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The Toronto Raptors have tied their playoff series against the Cleveland Cavaliers at 2-2 after making key defensive adjustments. By switching matchups and enhancing their gap help, the Raptors have effectively countered the Cavs' pick-and-roll strategy.
The Raptors switched their defensive matchups, placing Scottie Barnes on James Harden and Ja’Kobe Walter on Donovan Mitchell, which helped neutralize the Cavaliers' pick-and-roll effectiveness.
The Raptors tied the series by improving their defense, particularly in Game 4, where they limited the Cavaliers' shooting and forced turnovers.
The Cavaliers shot just 25 percent from three-point range in Game 4.
Key players in the Raptors' defensive strategy include Scottie Barnes, Ja’Kobe Walter, and Jakob Poeltl, who were instrumental in switching matchups and enhancing defensive coverage.
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After two games of being demolished by James Harden and Donovan Mitchell in the pick-and-roll, the Raptors said, ‘hey, we were the fifth-best regular season defense and we are not going to stand for this anymore.’ In Game 1, the Raptors went with some pretty standard matchup assignments. RJ Barrett on Harden, Jamal Shead on Mitchell, Brandon Ingram on Dean Wade, Scottie Barnes on Evan Mobley, and Jakob Poeltl on Jarrett Allen. Juxtapose those matchups with what we saw at the start of Game 4: Barnes on Harden, Ja’Kobe Walter (now starting in place of Shead) on Mitchell, Ingram on Wade, Poeltl on Mobley, and Barrett on Allen. What this does is take away the pick-and-roll with Allen as the screener, as any time Harden or Mitchell try to initiate this action, the Raptors can nullify it with a simple switch – since Barrett, Barnes, and Walter are all long and athletic enough to handle a multitude of different player types. So, if Harden and Mitchell want to hunt Poeltl (the weak link defensively in Toronto’s starting five), they have to use Mobley as a screener. This may not seem like a big deal, but look how little separation Mitchell is able to generate on Mobley screens: View Link The Raptors also did a great job of enhancing their gap help to clog up driving lanes, mitigate passing windows, and force Cleveland’s sketchier shooters to vanquish them (as a team, the Cavaliers shot just 25 perect from downtown in Game 4). Cleveland *should* still be able to pull this one out. They have home court advantage, superior closers, and a lot of fat they can cut out of their process (they had 18 turnovers in Game 4). But credit goes to Toronto for turning what should have been a clean sweep into an instant classic.