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The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 169
Thursday, 18 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 05:45 UTC
  • UTC05:45
  • EDT01:45
  • GMT06:45
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← The MonexusSports

Raptors Shock Cavs in Game 4 Thriller Despite Record-Breaking Cold Shooting

The Toronto Raptors pulled off a stunning Game 4 upset against the Cleveland Cavaliers on Sunday, shooting just 13.3 percent from three-point range — the lowest mark ever recorded in a playoff victory.

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The Toronto Raptors handed the Cleveland Cavaliers a stunning Game 4 defeat on Sunday, April 26, 2026, pulling off a victory that will be dissected by coaches, analysts, and basketball historians for years to come. The Raptors shot just 13.3 percent from three-point range — the lowest percentage ever recorded in a playoff win in NBA history — and still outlasted a Cavs team that had controlled the series up to that point.

The result flips the series narrative entirely. After Cleveland took a commanding 3-0 lead, many expected a sweep. Instead, Toronto forced a Game 5 in Cleveland, extending the series and delivering a visceral reminder that basketball is won in the paint and at the free-throw line as much as from beyond the arc.

From Beyond the Arc to the Free-Throw Line

Toronto's perimeter game collapsed in the most public way possible. The Raptors' shooters missed 26 of 30 attempts from three-point range, a performance that would have ended most teams' playoff hopes. The Cavaliers, by contrast, connected on a respectable 36.4 percent of their three-point attempts — a gap that should have spelled disaster for Toronto.

What saved the Raptors was their work inside the arc and at the stripe. Toronto attacked the basket relentlessly, drawing 28 free-throw attempts compared to Cleveland's 18. The Raptors converted 23 of those 28, manufacturing points at the line when the threes wouldn't fall. This was a game won on effort and discipline, not on shot-making talent.

The Raptors also dominated the offensive glass, pulling down 14 second-chance points that kept extra possessions alive despite the shooting woes. Cleveland's defensive gameplan clearly prioritized protecting the three-point line, and Toronto exploited the gaps that created in the lane.

When the Odds Favor the Defense

A 13.3 percent three-point shooting rate in a playoff context is so anomalous that it raises immediate questions about sample size and variance. Over an 82-game regular season, teams occasionally endure cold nights from deep. In a seven-game playoff series, one brutal shooting night falls within the range of normal statistical noise — particularly when the opponent is also having an imperfect night from the field.

What made the Raptors' win structurally interesting was that Cleveland's own offensive execution was mediocre by playoff standards. The Cavs shot 43.5 percent from the field overall and committed 14 turnovers, giving Toronto 19 extra possessions to work with. The Raptors converted those extra chances at the line, effectively turning their own shooting disaster into a controlled, grind-it-out victory.

This is not unprecedented. Playoff basketball rewards defensive engagement in ways regular-season games sometimes do not. The pace slows, the whistles tighten, and teams that can manufacture points without relying on the three-pointer — through transition offense, post-ups, and free-throw hunting — have a structural edge when the perimeter shots stop falling.

What This Means for the Series

The Raptors have forced a Game 5 in Cleveland. The psychological dynamic has shifted. A team that many had written off after three straight losses has demonstrated that it can win ugly, on the road, in an environment designed to break it. That matters more than the isolated shooting percentage.

Cleveland now faces a Cavs team that must win one of its next three games to advance. The Cavaliers retain the series lead, but the narrative entering Game 5 is no longer about a sweep — it's about whether a resurgent Toronto squad can complete the comeback. If the Raptors carry Sunday's defensive energy into Cleveland, the Cavs' comfortable series lead evaporates entirely.

The broader question for Cleveland concerns roster construction. The Cavs built a team optimized for offensive versatility, spacing the floor with shooting around two primary scorers. That model works when the shooters are making shots. When they are not, the Cavs lack the traditional big-man presence to grind out wins against teams willing to play physical basketball.

What Comes Next

Playoff basketball rarely produces clean storylines. Toronto's Game 4 win is unlikely to be the first entry in a dominant Raptors run — this team is not built for that kind of sustained excellence. But it may prove to be a pivotal moment in a series that looked decided three games ago. The Raptors have reminded the league that playoff basketball rewards effort, rebounding, and free-throw accuracy over shooting percentage.

Game 5 is scheduled for Tuesday in Cleveland. The Cavaliers enter that contest as favorites, but the margin of error has compressed considerably. A team that shoots 13.3 percent from three and still wins is a team that believes in its own model — and that belief, once established, is difficult to dislodge.

This publication covered the Raptors-Cavaliers series through ESPN's game reporting. National broadcast coverage framed the game as a stunning upset; Monexus focused on the structural mechanics — free-throw differential and offensive rebounding — that made the result legible even before the final buzzer.

© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire