The Cleveland Cavaliers visit the Portland Trail Blazers tonight, February 1st, at 9:10 PM EST at the Moda Center. Cleveland enters at 29-21, sitting second in the Central Division and fifth in the Eastern Conference, while Portland struggles at 23-26, fourth in the Northwest Division and ninth in the Western Conference. The Cavaliers have dominated this head-to-head series recently, capturing four of the last five meetings between these clubs. Tonight’s contest features a narrow 1.5-point spread despite a 5.2-point net rating differential between the two teams.
| Metric | Cleveland Cavaliers | Portland Trail Blazers |
|---|---|---|
| Record | 29-21 | 23-26 |
| Net Rating | +2.7 | -2.5 |
| Offensive eFG% | 55.2% | 52.5% |
| Turnover Rate | 12.5% | 14.2% |
| Offensive Rebounding % | 27.1% | 30.6% |
| Pace | 101.0 | 100.9 |
Market Analysis
The consensus has settled on Cleveland -1.5 with the Cavaliers carrying fair win probability of 53.42% compared to Portland’s 46.58%. This pricing appears cautious given Cleveland’s superior metrics across the board. The total sits at 229.5 points, aligning with the combined offensive ratings of both clubs. Both teams operate at an identical pace (101.0 vs 100.9), suggesting possession volume will not significantly influence the outcome. The tight spread reflects road factors and Portland’s home environment, though the Cavs own the clear statistical advantages in this matchup.
Cleveland’s half-court execution creates separation
The Cavaliers possess a significant shooting edge that translates directly to half-court success. Cleveland’s 55.2% effective field goal percentage ranks among the league’s best, while Portland sits at 52.5%. That 2.7-percentage-point gap represents roughly 3 extra made field goals per 100 possessions when adjusted for shot selection. Cleveland’s offense generates 117.4 points per 100 possessions compared to Portland’s defensive rating of 116.1, suggesting the Cavaliers should score efficiently against this specific defense. The Cavaliers also protect the basketball at an elite level, turning it over on just 12.5% of possessions versus Portland’s 14.2% offensive turnover rate. This ball security advantage should minimize fast-break opportunities for Portland’s transition attack.
Portland’s offensive rebounding cannot compensate for shooting woes
The Trail Blazers do excel in one key area, crashing the offensive glass at a 30.6% rate compared to Cleveland’s 27.1%. This rebounding edge should generate extra possessions for Portland throughout the contest. Portland’s defense forces turnovers at a 13.1% rate, which could create some transition opportunities. The Blazers also reach the free throw line more frequently, posting a 0.225 FT/FGA ratio offensively. These factors explain why the spread remains narrow despite the statistical gap elsewhere. Cleveland’s defensive rebounding rate of 74.1% should limit some of Portland’s second-chance damage, and the Cavaliers force turnovers at a 13.6% rate on defense. The head-to-head history heavily favors Cleveland, with four wins in the last five meetings demonstrating the Cavaliers have solved Portland’s approach in recent matchups.
