The Cavaliers didn’t let Thomas Bryant linger on the market for long, and there was a clear reason they moved fast.
Cleveland is bringing Bryant back for 2026-27, and according to reporting from Marc Stein and Jake Fischer on Monday, the team wanted to make sure the Indiana Pacers never had a chance to get involved.
Bryant had arrived in Cleveland from Indiana, where he played a huge playoff game against the New York Knicks during the Pacers’ run to the 2025 NBA Finals. Even with Tyrese Haliburton sidelined for all of 2025-26, Indiana is expected to be back in the mix soon, which made Bryant a player the Pacers would have had interest in if Cleveland had hesitated.
Instead, the Cavaliers locked him in.
That makes sense for a team that values what Bryant brings in a reserve role. He’s the kind of bench piece who keeps his energy high whether he’s on the floor or watching from the sideline, and that matters in Cleveland because Jarrett Allen and Evan Mobley soak up most of the frontcourt minutes. With that much of the rotation spoken for, it takes a certain mindset to stay ready and stay positive.
Bryant appears to have handled that role well, and the Cavaliers’ quick move suggests they believe it, too.
There’s also a bigger layer to this for Cleveland. In recent years, the Cavs have been part of trade speculation involving either Mobley or Allen as a way to trim the frontcourt. Nothing is active right now at the end of June, but if those discussions ever come back around, keeping Bryant in place gives Cleveland another useful piece of depth.
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For Cleveland, the idea is less about nostalgia than ambition, because any true swing would have to be big enough to change how the league views the roster right away. The Cavaliers have been linked in rumor chatter to a possible major deal with Boston, and even the existence of that kind of discussion tells you how aggressive this front office might be willing to get if it sees a path to moving the team into a different tier. [Read more 🡒]
