Protesters call GOP's Cinco de Mayo celebration a 'slap to the face'

The Wisconsin GOP Hispanic Community Center’s Cinco de Mayo celebration caught some heat on the Milwaukee southside.

USA TODAY

Protesters rallied outside the center on West Greenfield Avenue calling the May 5 event a hypocritical attempt to earn Hispanic votes in the upcoming governor’s race.

Ismael Luna, a son of Mexican immigrants, said Cinco de Mayo isn’t a widely celebrated holiday among Mexicans in the U.S. or in Mexico. He said Wisconsin Republicans' decision to throw the event shows how disconnected they are from the Latino community in Milwaukee and the southside.

“It’s a slap to the face to every Latino in Milwaukee,” Luna said.

Cinco de Mayo, or the fifth of May, commemorates Mexico’s victory over France in theBattle of Pueblain 1862. This holiday differs from Mexican Independence Day, which is Sept. 16.

Celebrations in Mexico are mostly in Puebla, the town where the battle took place. It’s not a federal holiday in Mexico or the U.S.

However, Cinco de Mayo is heavily celebrated in the U.S. Since the 1980s, the beer industry has used the holiday to market their alcoholic beverages,outlets reported. Many restaurants and bars today offer drink specials on margaritas and traditional Mexican food to mark the day.

Nonetheless, the Wisconsin GOP says its annual Cinco de Mayo celebration is one of the ways it connects with the Hispanic community and hears the issues that are important to them.

“[Cinco de Mayo] is very important to the Hispanic community, which makes it important to us, and we want to make sure that we’re connecting with that community that way,” said Anika Rickard, party spokesperson, in a phone call ahead of the event.

Chris Lawrence, vice chair of the Republican Party of Milwaukee County, said this is an event Mexican Republican members asked for. He said members were offended a Cinco de Mayo celebration didn't exist a decade ago.

“I had no idea what Cinco de Mayo was until more Mexican Americans – our members – started requesting,” Lawrence said.

Protesters like Diana Goggins, an organizer with Voces de la Frontera, an immigrants’ rights organization, say some Republican policies do more harm than good for Latinos.

One example, protesters focused on was how Republicans' support of the Trump administration’s Big Beautiful Bill exasperates health care disparities for Latinos.

“They celebrate our culture while denying our communities' care,” Goggins said. “They want out culture but not our people.”

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Protesters carried signs opposing U.S. Rep. Tom Tiffany, a Republican who is running to be Wisconsin governor. He voted in favor of the Big Beautiful Bill, which organizers say will reduce health care access for about 250,000 Wisconsinites.

Hispanics and American Indians under age 65 had the highest uninsured rates in 2024, according to theKaiser Family Foundation, an independent organization reporting on health policy. The foundation found more than 18% of Hispanics and American Indians aren’t insured.

“Budgets reflect who you care about, who you think deserves access and belonging,” said Alexandra Guevara, spokesperson for Voces.

Although Brian Schimming, the state chairman of the Republican Party of Wisconsin, spoke in favor of Tiffany during the Cinco de Mayo event, Lawrence said the purpose of the event wasn’t to earn Hispanic votes in the governor’s race.

"We're here number one to celebrate an important day for Mexican Americans," Lawrence said.

Brian Schimming, the state chairman of the Republican Party of Wisconsin, speaks in favor of U.S. Rep. Tom Tiffany, who is running for governor, during the Wisconsin GOP Hispanic Community Center’s Cinco de Mayo celebration on May 5, 2026.

Republicans, Democrats share differing opinions on holiday celebration

Alfonso Morales, former Milwaukee Police Department chief and second-generation Mexican American, told an audience at the Wisconsin GOP Hispanic Community Center that Cinco de Mayo is a story of resilience and courage that the Republican Party can relate to.

"They didn't want somebody coming into their territory, changing politics, changing what they're used to, their freedoms," Morales said.

Cinco de Mayo is a proud day in Mexican history because it was an unexpected victory. The French military was better armed and had more experience. Yet Mexico managed to shove the invaders out, Morales explained.

But that's not quite the reputation Cinco de Mayo has in the U.S., Luna said, who is running for state Assembly in District 8. He says it's a holiday primarily White people celebrate.

"They'll say 'cinco de drinko,' 'shot o'clock,' and you'll never hear a Mexican or Latino say that," Luna said. "It's highly celebrated just as an excuse for them to use what they think is our holiday to go and get drunk."

Guevara, spokesperson for Voces, agreed that Cinco de Mayo is more of a commercial holiday that primarily benefits businesses that aren't owned by Mexicans. Although Mexican-owned businesses, like El Rey, benefit from Cinco de Mayo, too, she said.

Guevara is all for a change in the Latino community to celebrate and embrace the holiday and for other cultures to join in, too. Her trouble is with cherry picking what parts of Latino culture is celebrated.

"It can be OK to celebrate a culture, but you have to celebrate the whole the culture," Guevara said.

Gina Castrois a Public Investigator reporter for the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. She can be reached at gcastro@usatodayco.com.

This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:Protesters criticize GOP's Cinco de Mayo celebration in Milwaukee

Protesters call GOP's Cinco de Mayo celebration a 'slap to the face'

The Wisconsin GOP Hispanic Community Center’s Cinco de Mayo celebration caught some heat on the Milwaukee southside. Protesters ra...
Si Woo Kim makes biggest jump in Official World Golf Ranking for May 5

The Official World Golf Ranking has been updated for the week of May 5, 2026, with Scottie Scheffler still in the position of the planet's best player.

USA TODAY

By virtue of a T-4 finish at the Cadillac Championship last weekend, Si Woo Kim made the biggest jump in the top 50, leaping from No. 25 to No. 20. Kim was also third at the RBC Heritage and had a T-10 finish at the Valero Texas Open. He's made the cut in every one of his 12 starts in 2026.

Si Woo Kim of South Korea plays his shot from the 12th tee during the third round of the Cadillac Championship 2026 at Trump National Doral Miami on May 02, 2026 in Doral, Florida.

The OWGR system is calculated by awarding points from eligible tours and events to participating players over a rolling two-year period. Players are ranked weekly based on the amount of points they earn divided by the number of events they played in to reach an average total. Points hold their full value for a 13-week period and are then reduced in equal decrements. The current ranking for the Top 50 golfers in the world appears below.

See the full ranking here

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Official World Golf Ranking Top 50 for May 5, 2026

Ranking is accurate as of Tuesday, May 5, 2026, at 10:20 a.m.

Average Points

Events Played

2025 Final Ranking

Scottie Scheffler

United States

Rory McIlroy

Northern Ireland

Cameron Young

United States

Matt Fitzpatrick

Justin Rose

Collin Morikawa

United States

Tommy Fleetwood

Russell Henley

United States

United States

Xander Schauffele

United States

Chris Gotterup

United States

Robert MacIntyre

Sepp Straka

Ben Griffin

United States

Ludvig Ã…berg

Hideki Matsuyama

Justin Thomas

United States

Jacob Bridgeman

United States

South Korea

Harris English

United States

Patrick Reed

United States

Akshay Bhatia

United States

Tyrrell Hatton

Viktor Hovland

Min Woo Lee

Maverick McNealy

United States

Bryson DeChambeau

United States

Keegan Bradley

United States

United States

Ryan Gerard

United States

Patrick Cantlay

United States

Kurt Kitayama

United States

Shane Lowry

United States

Nicolai Højgaard

Marco Penge

Daniel Berger

United States

Michael Kim

United States

Nico Echavarria

Matt McCarty

United States

Sam Stevens

United States

Gary Woodland

United States

Kristoffer Reitan

Corey Conners

Jordan Spieth

United States

Which tours are eligible for the Official World Golf Ranking?

  • ACN Tour

  • All Thailand Golf Tour

  • Alps Tour Golf

  • Asian Development Tour

  • Asian Tour

  • Big Easy Tour

  • China Tour

  • ClutchPro Tour

  • DP World Tour

  • Gira de Golf Professional Mexicana

  • HotelPlanner Tour

  • Japan Golf Tour

  • Korn Ferry Tour

  • Korean PGA Tour

  • MENA Tour

  • Nordic Golf League

  • PGA TOUR Americas

  • PGA Tour of Taiwan - Chinese Taipei

  • PGA TOUR

  • PGA Tour of Australasia

  • Pro Golf Tour

  • Sunshine Tour

  • Tartan Pro Tour

  • Professional Golf Tour of India

Additionally, The Open, Masters Tournament, U.S. Open, PGA Championship, and Olympic Games are considered eligible tournaments.

This article originally appeared on Golfweek:Official World Golf Ranking for May 5, 2026: Si Woo Kim jumps to 20

Si Woo Kim makes biggest jump in Official World Golf Ranking for May 5

The Official World Golf Ranking has been updated for the week of May 5, 2026, with Scottie Scheffler still in the position of the plane...
Matt McCarty in front as weather interrupts Truist Championship

Matt McCarty is the surprise leader at the Truist Championship with play suspended on Thursday in Charlotte, N.C.

Field Level Media

McCarty birdied his last three holes to fire an 8-under-par 63. South Korea's Sungjae Im was on his tail after eagling his third-to-last hole (No. 7) to leap to 7 under.

After Im parred the eighth and hit his tee shot at No. 9, the event was suspended due to inclement weather with 20 of the 72 golfers in the no-cut signature event field yet to finish their rounds.

McCarty made a whopping 220 feet of putts Thursday, the most in a single round on tour this season. That included a 52 1/2-footer for birdie at the par-3 13th, a 60-footer for birdie at the par-4 16th and another 52-footer at the par-3 17th.

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McCarty, 28, won his only PGA Tour title at the Black Desert Championship in October 2024, shortly after he was promoted from the Korn Ferry Tour.

Canada's Nick Taylor, England's Harry Hall, Denmark's Nicolai Hojgaard and Norway's Kristoffer Reitan are tied for third at 5-under 66. Austria's Sepp Straka, the defending champion, is also 5 under through 17 holes and has a 6-foot par putt to finish up on No. 18.

Tony Finau, David Lipsky, Canada's Corey Conners and Englishmen Tommy Fleetwood and Alex Fitzpatrick shot 4-under 67. A win this week for Finau would gain him entry into the PGA Championship; he is currently the fifth alternate.

Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland, a four-time winner at Quail Hollow, opened with a 1-under 70.

--Field Level Media

Matt McCarty in front as weather interrupts Truist Championship

Matt McCarty is the surprise leader at the Truist Championship with play suspended on Thursday in Charlotte, N.C. McCarty birdied...
USA TODAY investigates new owner of Kensington Valley Ice House

A nine-month investigation by USA TODAY found former Black Bear Sports Group CEO Murry Gunty used his private investment firm to rapidly purchase ice rinks and teams across the Northeast and Midwest — including one in Brighton— then leveraged that control to steer families into a costly ecosystem of leagues, tournaments and fees.

USA TODAY

Black Bear Sports Group purchased Kensington Valley Ice House in Brighton Township in February 2024 — becoming Biggby Coffee Ice Cube Brighton. The company promised equipment and building upgrades, more tournaments and "first class" service.

What was uncovered by USA TODAY?

USA TODAY found the result of Black Bear's takeover includes higher prices, fewer choices and growing concern from legal experts that one company is consolidating power over a sport long rooted in local nonprofits, turning youth hockey into a pay-to-play pipeline where families must spend hundreds more each year or risk being shut out.

The newspaper's reporting — based on interviews with more than 80 parents, players, coaches, rink operators and current and former employees, along with thousands of pages of records — found the company's business model is reshaping youth hockey from a network of community-based nonprofits into a vertically integrated, for-profit system with fewer checks on how money flows.

Those changes are also raising deeper questions: whether nonprofit teams are being used to feed private businesses, whether families are being forced into buying bundled services they don’t want, and whether one company now has outsized control over who gets access to the sport and at what price.

“We’re all paying so much money, and each year, they take away more and more,” said Stephanie Kurzweil, a hockey parent who, in 2023, paid $4,600 for her nine-year-old son’s spot on a team owned by Black Bear in New Jersey. That doesn’t include hundreds more for hotels, travel, uniforms, equipment and a tryout fee.

Black Bear, in less than a decade, has grown into the single largest owner-operator of ice rinks in the country, with 47 facilities across 11 states. The business owns not only rinks but hundreds of youth teams inside them; the leagues, tournaments and showcases they compete in; even the streaming software parents use to watch their children’s games — and it bills families separately for each.

Gunty defended his company in a 90-minute interview with USA TODAY, dismissing many criticisms as coming from a vocal minority of customers. He said Black Bear has saved struggling ice rinks, grown participation in the sport faster than the national average and made hockey more fun and accessible. To be sure, many rinks were in dire financial straits when Black Bear purchased them and might not have stayed open otherwise.

“I just hope everybody knows that I come from a really good place in trying to deliver a great experience for our families,” said Gunty, who frequently answered questions by pivoting to his company's accomplishments. His relaxed, friendly demeanor contrasted at times with that of his crisis communications consultant, Evan Nierman, who sat nearby.

“I believe that the vast majority of our customers love our coaches. They love what we’re doing in our buildings. They love the people they associate with,” Gunty said. “If they don’t like what we’re doing, they can leave.”

Gunty demonstrated a pattern of unethical business practices over a private-equity career spanning three decades, USA TODAY’s investigation found. His and his companies' alleged conflicts of interest, self-dealing and refusal to cooperate with a government recall of dangerous cribs prompted two federal agencies to rebuke him and his companies. The findings call into question the extent to which Black Bear's leaders have prioritized profits over children's and families' interests.

Led by Murry Gunty, Black Bear Sports Group in less than a decade grew from nothing into the single largest owner-operator of ice rinks in the U.S

The Michigan Attorney General's Office, in fact, recentlylaunched an investigationinto potential anticompetitive business practices in youth hockey, with a focus on Black Bear. AG spokesperson Danny Wimmer said the department is "looking into this matter out of concern for the risk of consumer harm — including higher prices and reduced service quality — that can arise from diminished access to community and recreational services."

In an emailed statement addressing the state investigation, Nierman pointed to Black Bear's ownership of less than 10% of rinks in Michigan, ice rental contracts with third parties, and participation growth as evidence that families have choices and are choosing Black Bear.

Days after USA TODAY asked to interview him, Gunty announced his resignation as CEO of Black Bear, citing health and family reasons. His investment firm, however, remains in charge, and the brand's new CEO — Kevin Kuby — is an executive from Blackstreet.

Why are so many ice rinks owned by Black Bear?

Over four short years, Black Bear purchased 14 rinks in Maryland, Illinois, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Connecticut — in most cases for less than $5 million each, according to county property records.

When the pandemic shuttered in-person events across the country, crippling the ice rink industry, Black Bear’s acquisition pace accelerated. It scooped up 33 more rinks over the next six years, more than doubling the company's footprint.

Some rinks were deep in debt or in foreclosure. Others were profitable businesses in established hockey markets. Many rink operators were more than willing to sell.

Across a total of 25 years, no one had ever offered to purchase Mark Schaffer’s two ice rinks in southeast Michigan, he told USA TODAY. So, when Gunty called in 2023, he listened.

Even in a hockey hotbed, running an ice rink was difficult work — a largely seasonal business with high energy, maintenance, labor, tax and insurance costs. Schaffer wasn't sure another buyer would come along.

He wondered how a Maryland company would fare managing the daily demands of ice rinks in Michigan, but he didn’t ask many questions during a 20-minute meeting — nor did Gunty.

“I had a feeling it probably wasn’t going to go well,” Schaffer said.

Schaffer sold one of his two rinks, Kensington Valley Ice House of Brighton, to Black Bear in February 2024. The deed doesn’t list the sales price, but an affiliate of Black Bear took out a $12.6 million mortgage on that property and three others in Michigan in 2025.

Soon after taking over, Black Bear raised hourly ice rates for the Kensington Valley Hockey Association, a youth nonprofit that's rented ice time for years, from $320 to $370 an hour — according to board member Caryn Michalak.

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Black Bear threatened to raise that price even higher, she said, unless the association agreed to switch to the brand's official apparel provider, from which the company receives kickbacks. Black Bear — which denied making such a threat — also required the association to affix the logo of corporate sponsor Biggby Coffee to players’ jerseys.

Despite the nonprofit spending $925,000 on ice rental in 2025-26, conditions at the rink deteriorated under Black Bear, according to Michalak, who briefly worked at the rink after the purchase. In addition to frequent plumbing and electricity issues, she said, the building didn't have heat for several months during the wintertime, leaving families freezing during their children's games and practices.

In February 2026, Black Bear offered to purchase the association's teams for $1, according to a copy of the proposal reviewed by USA TODAY. If the board doesn’t accept, Michalak fears the company will kick the nonprofit’s teams out.

“We push all their programs, we put their names on their jerseys, and it still isn’t enough,” she said.

Gunty told USA TODAY that Black Bear won't boot the association’s teams from the rink, adding his company tries to raise prices in line with the nationwide inflation rate — 2.7% in 2025 — but that many rising costs, such as utilities and insurance, are beyond the business' control. He said he believes heating issues were fixed within weeks, not months.

“I felt terrible, and we tried to jump on it as quickly as we could,” he said. “We feel bad that people were cold in that rink, but that problem has been resolved.”

Schaffer said he regrets selling to Black Bear.

“Unfortunately,” Schaffer said, “I think parents and kids are paying the price.”

'They see dollar signs'

What concerns antitrust experts about Black Bear isn’t so much the consolidation of ice rinks — it’s the way the company has used its dominance in the rink market to gain an unfair advantage in other markets critical to the sport’s infrastructure.

As the company bought rinks, it also took control of many of the teams inside them. Some, it purchased outright. In other cases, longstanding local organizations were squeezed out and replaced with in-house, for-profit teams.

Once it controlled enough teams, Black Bear withdrew players from many of the community-based leagues they'd long competed in and started for-profit leagues. The depleted competition in the old leagues led other teams to follow suit.

Black Bear also started Defender Hockey Tournaments, whose events take place almost exclusively at company-owned rinks. As is increasingly standard practice across youth sports, tournaments under Defender have strict “stay-to-play” rules, which require participants who live more than 60 or 75 miles from the host rinks to book rooms at designated hotels from which the company receives kickbacks. Those who flout the rules face disqualification from the events without a refund, according to a hotel policy.

Family members who don’t wish to travel can pay extra to watch their children play through Black Bear’s proprietary live streaming service, Black Bear TV. The price is $14.99 per game or up to $320 for an annual subscription, plus additional fees to stream junior league games.

A behemoth three-day tournament in Pennsylvania and New Jersey in January 2026 reflected the company’s enormous influence over the sport in the region. Black Bear runs the tournament company, all six rinks that hosted games and 76 of the 114 participating teams.

“It just feels like Black Bear is slowly becoming a monopoly,” said Chris Boughman, whose son's team played in the tournament. “It shouldn’t be at the expense of kids.”

The costs aren’t purely financial. The demanding schedules in Black Bear leagues — roughly 50 games over six months — force players to specialize at a young age, which medical experts say contributes to overuse injuries and burnout. Boughman’s son used to play football as a quarterback, he said, but quit to focus on hockey.

Gunty insists Black Bear is not a monopoly. He said the company only buys rinks in areas where there are competing rinks within a 30-minute drive and reinvests "almost all" profits back into the business.

“We are a small piece of the overall hockey market in the United States,” Gunty said. “We are required every single year to deliver a great product to our customers, and we have been fortunate that we're growing in states where hockey is declining.”

The hallmark of a monopoly is a company’s ability to raise prices without losing many customers. That’s exactly what Black Bear did in 2025.

Between seasons, Black Bear raised prices for 142 of 209 in-house teams whose prices were listed online. The hikes, usually increases of $100 to $400 per player for a full season, were highest for some of the company's youngest clients: 9- to 12-year-olds.

All those costs add up for families like Dan Keel’s. He said he paid close to $5,000 in tuition alone for his eight-year-old son’s season with the Mercer Chiefs — plus hundreds more for travel, hotels, equipment, league fees and Black Bear TV.

“They don’t care about the kids and their development,” Keel said. “They see dollar signs.”

Kenny Jacoby is an investigative reporter for USA TODAY who uncovers issues in sports, higher education and law enforcement. Contact him by email atkjacoby@usatoday.com.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:USA TODAY investigates new owner of Kensington Ice House in Brighton

USA TODAY investigates new owner of Kensington Valley Ice House

A nine-month investigation by USA TODAY found former Black Bear Sports Group CEO Murry Gunty used his private investment firm to rapidl...
Detroit Pistons won't waste their time whining over refs; they're too busy beating Cleveland

Donovan Mitchell is too nice to be cunning the way Phil Jackson once was, but darn if he didn’t try.

USA TODAY

After hisCleveland Cavalierslost to theDetroit Pistonsin Game 1 of their Eastern Conference semifinal, on Tuesday, May 5, he complained to reporters that the referees werebig ol’ meanies– they weren’t calling enough fouls.

Jackson – the Hall of Fame coach of the LA Lakers andChicago Bullswhose coaching skills are perhaps matched only by his public relations talent – once lobbied the refs during a playoff series against the Pistons, too.

He just took it a step – or 10 – further and told the media the Pistons werebad for the game.

Ugly, even.Graceless bullies.

Mitchell wouldn’t go that far and seemed to undermine himself when he said Tuesday's free throw disparity wasn’t the reason his team lost. But hewasfrustrated; he politely lobbied for more calls.

Cleveland Cavaliers guard Donovan Mitchell (45) drive the ball against Detroit Pistons guard Cade Cunningham (2) during the fourth quarter of game 2 of the NBA playoffs, at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit, Thursday, May 7, 2026.

MITCH ALBOM:Cade Cunningham puts the icing on Pistons' Game 2 cake

On Thursday, his plea worked ... sort of.

Cleveland got to the line more in Game 2 and, more importantly for the Cavs, more than Detroit did. That it didn’t matter inthe Pistons' 107-97 win at Little Caesars Arenashould send a shudder through the Cavaliers as they head back home. They can shoot more free throws. They can take more overall shots. They can win the possession battle.

They can still lose.

They did, as a matter of fact, on Thursday, in similar fashion to Game 1: They fell behind early, trailed at the half, rallied, got in the game in the fourth ... and fell apart in the high-leverage moments. They’ll tell themselves they wereright there.

Good for them.

But really, they should tell themselves they’re getting out-toughed and out-muscled, and that if they’re taking to post-game talks with the media to try to win the game, they’re already losing the battle.

YOUTH MOVEMENT:J.B. Bickerstaff's growth-first approach is winning playoff games for Pistons

Besides, these Cavaliers – and Mitchell, especially – have neither the stomach nor the haughty countenance to go all in when trying to denigrate the Pistons. Nor, for that matter, do they have the personnel to attack the rim with enough vigor.

Superstar guard James Harden, savvy though he still is, plays at half his old speed and struggles to get byDuncan Robinson(with apologies for the emphasis there).

And when the Pistons' Ausar Thompson or Cade Cunningham have guarded Harden?

It has been, well, unusually cruel.

Those matchups should also be a reminder of who these Cavaliers are. They may yet come back and win this series. But it’d be surprising at this point, even though so many consider Cleveland’s roster to be superior.

The fouls don't matter

Detroit Pistons guard Daniss Jenkins (24) defends Cleveland Cavaliers guard Donovan Mitchell (45) during the second half of Game 2 of second round of NBA playoffs at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit on Thursday, May 7, 2026.

Part of that is the NBA's natural bias toward offense – folks putting the ball in the basket remains the principal goal.

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And yetkeepingfolks from putting the ball in the basket seems pretty important, too, and on that front, the talent comparison tilts toward Detroit.

Mitchell no doubt figured he’d try to leverage that bias when he complained about officiating Tuesday. He understands what he and his teammates are up against. Well, unless he was the one whotold a reporter who covers the Cavs that the Pistons weren’t in their class, and hubris has kept him from understanding what the Pistons truly bring.

But I doubt it. Besides, the wholenot-in-our-classvibe doesn’t sound like Mitchell. And if he really thought that, then why lobby the refs?

As explosive and creative a scorer as Mitchell is, his go-to move relies more on interpretive dance than shoulder-to-sternum force; as impressive and unstoppable as his windmill-dribble-and-floater game can be, it’s rarely going to convince the refs to blow their whistle.

Mitchell probably knows this more than he’d like to let on, as he perhaps acknowledged when he told reporters this:

“I’m just not getting the calls. I don’t know why. I don’t flop, maybe that’s why,” Mitchell said Tuesday. “And this isn’t just a [tonight thing]. This has been the entire [playoffs], and it’s frustrating a little bit, but because I’m such a dynamic driver, right? But I can’t control that. So, if they’re not going to call it for me, I got to find a way to finish and do that.”

He finished more often in Game 2 than in Game 1 and finished with a game-high 31 points, mostly on those pretty windmill rip-through floaters and mid-range pullups. He shot nine free throws, too – seven more than he attempted in Game 1.

In that sense, his strategy ...worked?

Likewise, Cleveland attempted 27 free throws to Detroit’s 20, a far better ratio, from the Cavs' perspective, than Game 1's 35-16 disparity.

And yet, it didn’t matter.

It's the defense, not foul calls, that matters

Cleveland Cavaliers guard Donovan Mitchell (45) walks off the court as Detroit Pistons players celebrates 107-97 win over Cleveland Cavaliers at Game 2 of second round of NBA playoffs at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit on Thursday, May 7, 2026.

Surely, that’s more frustrating than anything else. In the end, the lobbying – if it made a difference at all – helped flip the free throw attempts. But little else

That’s the easy assumption, anyway. The truth is never so black-and-white. The play on the court is where it’s revealed, and for a while Thursday night, Cleveland set better screens to free up Harden and Mitchell, and that opened more frequent paths to the paint.

But only for a while.

When those paths closed in the fourth quarter, and Harden and Mitchell were flailing and fading and avoiding contact nearly often as they sought it, the path to the free throw line dried up, too.

A long time ago, Jackson employed thework-the-refs-through-the-mediastrategy. He wanted more calls, yes, but he also meant to eviscerate the entire Bad Boys era. His effort no doubt contributed to the way those teams are remembered outside of Michigan, thanks to his Chicago Bulls getting the better of the Pistons eventually (not to mention the rest of the NBA for six out of eight years).

Yet that was mostly because he had Michael Jordan on his roster. And when you’ve got the GOAT – well,aGOAT – you get to rewrite history.

The Cavaliers have no such player, as good as Mitchell is. And ultimately, his plea proved useless.

Not because of how the game was called, but becauseit didn’t matterthat Cleveland shot more free throws. When the Pistons swarm and teleport and behave as they're all connected to the same central nervous system, there isn’t much these Cavaliers can do.

That, more than any off-the-court lament, is clear two games into this series – and no amount of postgame chatter is going to change that.

Contact Shawn Windsor:swindsor@freepress.com. Follow him@shawnwindsor.

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press:Detroit Pistons won't take Cleveland Cavaliers road of whining to refs

Detroit Pistons won't waste their time whining over refs; they're too busy beating Cleveland

Donovan Mitchell is too nice to be cunning the way Phil Jackson once was, but darn if he didn’t try. After hisCleveland Cavaliersl...

 

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