Shorthanded Hornets Stifle Cavaliers in Overtime to Secure Gritty Road Win 119-111
Some wins look good in the standings, and then there are wins that build the character of a franchise. For the Charlotte Hornets, Sunday night at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse was emphatically the latter.
Despite missing their primary engine in LaMelo Ball and key rotation pieces like Collin Sexton and Tre Mann, the Hornets walked into Cleveland and pulled off a stunning 119-111 victory in overtime. It wasn’t just that they won; it was how they did it. In the extra period, Charlotte’s defense transformed into a vice grip, holding the Cavaliers to a staggering 0-for-10 shooting performance to seal the game.
For a young Hornets team looking to establish an identity, staring down a playoff-caliber opponent on the road and forcing them into a scoreless overtime drought is a massive statement.
Knueppel and Miller Fill the Void
With LaMelo Ball sidelined, the scoring burden fell squarely on the shoulders of the supporting cast, and rookie sensation Kon Knueppel answered the call. Knueppel looked nothing like a first-year player, dissecting the Cavaliers’ defense for a game-high 29 points. He shot efficiently from the floor (11-of-19) and drained three crucial triples, providing the offensive spark Charlotte desperately needed to keep pace with Cleveland’s firepower.
But while Knueppel provided the scoring punch, Brandon Miller provided the heart.
Miller was everywhere on Sunday. The forward stuffed the stat sheet with 25 points, dished out six assists, and crashed the glass for a career-high 13 rebounds. His energy was infectious, particularly in the closing moments of regulation when the game seemed to be slipping away. Miller’s ability to impact the game on both ends of the floor was the stabilizing force that kept the Hornets composed even as the crowd of 19,000-plus erupted during Cleveland’s third-quarter run.
Veteran Miles Bridges also played a pivotal role, notching a double-double of his own with 20 points and 10 rebounds. Bridges served as the steady hand, helping to facilitate an offense that racked up 28 assists on 43 made field goals.
Surviving the Regulation Scare
The game shouldn’t have necessarily reached overtime. The Hornets had built a commanding 17-point lead in the third quarter, looking poised to cruise to a victory. However, the Cavaliers, led by Darius Garland (26 points, 9 assists) and Donovan Mitchell, refused to go quietly.
Cleveland mounted a furious comeback, chipping away at the lead until the game was deadlocked in the final seconds of regulation. The momentum had shifted entirely to the home team. With the clock winding down, Donovan Mitchell—one of the league’s most feared closers—had the ball in his hands with a chance to win it. He pulled up for a 12-foot jumper, a shot he has made hundreds of times.
It clanked off the rim.
That missed opportunity proved to be the last gasp for Cleveland. Having dodged a bullet at the buzzer, the Hornets entered overtime with renewed focus, while the Cavs seemed to run out of gas entirely.
Defense Wins the Day
The overtime period was a defensive masterclass by Charlotte. To hold an NBA team scoreless in a five-minute overtime session is a statistical rarity. The Cavaliers didn’t just miss difficult shots; they missed everything.
The Hornets swarmed the perimeter and contested every look, forcing Cleveland into bad angles and rushed decisions. The Cavs missed all 10 of their field goal attempts in the extra session. Meanwhile, Charlotte executed calmly on the other end, hitting their free throws and finding open lanes as Cleveland’s defense scrambled.
The rebounding battle was another key factor in the Hornets’ success. Charlotte dominated the glass, pulling down 67 total rebounds compared to Cleveland’s 53. That physical edge gave the Hornets extra possessions and prevented the Cavaliers from getting easy second-chance points during their shooting droughts.
A “Sky Isn’t Falling” Moment for Cleveland?
For the Cavaliers, the loss is a frustrating stumble in an inconsistent season. Missing Evan Mobley (strained calf) certainly hurt their interior defense and rebounding, but the offensive collapse in overtime is what will keep the coaching staff up at night.
Despite the ugly finish, Cavaliers head coach Kenny Atkinson remained optimistic in his postgame presser.
“The sky isn’t falling,” Atkinson told reporters. “We’re going to be all right.”
Atkinson may be right, but the night belonged to the visitors.
What This Means for the Hornets
This victory moves the needle for Charlotte. Winning on the road without your best player requires a collective “next man up” mentality that separates lottery teams from playoff hopefuls.
By weathering the storm of a 17-point comeback and delivering a shutout in overtime, the Hornets proved they have the grit to compete with anyone. As they head to their next matchup, they do so knowing that even when the roster is thin, the “Hive Mentality” is alive and well.

