Dennis Schroder gave the Cleveland Cavaliers another steady 20 minutes on Monday night, scoring seven points in a 112-103 home win over the Detroit Pistons that tied their second-round series at 2-2. He shot 3-for-4 from the field, added two rebounds and one steal, and then posted to Instagram after the game.
The win mattered because Cleveland had to answer after a tight opening stretch of the series and did so with Schroder in a supporting role that fit the moment. The veteran guard was traded to the Cavaliers through the Sacramento Kings in the middle of the year, and his night reflected the kind of quick-impact production teams hoped to get when they brought him in. He averaged 10.8 points, 2.7 rebounds and 4.9 assists in the 2025-26 regular season while shooting 40.5% from the field and 32.9% from three-point range across 70 games.
Cleveland entered the playoffs as the Eastern Conference's fourth seed after a 52-30 regular season and had already survived a seven-game first-round series against the Toronto Raptors. Now the Cavaliers are back in a series that has become a grind, with Game 5 set for Wednesday in Detroit and the winner moving on to face the New York Knicks in the Eastern Conference finals.
That is where Schroder's night lands in the larger picture. The 17th pick in the 2013 NBA Draft has spent 13 years moving through the league, with stops in Atlanta, Oklahoma City, Los Angeles, Brooklyn, Golden State, Toronto, Boston, Detroit and Houston, and Monday's performance was another reminder of why he keeps finding a place in the rotation when the stakes rise. He did not need a huge scoring load to matter; he simply gave Cleveland enough on a night when the Cavaliers could not afford much less.

