Jaylon Tyson could be the answer in the Cavaliers‘ long search for a productive small forward, writes Tony Jones of The Athletic. Tyson turned in one of the best games of his brief NBA career on Friday, scoring 39 points and handing out a game-winning assist in a two-point victory at Philadelphia.
“I feel like when you get into the NBA, you have to find your niche, the one thing you are good at,” Tyson said. “Last year, that was my rookie season, so I needed to figure out where I fit in with this team. There are a lot of really good players on the roster, so I needed to figure out what role I had to play. Tonight, Philadelphia tried to take Donovan (Mitchell) out of the game, so Donovan told me to be ‘California Jaylon.’ That meant for me to go and get a bucket.”
Tyson was a high-scoring collegiate player at California who was selected with the 20th pick in the 2024 draft, but he was used to being the focus of the offense. He had to adapt when he joined a Cleveland team where he was surrounded by scorers, and he averaged just 3.6 points per game while shooting 43% from the field during his rookie year. He has increased his scoring average to 13.4 PPG this season while connecting at 52.4% from the field and 47.5% from three-point range, and Tyson’s teammates are touting him as a candidate for Most Improved Player honors.
“No disrespect to people who have won it in the past, but it seems like people have won it who were already on a star trajectory,” Mitchell said. “The award is made for people like Jaylon. He came in, and he has worked on his game, and he’s improved so much since he has been here. He should win the award.”
There’s more from the Central Division:
- Darius Garland (toe soreness) and Sam Merrill (sprained right hand) were both injured in Wednesday’s game at Philadelphia and will be examined this weekend, Chris Fedor of Cleveland.com states in a subscriber-only story. Garland, who’s the Cavaliers‘ second-leading scorer, is experiencing pain in his right big toe, which is on the opposite foot from the toe injury that required offseason surgery and has continued to bother him. Merrill missed about a month earlier this season with a right hand sprain, but team sources tell Fedor that the bruising and swelling are less severe this time. He was also able to use his hand normally before Friday’s game, coach Kenny Atkinson told reporters.
- Pacers center Isaiah Jackson, who returned to action on Saturday after missing nearly four weeks with a concussion, talked to Dustin Dopirak of The Indianapolis Star about the severity of the condition. “Headaches,” Jackson said. “Fogginess. My thoughts were foggy. … My symptoms were severe. Light sensitivity. Sound sensitivity. I couldn’t even be around. I was bad. I was literally just in my room the blinds were shut. I had sunglasses on. It was bad.”
- Bulls guard Josh Giddey, who has been sidelined since December 29 with a strained left hamstring, has been upgraded from “out” to “doubtful” for Sunday’s game against Brooklyn, per K.C. Johnson of Chicago Sports Network (Twitter link). Giddey isn’t expected to play, according to Johnson, but it’s a sign that he could return to action soon.

Current top 5 MIP candidates
Deni Avdija
17-7-4 > 26-7-7
Jalen Johnson
19-10-5 > 23-10-8
Keyonte George
17-4-5.5 > 24-4-7
Nickeil Alexander-Walker
9.5-3-3 > 20.6-3.5-3.5
Anthony Black
9.5-3-3 > 16-4-4
Other notable changes I believe have a good shout…
Ryan Rollins
6-2-2 > 16-4.5-5.5
Jaylon Tyson
3.5-2-1 > 13.5-5.5-2
Neemius Queta
5-4-0.5 > 10-8.5-1.5
Just for reference Deni started the season off with the 3rd best odds to win the award so not to discredit his improvement but it was almost expected he’d be somewhere around this level going off projections.
Jalen Johnson although I like the guy has had the least amount of growth statistically, 4 points and 3 assists more per game.
I personally agree with Mitchell and think it should go to someone who didn’t have the expected trajectory. If you compare these guys not off face value but off percentage increases Tyson improved his scoring by 285%. For reference Deni who averaged 17 the year before if he increased his scoring by that same percentage he’d have to put up 65 points per game. That’s just scoring alone. Tyson doubled his rebounds and doubled his assists, while also drastically improving his efficiency.
I’d love to see a guy like him or Rollins earn the award cause it shows more growth. NBA hasn’t done that since CJ McCollum way back in 2015-16, all the recent selections have been guys we expected to be at the top and improve such as Ja Morant, Tyrese Maxey, Brandon Ingram etc etc
NAW by big margin for now. Johnson, and to some extent Avdija, shouldn’t be in conversation at all. Tyson just didn’t receive any chance year one, so it’s not his improvement as much as Atkinson being desperate at sf position, so he had to give him chance this year.
For Black, if he can go to 20-7-7 without losing efficiency, i would take him into serious consideration.
The thing that hurts Black is that the Magic have played below expectations this year. Not really sure what’s going on there…
Avdija and Johnson are neck in neck in my book.
Was at the bulls game yesterday, team is flawed but provided some great shot making by Coby and good all around game from Vu. Donovan still refuses to play Buzelis over 30 minutes which is insane, only 29 yesterday. Dalon Terry is horrible even in garbage time. Ayo played his heart out but this team is not talented or deep enough to do anything other than a play-in again. Fun experience with the family, but man seeing those 6 trophies in the display case really hurts my heart these days. Bulls are starting to become the 4th option in this city with both Bears/Cubs resurgence and White Sox optimism.