After falling behind 2-0 to Detroit in the Eastern Conference semifinals, Cavaliers head coach Kenny Atkinson and his staff considered making a starting lineup change, writes Chris Fedor of Cleveland.com (subscription required). However, Atkinson decided to stick with forward Dean Wade as the fifth starter alongside his “core four” of Donovan Mitchell, James Harden, Evan Mobley, and Jarrett Allen.
Wade, who will be an unrestricted free agent this summer, has rewarded Atkinson’s faith in him, according to Fedor. While the 29-year-old only scored three points in nearly 40 minutes of action across Games 3 and 4, he has been a crucial part of the Cleveland’s defensive plan against All-Star guard Cade Cunningham. According to NBA’s matchup data, Cunningham had five points, two assists, and four turnovers on 2-of-8 shooting when Wade was his primary defender in the two games in Cleveland.
“I thought Dean Wade took his defense to another level,” Atkinson said after Monday’s win. “To have a 6-foot-9 body that can lean on Cade and make things difficult, I thought that was key.”
No Cavaliers player has a higher individual net rating during the postseason than Wade. The team has outscored its playoff opponents by 10.6 points per 100 possessions during his 262 minutes of action and has been outscored by 10.2 points per 100 possessions in the 271 minutes he hasn’t played.
“All the lineups with Dean, we rebound better and we defend better,” Atkinson said.
Here’s more from around the Central:
- The Bulls have plenty of work to do on the roster this summer, according to Keith Smith of Spotrac, who suggests in his offseason preview that Matas Buzelis looks like the only young player on the roster who is guaranteed to be a long-term cornerstone. Smith explores potential uses for Chicago’s cap room, noting that taking on unwanted contracts attached to more valuable assets is probably the safest approach. If the Bulls want to target a restricted free agent, they’d be better off working out a sign-and-trade than risking an offer sheet that might gets matched, Smith adds.
- In a pair of subscriber-only stories for The Chicago Tribune, Julia Poe considers the Bulls‘ draft options with the fourth and 15th overall picks and reports that Bryson Graham has made his first personnel change since being hired as the team’s executive VP of basketball operations, having let go of Windy City Bulls general manager Josh Malone.
- Revisiting the trade that saw the Pacers give up a handful of assets – including what turned out to to be the No. 5 pick in this year’s draft – for Ivica Zubac, Jay King of The Athletic questions whether acting with such urgency to address the team’s hole at center was the right call. As King observes, even though they appeared in the 2025 NBA Finals, there’s no guarantee that a healthier version of the Pacers will be able to get back to that level next season, especially since so much is hinging on Tyrese Haliburton recapturing his prior form after an Achilles tear, one of the most difficult injuries to return from.

At 4 we need to get this pick right. It’s probably the most important pick since we got 1 in 2008. I wouldn’t mind getting one of these players.
Acuff
Wagler
Wilson
Acuff defense is awful, Wagler has zero athleticism but high ball IQ and Wilson might be a genetic freak but shooting is inconsistent.
Personally I am more intrigued with 15. I want Cameron Carr at 15. 6’5 athletic defensive player who has a nice shot and has Edgecombe type game to him. I would be exteremely satsified if he was there at 15 and we take him over Quiantance or Karim Lopez.
I’d take Wilson. He has higher upside than Boozer, but I agree with your concerns. He could be the best player in the draft. At the very least he should be a solid rotation player. That’s not necessarily what you want at 4 though so I get it
I like Wilson’s measurables and game. I think it’s a hidden level of the team that has yet to be addressed in a while, which is explosiveness and just raw ability to overpower the defender in the transition game. Plus if the reports are true and Essengue grew a few more inches during the spring and close to 7’0 now we would have an embarrassment of riches with Buzelis Wilson Essengue on the front line.