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Prediction: Cleveland Cavaliers VS New York Knicks 2025-10-22

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Cleveland Cavaliers vs. New York Knicks: A Rivalry Rekindled in the Shadow of Absentees

The NBA’s most gloriously bitter rivalry—bitter because neither team has won a championship since the 90s—kicks off with the Cleveland Cavaliers and New York Knicks trading barbs at Madison Square Garden. Let’s parse the chaos.

The Odds: A Tale of Two Favorites
The Cavaliers, defending Eastern Conference champs, are oddly the underdog here. Their implied probability via decimal odds (1.8) checks in at 55.5%, while the Knicks (2.05) sit at 48.8%. That 6.7% gap feels like the difference between “I’ll take it” and “I’ll take it… but only if you throw in a free hot dog.” The spread (-1.5 for Cleveland) suggests the books think this’ll be a nail-biter, and the total (228.5) hints at a high-octane game—if both teams’ lineups aren’t decimated by injuries.

Injury Carousel: A Buffet of Absences
Let’s start with the Cavaliers. Darius Garland, their floor-general-turned-ACL-victim, is out for the first month, replaced by Lonzo Ball. Think of Lonzo as a substitute teacher: competent, but not exactly the star of the show. Also sidelined: Max Strus (foot), De’Andre Hunter (knee), and a possible absence of Dean Wade, who’s here to “provide veteran leadership” but might just provide veteran confusion. Cleveland’s frontcourt—Evan Mobley and Jarrett Allen—is a double-dip of dominance, but their perimeter defense? A sieve that could pass for a colander at a cooking show.

The Knicks? They’re playing 2025’s version of “Guess How Many Injuries I Have.” Mitchell Robinson (ankle), Josh Hart (back), and Karl-Anthony Towns (quad) are out or questionable. O.G. Anunoby is “probable,” which in NBA speak means “we’re 50% sure he won’t text out mid-game.” Their saving grace? Depth. Jalen Brunson, Mikal Bridges, and a surprisingly competent bench (hello, Pacome Dadiet!) could fill the gaps. New York’s home-court advantage is no joke—they went 27-14 at MSG last season, which is about the same as a toddler’s attention span: short, but intense when it matters.

The Rivalry: A Soap Opera with Jump Shots
Donovan Mitchell’s trade to Cleveland hasn’t healed any wounds—it’s just given the rivalry a new plot twist. The Knicks want revenge for last season’s 4-0 sweep; Cleveland wants to prove they’re still kings of the East. But let’s not forget: New York’s roster is a buffet of talent, while Cleveland’s feels like a microwave meal—fast, flashy, and prone to burning.

The Verdict: Why the Knicks Should Win… Unless They Trip Over Their Own Shoelaces
The math says Cleveland’s slightly more likely to win, but math also said the 2024 Golden State Warriors wouldn’t lose a single game. The reality? The Knicks’ depth, home-court magic, and Cleveland’s porous perimeter defense make New York the smarter bet. The Cavaliers’ offense was NBA-best last season, but without Garland, their pick-and-roll precision turns into a game of “Lonzo, roll where?” Meanwhile, Miles McBride—New York’s “Mr. Irrelevant” turned hero—could exploit Cleveland’s shaky perimeter defense like a hacker at a tech conference.

Prediction: The Knicks win 115-112 in a game that feels longer than a Marvel trilogy. Cleveland’s fans will blame Lonzo Ball for every missed pass, while New York’s crowd chants “Rebuild!” at Towns’ empty chair. But hey, at least there’ll be no shortage of drama.

Final Score: Knicks 115, Cavaliers 112. The only thing louder than the MSG crowd? The sound of Cleveland’s defense crumbling.

Created: Oct. 22, 2025, 4:29 p.m. GMT

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