13 Stats to explain the Cavs 128-122 loss the Magic

The Cleveland Cavaliers couldn’t stop what has been a bad Orlando Magic offense on Wednesday, which led to their 128-122 defeat.

The stats in the table below are taken from Cleaning the Glass.

Offensive Rating

Effective Field Goal Percentage

Offensive Rebounding Percentage

Offensive Turnover Percentage

Free Throw Rate

Cavs

128.4, 86th percentile

59%, 75th percentile

28%, 47th percentile

10.5%, 84th percentile

19.1, 42nd percentile

Magic

133.7, 92nd percentile

58.8%, 74th percentile

25%, 31st percentile

6.3%, 98th percentile

32.9, 92nd percentile

Now, let’s dive into the numbers.

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The Magic converted 21 of their 25 shots at the rim (84%, 92nd percentile). The Cavs had no answer for Orlando’s size. They desperately missed Jarrett Allen in this one.

Orlando outscored Cleveland by 11 points at the free-throw line. The Magic were able to get to the free-throw line often, going 28-37 (75.7%). Meanwhile, the Cavs couldn’t get to the line and had trouble converting when they did, going 17-26 (65.4%).

Evan Mobley went 2-7 from the charity stripe. He’s struggled with his free-throw shooting all season, as he came into this game converting 63.4% at the line. This is a sizeable dip from shooting 72.5% last season.

The Magic turned it over just six times. You’re going to have a good offense if you get to the basket, the line, and keep possession of the ball.

Orlando had their seventh-best offensive rating for a game this season (133.7). They did this without the benefit of shooting well from beyond the arc. They converted just 34.3% of their three-pointers.

Desmond Bane scored 11 of his game-high 35 points in the fourth quarter. His off-balance three with 18 seconds left ended Cleveland’s chance of a comeback.

Donovan Mitchell struggled to find his shot in the fourth quarter, going 2-8 from the field in that frame. This wasn’t Mitchell’s most efficient game. He still scored 25 points, but he wasn’t able to establish the offensive rhythm we’re used to seeing.

James Harden — who scored a team-high 30 points — took just two shots from the field in the fourth quarter. Harden has ceded the scoring burden to…


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Publish date : 2026-03-12 03:30:00

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