

“I think the thing that stood out to me was the offensive rebounds,” Atkinson said after the game. “I think they had eight offensive rebounds in that fourth quarter. That’s a lot.”

The Cavaliers momentarily took an 81-79 lead early in the final period after trailing by as many as 14 points, but the Pistons responded immediately. Duncan Robinson nailed a go-ahead three-pointer, and Cade Cunningham followed with another deep dagger to secure the victory.

Atkinson noted that Cleveland’s inability to finish defensive possessions sapped momentum from their comeback effort.

“We got some good stops, made some good defensive plays and then we couldn’t come up with the rebound,” Atkinson explained. “You play for 18 seconds and the shot clock miss, offensive rebound, and it just takes the wind out of your sails.”

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The Cavaliers shot only 7-for-32 from three-point range, including 0-for-11 in the fourth quarter. James Harden endured one of his toughest playoff performances, finishing with 10 points on 3-for-13 shooting and attempting just two shots after halftime.

Atkinson surprisingly defended Harden’s decision-making while also accepting fault for the lack of touches.

“We can’t have our Hall of Famer taking two shots in the second half,” Atkinson said. “I’ll take that one.”

The Cleveland coach added that Detroit’s defensive pressure forced Harden into a facilitator role.

“Sometimes as a great player that’s what the game calls for,” Atkinson said. “He was just hitting the next open man. Sometimes that’s it when so much attention is being paid to you.”

While Harden struggled, Donovan Mitchell attacked consistently and scored 31 points. Atkinson praised Mitchell’s aggressiveness and ability to pressure Detroit’s defense.

“I thought Don was super aggressive tonight driving the ball,” Atkinson said. “He lived in the paint.”

The bigger concern for Cleveland may be their recurring slow starts. The Cavaliers have now fallen behind by double digits in seven of their last eight games, a trend Atkinson admitted has become impossible to ignore.

“We got to look at everything,” Atkinson said. “There’s lineups. There’s tactics. There’s even more aggressive defensive tactics. Everything’s on the table.”

Detroit’s physicality has also become a major problem for Cleveland’s frontcourt. Cade Cunningham finished with 25 points and 10 assists, while Tobias Harris added 21 points and repeatedly punished the Cavaliers on closeouts and post-ups.

“He’s hurting us in the post,” Atkinson said about Harris. “He’s hurting us on closeouts too.”

Even in defeat, Atkinson pointed to several positives. Cleveland committed only two turnovers in the second half, pushed the pace more effectively after halftime, and received a strong bounce-back performance from Jarrett Allen, who scored 22 points after struggling in Game 1.

“I love both of them,” Atkinson said about Allen and Evan Mobley. “Going to keep doubling down on playing those guys together.”

Now the series shifts to Cleveland for Game 3 on Saturday, where the Cavaliers were undefeated in the first round against Toronto. But after two losses in Detroit, Atkinson acknowledged the urgency surrounding his team.

“Obviously haven’t figured that one out,” he said. “Still back to the drawing board.”