Evan Mobley has plenty to prove. Cavs vs. Raptors NBA playoffs preview
· Yahoo Sports
INDEPENDENCE — Evan Mobley wants to prove he should be considered a cornerstone of a championship-caliber Cavaliers team for many seasons to come, and the 24-year-old forward realizes franchises render verdicts along those lines by evaluating the NBA playoffs.
In February, the Cavs traded one of their former top-five draft picks with an All-Star resume — point guard Darius Garland — for a future Hall of Famer — James Harden. The blockbuster move did nothing to limit the imaginations of NBA fans and pundits regarding what the Cavs could contemplate about Mobley's future, especially if the team were to disappoint in the 2026 playoffs.
Visit betsport.cv for more information.
On the eve of the Cavs' best-of-seven first-round playoff series against the Toronto Raptors, Mobley didn't flinch when he was asked how he views outsiders routinely mentioning him in hypothetical trade scenarios centered on Milwaukee Bucks superstar Giannis Antetokounmpo and whether he feels additional pressure because of it.
"I just don't really try to feed into that," Mobley told the Beacon Journal. "Everyone's going to have a conversation or talk about this trade, that trade, eventually in your career. That's going to come up, and if you focus on that, you can get sidetracked and distracted from what's going on. I just focus on my game, focus on how I can keep getting better and, I mean, I want to stay here. I think we have a great team this year, and I think that's what I'm focused on."
Cleveland Cavaliers vs. Toronto Raptors features former Rookie of Year rivals Evan Mobley and Scottie Barnes
Game 1 between the fourth-seeded Cavs (52-30) and fifth-seeded Raptors (46-36) is scheduled to tip off at 1 p.m. Saturday, April 18, at Rocket Arena.
The performances of Mobley and Raptors forward Scottie Barnes will be stacked against each other and compared throughout the Eastern Conference series. Barnes became the 2021-22 NBA Rookie of the Year after a tight race with Mobley, whom the Cavs drafted third overall, one spot before the Raptors picked Barnes.
In Rookie of the Year voting, Barnes received 378 points (48 first-place votes) from a global panel of 100 sportswriters and broadcasters. Mobley finished runner-up with 363 points (43 first-place votes).
"You can use whatever you want as motivation. I use it a little bit," Mobley said. "But I'm not really too focused on that. I'm years in now at this point."
Mobley is indeed in his fifth NBA season, and it has been a roller coaster. Last year, Mobley made his first All-Star team, earned All-NBA Second Team status and won the NBA Defensive Player of the Year award. This season, Mobley regressed while the Cavs experimented with him on offense, asking him to essentially play point forward and create for himself from the perimeter.
The trial period didn't last long, though injuries followed it.
"It was a little choppy," Mobley conceded.
Cavaliers forward Evan Mobley confident calf injury his behind him
In December and January, Mobley suffered a strained left calf twice, forcing him to miss five consecutive games because of the first setback and seven games in a row because of the second injury. When Mobley returned to action, his job responsibilities suddenly required him to learn how to mesh with Harden, an 11-time All-Star whom the Cavs acquired on Feb. 3.
"Every year's not going to go as good as the last year where we barely lost and had [more than] 60 wins and everything went smoothly," Mobley said. "Every year is different. I wouldn't say it's weird, but that just happens sometimes. You're not always going to have your best season every single year. That's impossible.
"I just take what I have and try to just expand on that. Once I came back from the injuries and got back to having my legs under me, I feel like I had a great season. I feel like I'm in a great place right now mentally and physically and where I'm at in my game. We're going to continue that into playoffs and see where it goes from there."
Mobley said his pesky calf feels "great" now.
"I don't even think about it," Mobley added. "I didn't really think about it too much during the time [I was injured], either. I knew I'd get through it, but it definitely was a part of the journey."
Evan Mobley stats entering 2026 NBA playoffs
Mobley explained he has returned in the past six weeks to doing on the court what he does best. He and Harden have studied film together and learned each other's cues.
"Things weren't going the best early on [this season] as a team and with me as well," Mobley said. "I feel like we figured out a way to change."
Listed by the Cavs as 7 feet and 230 pounds, Mobley appeared in 65 regular-season games during 2025-26. He averaged 18.2 points on 54.6% shooting from the field (29.7% on 3-pointers), 9.0 rebounds, 3.6 rebounds, 1.7 blocked shots and 31.9 minutes. Many of his statistics are nearly the same as they were last season with two notable exceptions: His shooting percentages dropped on 3-pointers from 37% to 29.7% and on free throws from 72.5% to 60.6%.
Earlier this month, Cavs coach Kenny Atkinson acknowledged Mobley has endured an uneven season, but Atkinson also declared, "I believe desperately in Evan Mobley." The reason? Mobley has the requisite physical tools to flourish. In a way, he's a microcosm of the Cavs — extremely talented, yet left striving to put it all together on a consistent basis, including when the stakes are raised.
"I keep saying he came back [from the All-Star break] with a chip on his shoulder," Atkinson said. "He wasn't satisfied with how the first part of the season went, and guys just almost refocus, collect themselves. We've obviously been really intentional about getting him the ball deeper into the paint, and that helps with James' ability to find him on mismatches."
The playoffs are the real test for any player, though, and Mobley is no longer new to them. He and the Cavs will appear in the postseason for the fourth consecutive year. The first three trips yielded one opening-round elimination (2023) and two second-round knockouts (2024 and 2025).
"It's about intention. It's about locking in. It's about physicality. It's a whole different game," Mobley said of the playoff lessons he has absorbed. "When you're out there, you've got to be 100% locked in, not worried about what's outside of the lines, and do what the team needs you to do.
"I'm not really looking for certain accolades. [I'm looking to do] whatever it takes. Whether that's a lot of points, a lot of rebounds, a lot of assists, help defense, it doesn't matter right now. It's about winning."
It's also about Mobley showing everyone he can help the Cavs contend instead of wither when it matters most.
Nate Ulrich is the sports columnist of the Akron Beacon Journal and a sports features writer. Nate can be reached at [email protected]. On Twitter: @ByNateUlrich.
This article originally appeared on Akron Beacon Journal: Evan Mobley strives to prove himself as Cavs' future in NBA playoffs