Knicks vs Cavaliers Prediction: Can Cleveland Shock New York in ECF Game 1?

The Eastern Conference Finals tip off at Madison Square Garden tonight as a hungry Cleveland Cavaliers squad tries to prove the bookmakers wrong against a Knicks team that hasn't lost a playoff series yet.
Donovan Mitchell

The 2026 NBA Eastern Conference Finals get underway Tuesday night at Madison Square Garden, where the New York Knicks (53-29) host the Cleveland Cavaliers (52-30) in Game 1 at 8 p.m. ET on ESPN. This is one of the most intriguing matchups left in the postseason — two Eastern heavyweights separated by just one game in the regular season standings, now meeting on the biggest stage the conference has to offer.

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New York finished the regular season with the third seed in the East, running a 30-10 record at home that made Madison Square Garden one of the most hostile environments in the league. The Knicks swept the Atlanta Hawks and then dispatched the Philadelphia 76ers in four straight games to reach the conference finals. Cleveland, meanwhile, clawed their way through a pair of brutal series — beating Toronto in seven games and then outlasting the Detroit Pistons in another seven-game war — finally reaching the conference finals for the first time under Donovan Mitchell’s watch. The Cavs are battle-tested and hungry, but now they face a New York team playing its best basketball of the postseason.

Bookmakers Heavily Favor the Knicks in This One

The oddsmakers aren’t hiding which team they prefer heading into Game 1. New York opens as a substantial favorite, and the numbers tell the story clearly. The Knicks are installed at -265 on the moneyline, with Cleveland coming in at +210. The spread sits at Knicks -7.5, with the over/under set at 217.5 points.

The public betting split is somewhat interesting — a majority of bets are going toward the Cavaliers to cover the 7.5-point spread, though the money percentage leans New York. Prediction markets are even more lopsided, with forecasters pricing a New York ECF series win in five games at 25 cents on the dollar versus just 9 cents for a Cleveland five-game victory. The implied probability on the moneyline gives the Knicks roughly a 71-73% chance of winning tonight’s opener.

Two Stars, Two Different Paths to This Stage

The central storyline of this series runs through two elite guards. Jalen Brunson has been an absolute machine for the Knicks throughout these playoffs, averaging 27.4 points, 6.1 assists and 2.6 rebounds per game across 10 postseason contests while shooting 48.5% from the field. He’s been the most consistent offensive engine in the East this postseason, and playing at home with MSG rocking should only amplify his production.

Donovan Mitchell, on the other hand, has had a more uneven run. The Cavaliers star is averaging 25.6 points, 5.2 rebounds and 3.3 assists per game across 14 playoff games, but his efficiency has fluctuated wildly. He scored 43 points in Game 4 against the Pistons, then shot just 30% from the field in the loss in Game 6. His regular season output of 27.9 points per game — one of the best marks in the NBA — shows the ceiling is sky-high, but getting there consistently against New York’s defense will be the challenge. This is also the first conference finals of Mitchell’s career, and Madison Square Garden on a national stage will test his composure in a new way.

Beyond the headliners, New York’s depth is a real advantage. Karl-Anthony Towns leads the Knicks in rebounds (11.9 per game this season) and assists (6.6 per game), serving as the offensive hub who can drag Cleveland’s defense into pick-and-roll purgatory all night. The Knicks also feature OG Anunoby, though he appears on the injury report heading into tonight’s game. Cleveland counters with Evan Mobley, one of the best two-way bigs in the league averaging 9.0 rebounds and 5.0 blocks per game in the postseason, but the Cavaliers are thinner in terms of reliable secondary scoring options.

Team stats paint a nuanced picture. Cleveland actually scores more per game during the regular season (119.5 points) than New York (116.5), but the Knicks have been the superior defensive team — allowing just 101.0 points per game this season compared to Cleveland’s 108.8. The Knicks rank second in the league in offensive rating (119.8) and seventh in defensive rating (113.3). Cleveland is sixth in offensive rating (119.2) but 15th defensively (115.1), a gap that matters enormously at this stage of the playoffs.

The Knicks’ home court advantage is real and documented. New York went 30-10 at MSG during the regular season and has been dominant in front of their own crowd throughout these playoffs. The Garden crowd can shift momentum dramatically, and for a Cleveland team making its first conference finals in years, the noise factor is not trivial. The Cavaliers went just 25-16 on the road during the regular season, and they’ve already played 14 grueling playoff games to get here.

One other factor worth watching: series fatigue. Cleveland battled through two seven-game series — an enormous physical and mental toll. The Knicks, who swept the 76ers and closed out Atlanta in five, are considerably fresher. Depth and rest could matter by the fourth quarter of a tight game, and New York has both advantages going into tonight.

Prediction and Best Bet

The Knicks are the right side here, but the real question is whether they cover 7.5. New York has covered that spread 16 times in 29 chances when favored by that margin or more this season — a 55% clip that isn’t overwhelming. Cleveland has covered in one of their two opportunities as a 7.5+ underdog, which isn’t a large sample. The Cavaliers are resilient and Mitchell is capable of going for 35 on any given night, which could keep this one within range even if the Knicks ultimately win.

The sharper play here is backing Cleveland to keep it close. New York wins Game 1 in front of their crowd — that outcome is very likely — but the Cavaliers have shown throughout these playoffs that they don’t get blown out, grinding through two seven-game series by staying competitive until the final buzzer. Game 1 home court advantage tends to produce close battles as both teams size each other up, and Mitchell’s ability to explode offensively means the margin is unlikely to reach double digits.

  • Prediction: Knicks 116, Cavaliers 108
  • Best Bet: Cavaliers +7.5

New York wins the opener at home, but Cleveland keeps it competitive until the final minutes. Mitchell and the Cavs have proven all postseason that they do not go quietly, and a 7.5-point spread gives them plenty of cushion to cover even in defeat. This is the kind of game that ends 112-106 with Cleveland looking like the more dangerous team heading into Game 2.

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Bill Christy


Sports Betting Contributor

Bill is a high-volume sports bettor who runs his own sports investing business. He has an uncanny ability to find tons of mathematical edges on each day’s sports betting card. Bill covers all sports but his bread and butter is UFC, Golf, and College Hoops. Find him on X at @LarrysLocks2