CLEVELAND, Ohio — Dignity, urgency and focus are all on the line Wednesday night when the Cavs visit the Charlotte Hornets at Spectrum Center. Tipoff is set for 7 p.m. Eastern on ESPN.
Cleveland (24-20) has already learned the hard way that records do not guarantee outcomes against Charlotte (16-27). The Hornets handed the Cavs a loss earlier this season, and now the rematch arrives at an uncomfortable moment.
Two days after Oklahoma City embarrassed them by 32 points, the Cavs are searching for answers while still being shorthanded. Darius Garland (toe), Sam Merrill (hand) and Max Strus (foot) will all remain sidelined.
Charlotte, meanwhile, inherently plays with freedom rather than worrying about external expectations. The Hornets’ recent résumé is not a fluke.
Over their last 10 games, they have beaten Denver, the Lakers and the Thunder, leaning into an offensive identity that stresses defenses with spacing and shot volume. Charlotte owns the seventh-best offense in the league, driven by a modern shot diet. They attempt the fifth-most 3-pointers per game and convert them at the fifth-best rate in the NBA at 37.2%.
That combination puts immediate pressure on Cleveland’s weakest area.
The Cavs currently sit last in the league in 3-point defense, a problem that was laid bare Monday when Oklahoma City buried 23 triples on nearly 50 percent shooting from beyond the arc.
And that was against a team who isn’t known for leaning extensively on their outside shot. Charlotte does.
LaMelo Ball’s manipulation of help defenders, Brandon Miller’s off-ball movement and Kon Knueppel’s shooting versatility all test communication and discipline. One late rotation can quickly turn into a run.
For Cleveland, this game is less about schematic novelty and more about habits.
When the Cavs play with consistent energy and defensive intent, they can compete with anyone. When they drift, rely on talent alone or lose focus for even a short stretch, they spend the fourth quarter digging out of holes they created themselves. That pattern has defined much of their season.
Without Garland, the Cavs will need a collective commitment to feeding the bigs who should have an interior advantage — though Moussa Diabate averages 3.7 offensive rebounds per game and could pose problems on the glass.
But transition defense and early matchups will matter just as much as half-court execution. Against a team that thrives on rhythm and confidence, emotional control becomes a basketball skill.
At this point in the season, every game feels like a test of Cleveland’s mental endurance. Wednesday night is another chance to show whether the lessons from Monday landed, or whether the Cavs are still searching for their footing in games that demand urgency from the opening tip.
How to watch the Cavs: See how to watch the Cavs games with this handy game-by-game TV schedule.
Here’s what to know about the matchup:
Who: Cleveland Cavaliers vs. Charlotte Hornets
Series: Third of four matchups in the regular season.
Where: Spectrum Arena
When: 7 p.m. ET.
The point spread: Cavs minus-2.5; O/U 236.5
TV: ESPN & FanDuel Sports Network – Ohio
Injury report
Cavs
Out:
Darius Garland (right great toe; sprain)Chris Livingston (G League – Two-Way)Sam Merrill (right hand; sprain)Max Strus (left foot; Jones fracture surgery)Luke Travers (G League – Two-Way)
Hornets
Probable:
Tidjane Salaun (left Achilles; tendinopathy)
Out:
PJ Hall (G League – Two-Way)Liam McNeeley (G League – On Assignment)Mason Plumlee (right groin; surgery)Antonio Reeves (G League – Two-Way)KJ Simpson (left hip flexor; strain)