The 2026 NBA playoffs began Saturday, and our NBA insiders have you covered for every game in the march to the Finals.

The Cleveland Cavaliers and Toronto Raptors kicked things off, and Donovan Mitchell & Co. cruised to a 13-point win at home. Mitchell led all players with 32 points, and James Harden made his Cleveland playoff debut with 22. Max Strus, who missed the first 67 games of the season with a left foot injury and did not debut until March 15, erupted for 24 points off the bench.

The New York Knicks followed up by beating the Atlanta Hawks 113-102, as they held the Hawks to just 47 halftime points. Jalen Brunson led all scorers with 28 points, and Karl-Anthony Towns finished with 25 points in the win.

The Game 1s continued Sunday, with the Boston Celtics’ dominating the Philadelphia 76ers, 123-91, with Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown combining for 51 points on 20-for-38 shooting. Game 2 is Tuesday night.

As the East playoffs continue, here’s what matters most and what to watch.

More coverage:
West takeaways | Schedules and results | Offseason guides

(2) Boston Celtics lead (7) Philadelphia 76ers, 1-0

Game 1: Celtics 123, 76ers 91

Biggest takeaway from Game 1: It was always going to be difficult for Philadelphia in this series — especially with Joel Embiid unavailable, potentially for the entire series, after his emergency appendectomy a week and a half ago. But there was a clear formula for the 76ers to at least be competitive in the series: hit 3s, and have Tyrese Maxey be the best player on the court. Neither one came close to happening Sunday.

Philadelphia went 2-for-16 from 3 in the first half, and then barely attempted any in the second half of the game, finishing just 4-for-23 from beyond the arc. Maxey had 21 points and 8 assists, but was badly outplayed by both Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown.

The Celtics controlled almost every area of the game — seemingly with ease. Their 32-point win is their largest in a playoff opener in franchise history. But all that did was emphasize the gap between these two teams as presently constituted, and how fine the margins are if Philadelphia wants to make this a competitive series. — Tim Bontemps

Game 2: 76ers at Celtics (Tuesday, 7 p.m., NBA/Peacock)

What to watch in Game 2: Over the past few years, the Celtics have had a tendency to lull themselves into a false sense of security. Just last season, for example, the first two games of their Eastern Conference semifinal loss to the New York Knicks saw them blow back-to-back 20-point leads at TD Garden en route to losing a series Boston entered as massive favorites to win.

So no one, by any means, should assume that the Celtics are going to cake-walk to the Eastern Conference semifinals. That mentioned, this is an opportunity for Boston to show that, this year, their attitude is different.

The Celtics of past years often went into series with overwhelming talent advantages that gave them massive margins of error. And while Boston has a clear edge there in this series, especially with Embiid out, this group has a different makeup to it, and has a chance to show it’s got a different mentality to it, as well.

Will the Celtics win wire-to-wire and lead by as much as 35 in Game 2? Probably not. But another dominant victory in Game 2 would put Boston in a command position in the series, and the Celtics would be wise to not let that opportunity slip away. — Bontemps

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