Thunder vs Cavaliers Preview

Oklahoma City has played like a contender all season, but they stagger into this matchup missing nearly their entire engine room. Cleveland, locked in a tight playoff race, arrives with momentum and a rare chance to take a statement win from a battered powerhouse. This is a test of survival for OKC and a proving ground for the Cavs.

Cleveland Cavaliers

Cleveland Cavaliers

VS
Oklahoma City Thunder

Oklahoma City Thunder

Sunday, February 22, 2026

Win Probability (BAC Model)

59%

41%

Moderate Favorite

Competitiveness

7/10

Worth Watching

Viewing Value

8.0

True Toss-Up

HEAD-TO-HEAD COMPARISON
Cavaliers
Thunder
117.6

ORtg

117.6
113.0

DRtg

106.0
101.6

Pace

100.7
4.6

Net Rtg

11.6
63.2

Win%

75.4
4.2

TQS

11.1
WWWWW
Last 5
WLWWL
1 day rest (road 2 of 2)
Rest
1 day rest
Stat visualization


Record 36-21 43-14 Viewing Value 8.0 — True Toss-Up Game Competitiveness 7/10

Matchup Overview

The Thunder are missing their star guard trio—Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Jalen Williams, and Alex Caruso—which guts both their scoring and perimeter defense. Cleveland is close to full-strength (just Max Strus out), playing their best basketball of the year, and looking to capitalize on a golden opportunity. Both teams are rested, but only one brings the full arsenal.

Stats Corner

  • OKC Defensive Rating: 106 (season elite), but missing three top defenders tonight.
  • Cavs Offensive Rating: 117.6 (last 5 games: W-W-W-W-W; averaging 125.8 points).
  • Thunder last 5: 3-2 (losses both came without Shai; average just 107.7 PPG without him).
  • Cavs ORB%: 31.0 — Cleveland should feast on extra chances against OKC’s undermanned backcourt.
  • OKC Four Factors Offense: eFG% 56.2, TOV% 12.4 — with new ballhandlers, expect efficiency to drop.

The Edge & What Could Break It

BAC Model pick: Cavaliers (59%). Cleveland’s guard play—the combo of Donovan Mitchell (28.8 PPG) and James Harden (8.2 APG)—is the advantage. They are healthy, hot, and should overwhelm a depleted Thunder rotation.

Supporting factors:
– The Cavs have rattled off five straight wins, including over Denver and Sacramento. Confidence is sky-high.
– No Shai, no Williams means OKC’s offense is led by backups and role players—Isaiah Joe, Jared McCain, Aaron Wiggins. These are serious downgrades at both ends.
– Cleveland’s rebounding edge (ORB% 31.0 vs. OKC DRB% 69.5) will extend possessions and wear down a thin Thunder bench.

Risks:
– OKC’s scheme and home-court intensity. Their core system has held up well in short spurts, and Hartenstein is a disruptive anchor up front.
– Cleveland’s tendency to give up big shooting nights—if OKC’s wings get hot (Joe, Wiggins), the short-handed Thunder could hang close for 48 minutes.

Confidence level: Decisive, but not a layup. Cavaliers are the clear favorite with more talent and continuity tonight, but OKC’s defensive fundamentals keep this from being a blowout call.

The Bottom Line

The Thunder are missing their alpha and two more creators. The Cavs are rolling and healthy. This is a window for Cleveland to steal a big road win and keep pushing up the East standings. Expect a competitive start, but Cleveland’s firepower and depth close the door. The Cavs have the edge tonight—take Cleveland and expect their stars to carry them home.