Cleveland Cavaliers youngster Jaylon Tyson is looking to earn himself a defined role under head coach Kenny Atkinson in his second season in the league. With guards Ty Jerome and Isaac Okoro now playing for different teams and 3-point specialist Max Strus set to miss an extended period of time to start the new campaign, there seem to be minutes for the taking.
One Cavaliers source noted a quality about Tyson as a basketball player that should only aid his chances to crack the rotation. The source indicated that Tyson leaves it all out on the floor and “plays every possession like his life depended on it.”
“He plays every possession like his life depended on it,” the source said. “He’s one hard-playing dude.”
Tyson said earlier this summer that he envisions himself being the team’s missing piece in his sophomore campaign because of what he brings to the table from a physicality perspective. Maybe his prediction will come true, as Cleveland isn’t lacking a lot of things, but toughness is probably one of them.
Cavaliers president of basketball operations Koby Altman even admitted that there’s a mental toughness piece the team needs to overcome after it got booted by the Indiana Pacers in the second round of the 2025 NBA Playoffs.
A good way for the Cavaliers to start building a greater level of team-wide mental toughness might just be to consistently play Tyson, someone who seemingly will do whatever it takes to win. Tyson’s knack for doing all the little things that don’t show up on the stat sheet could rub off on the rest of his teammates.
But it’s not as if Tyson is a one-trick pony and little more than a lunch-pail player. In fact, he’s actually quite a talented offensive player and showed off some impressive scoring and playmaking abilities across a small sample size in Summer League.
Couple Tyson’s penchant for playing so hard with his diverse offensive toolbox, and he projects to be in the running for a rotation spot in Cleveland heading into his sophomore season. At the very least, fans of the Cavaliers should expect Tyson to receive significantly more playing time than he did as a rookie.