Cleveland is heading into the 2026 NBA Playoffs with a familiar kind of urgency, and Dennis Schröder says he wants to be part of what pushes the Cavaliers further than they have gone before. As the team prepares for its first-round matchup with the Toronto Raptors, the veteran guard is among the players Cleveland is leaning on to steady the group.
“I want to be the guy who takes us to the next level,” Schröder said. That is the kind of line that lands differently in April, when every possession starts to feel like a test and every veteran voice matters more.
The Cavaliers have spent their playoff preparation leaning on experience, and Schröder fits that role. Cleveland has not hidden the fact that it is turning to its older players for guidance as it readies for Toronto, a matchup that brings a specific defensive challenge if the Raptors have Immanuel Quickley in the lineup.
Quickley would be the primary defender on Cleveland's Donovan Mitchell if and when he's available, giving the series an immediate edge within the edge. That assignment matters because it shapes how Cleveland may need to attack early and how much pressure the Cavaliers can expect on Mitchell when the game slows down and possessions become harder to create.
That is where Schröder’s value comes into view. The Cavaliers are not just asking veterans to speak; they are asking them to help carry the weight of a series that can turn quickly. Toronto’s preparation and Cleveland’s response will be judged game by game, but the first step is already clear: the Cavaliers are entering the playoffs with their oldest players expected to help set the tone.
For Schröder, the task is simple to describe and hard to do. Cleveland needs playoff poise, not noise, and the first-round series will show whether the veteran group can turn that message into a win when the pressure arrives in real time.