Cleveland Cavaliers vs. Toronto Raptors 2026 NBA Playoffs Preview: Is There Any Value on the Massive Underdog?

Toronto went 3-0 against Cleveland in the regular season, including twice in Cleveland. So why are the Raptors getting +425 to +600 in the first round? The market might be making a mistake.
Scottie Barnes

On paper, the Cleveland Cavaliers versus Toronto Raptors first-round series looks like a formality. The Cavaliers are a heavy favorite — ranging from -575 to -900 depending on where you shop — and most oddsmakers expect them to dispatch the Raptors in five games. Game 1 tips Saturday, April 18 at Rocket Arena in Cleveland (5:00 PM ET, Amazon Prime). Before you dismiss this series as predetermined, there is a piece of context buried in the regular season data that the market is significantly underweighting, and it could make Toronto one of the more interesting betting angles in the entire first round.

The Number That Changes Everything

Toronto won all three regular-season meetings against Cleveland in 2025-26 — including two games in Cleveland as road underdogs. Read that again. The team getting +425 to +600 in the series went 3-0 against the team favored by -8 points on Saturday, winning twice in Cleveland’s building. Regular-season results do not guarantee playoff outcomes, and every serious bettor knows that. But three head-to-head wins, including two on the road, is not a sample size you can dismiss as noise. That is a pattern, and it reflects something real about the Raptors’ ability to compete with and neutralize what the Cavaliers do.

Cleveland’s ATS Record Tells a Story Too

Here is the other number worth sitting with: Cleveland finished the regular season with the worst against-the-spread record in the entire NBA, going 33-49 ATS. The Cavaliers won games — their 52-30 record is legitimate — but they were notoriously inconsistent at covering their number. That makes sense for a team that tends to win by comfortable margins against lesser competition while playing close games against elite opponents, but it is a red flag when you are being asked to lay -8 points on Game 1 and -575 or more in a series. The market is pricing Cleveland as if they are a dominant favorite against a vastly inferior team. The data suggests the gap is considerably smaller than that.

Toronto Has the Pieces to Make This Interesting

Scottie Barnes has matured into a genuine two-way force who led Toronto’s late-season push into the postseason. The Raptors enter fully healthy — no significant injury concerns heading in — which is more than can be said for several other first-round competitors. Their point differential of plus-2.8 on the season compares favorably to Cleveland’s plus-4.1. The gap between these two teams as measured by actual margin of victory over 82 games is 1.3 points. The series price implies a much wider canyon than the underlying data supports.

James Harden had an up-and-down season for Cleveland, and his playoff track record over the past several years has been the subject of real debate among bettors and analysts. The Cavaliers are good — 52 wins proves that — but they are not a historically dominant team that should be priced as though they are guaranteed to roll through a healthy, motivated opponent that beat them three times this year.

The Specific Bets Worth Looking At

There are a few ways to approach this series from a betting standpoint, and the straight series price is not necessarily the cleanest entry point. The Raptors at +425 to +600 to win the series is intriguing given the 3-0 regular season record, and at those prices, even a modest probability assessment of Toronto winning — call it 20 to 25 percent based on the underlying evidence — represents positive expected value against the implied probability the market is assigning.

The more surgical play is Raptors +2.5 games at -130 on DraftKings. That bet pays off if Toronto forces at least a Game 6. Given the regular-season head-to-head results, Cleveland’s ATS struggles, and the tight actual point differential between the teams, getting six games out of this series is a realistic and arguably likely outcome. At -130, you are getting a fair price on a bet that does not require Toronto to win — just to be competitive over six or more games. If Cleveland’s home-court advantage materializes in Games 1 and 2 but Toronto takes care of business in their building, a deep series becomes very plausible.

Game 1 spread of -8 for Cleveland is the number to avoid. The Cavaliers may well win that game, but laying 8 points against a team that went 2-1 in Cleveland this season — including wins as road underdogs — is a tough sell. The Raptors moneyline at +250 for Game 1 is at least worth a small look for the aggressive bettor who believes in the regular-season narrative, though a more conservative approach would be waiting for the series to develop before adding to any Toronto position.

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Carmelo Roldan


Sports Betting Contributor

Carmelo graduated from Kent State University with a bachelor’s degree in business management. Using his 10+ years of sports betting experience, Carmelo is one of the main analysts for UFC on HelloRookie.