Expectations
2013-11-15The Cleveland Cavaliers are 9/82nds through the season and signs thus far are at best “mixed” and at worst “why did this team pass on a lot of talented guys who fit a series of team needs for a dude who has more combined fouls and turnovers than points?” There is the undefeated home record, but also the 0-and-6 mark on the road. Mike Brown’s initiatives to shore up the defense have produced impressive results, as the currently average defense represents a massive turnaround, but the offense feels like it has all the sophistication of a symphony played on kazoos. There are good spots and bad spots, as there will be with any team in any year, but the frustration stings a bit more. Basically, things were supposed to make more sense by now.
When a team makes its initial moves toward competitiveness and starts signing veterans, expectations follow. This glare reflects most harshly onto the star. We’re seeing this happen in Houston, where the arrival of Dwight Howard has attracted a lot of attention, and that attention has revealed that James Harden doesn’t play defense. With Kyrie Irving, there’s an unsettledness to his game that’s disconcerting. His numbers are relatively stable, (assists are up, field goal percentage is down) but he floats in and out of games, and is receiving scrutiny for it. Before the Cavs played Chicago, there was a lot of hype about the first Irving vs. Rose matchup, but it was an anticlimactic clash, one out-of-sync virtuoso against another.
Kyrie’s is at his best when he’s direct, using his ability to slice through defenses with his handle, pulling the right strings, and scoring or finding the right pass. Right now, Irving is not attempting to dismantle defenses to the degree of which he is capable. This is partially because he’s playing with a relatively new-look team–one with a new coaching staff, too–and this combined with his unassailable talent level should assuage any fears that his career has peaked prematurely. Team success does flow from him most directly however, and he needs to assert himself more. Of course, it doesn’t exactly help when the offense he has the keys to can generously be described as “pick and roll-centric.” The logical takeaway is to wait and see. Only 1/9th of the season has elapsed, and Mike Brown will presumably add some plays at some point.
Who those plays will be run for is a bit cloudy. Kyrie is playing vaguely up to his level but the preseason hope of steady, across-the-board improvement has yet to be realized. The small forward hole has been as vacuous as many feared it could be, save for some spot minutes from a surprisingly effective C.J. Miles. Earl Clark has been plain bad. Problems at the 3 were expected coming into the year, but seeing it in practice is another thing entirely. But hey! The Cavs can at least use road games as a chance to give the ball to Sergey Karasev and/or Anthony Bennett, shrug and say “Good luck fellas! Here’s to hoping you’re above-average!” Andrew Bynum has yet to be fully weaponized in the post, but he has shown he is probably the Cavs’ second-most talented player. What’s worrying is his apparent apathy towards basketball. He oozes talent, but he seems half-awake and frankly depressed. His quotes thus far have indicated he is feeling the many knee surgeries he has endured in his career. A healthy, invested Bynum is a huge bargain, but it’s murky what is happening in dude’s headspace.
Perhaps the most important key to a successful season involves three of the team’s high-lottery picks not named Kyrie Irving showing, you know, improvement. It’s been 11 percent of the season, nothing really, but thus far, only Tristan Thompson has looked promising. Dion Waiters is on the upswing after a brutal start. Once again, a competent offensive scheme may help mask his deficiencies but the eye test shows that those deficiencies mainly center around his inability to know what to do when he has the basketball. Waiters was in a series of pick & rolls with Anderson Varejao in the game against Chicago, and every time, he went around the pick, cut back under Varejao and launched a fadeaway. I hesitate to go in on Anthony Bennett as much as his play perhaps warrants because there is a lot in the way. Rookie big men typically struggle early on with the adjustment, as do players coming back from injury. That being said, he has been horrendous and barely looks like an NBA player. Thompson himself hasn’t been perfect, but the new shooting stroke is solid. Still, out of three top four picks, you expect more than solid or mediocre. Patience is a virtue and all that, but these player’s developments are crucial to the success of the Cavs.
It would be utterly premature to declare the season a wash, set fire to the ships and google “tank gif” for a few months. There is real talent on this team, maybe not quite enough to push anyone in the Eastern Conference hegemony in a playoff series, but enough to justify working toward that end. Nine games into the season and the team has yet to hit its stride, but there are still positives. This is who the Cavs are: a mixed-bag of a team that could be average if pieces fall into the right place. The team will be clawing at stability and wins and a lot hangs in the balance. It’s a big season simply because it could swing either way. Welcome to the post-offseason-expectation Cleveland Cavaliers.
Mike Brown’s offense was a Lebron James isolation.
The Chosen one cannot emerge if Kyrie won’t give him the ball.
kj’s original comment is brilliant (maybe it is satire?), and may in fact be a part of the unfolding dion absence story, let’s let it ride for a week or two to see if the chosen one can emerge.
Does this blog have a moderator that can tactfully remove kj’s offensive post?
What scares me is when they lose to the Bucks. If this team can’t beat the bottom-feeders then by definition the bottom is where they belong. If they lose the in-season series to Philadelphia and/or teams like Detroit, then playoffs will remain a dream. A little urgency would be nice. Bennett’s comments about “fortunately I have time to learn” also have consequences; might have been fine last year, but I don’t want to hear it.
This product of cavs ball is unwatchable. They suck
First of all, I didn’t say our big men should be as good as their big men. I simply pointed out that we have a lack of efficient passing from our bigs and our offense takes way too long to run plays. Execution might be lacking because of inexperience. The lag time of 10 seconds before we run a play (if we even do) is inexcusable.
Gordon, all I will say is that is disengenious for you to compare the triumvirate of Boozer, Noah and Gibson to our big men. The main reason? The Bulls big men have played with each other for 3 full seasons! Yet, you’re here raining down apocolyptic proclamations about the offense after less then 10 games? Come on…
I lay most of this on Mike Brown. We’re talking about Kyrie Irving who looks bad out there sometimes. He’s a budding SUPERSTAR, not All-Star, but a guy most sports writers are talking about as the next superstar, and he looks bad in this offense. In the games I have seen on TV and in person, our offense is simply dysfunctional. Spacing is an issue. Passing is an issue. Dribbling is an issue. Players get the ball and then have to think about what to do with it next. There is absolutely zero rhythm. If anyone wants to take the… Read more »
Kj, You nailed it. For AB, it would be nice if he was good from day 1. If he is still playing like this next year, I will say “OK, Nate, you were right”. But it is way to early to give up. I have been hanging out in gyms and playgrounds for a half century or so. Many times a big kid starts coming around, and I can totally outplay him. Then about a year later, he can thump me. It is good to become friends with such kids; some of them wind up becoming HS coaches, and have… Read more »
KJ, I agree that Dion is perhaps the least of our issues. I think it will help when Mike Brown’s defense starts to actually cause turnovers instead of just slowing the game down. Without transition buckets, we look like a 3rd rate bulls defense…which means we’re keeping the game boring, although rather close, for 3 qutrs. But then there’s no kick at the end. The Twolves game aside…i think the defense should hold up pretty well as long as the guards learn to keep penetration to a minimum. That said…i think we still have the second worst point differential in… Read more »
I would remind the author that Dion is shooting better from the floor and from 3 then Kyrie. Yet, you mainly give Kyrie a pass saying Kyrie is “vaguely playing up to his level?” Really? I mean, you must be joking! His “level” is near-superstar. He’s not even at all-star level currently. At this point I an FAR more worried about Kyrie then Dion because this is Year 3 for Kyrie, which is historically the year great players take the leap. Not only have we not seen the leap, we’ve seen a regression. This is the A #1 concern for… Read more »
Yeah, that wasn’t me, folks. Someone attempting to pass themselves off as me. Fail.
I’m one of those hopelessly optimistic sports fans — the kind who envisions the best possible scenarios for his team, and believes and expects them to come to fruition. That being said, I absolutely think the Cavs could be one of those upstart teams to creep into the playoffs and knock off a higher seeded opponent, only to be crushed in the second round, humbled yet emboldened. Kyrie, Tristan, Dion, and even Bynum (from a health standpoint) are all diamonds in the rough that have the capability to do big things. The bench is deep and experienced. Heck, considering the… Read more »
KJ, your attempt at humor is cringe worthy
kj, just so you know, and I realize you were attempting humor, your post could be perceived as horribly offensive to some people. not trying to start something because i know that’s not what this space is for, but just a heads up, my man.
Everything you said is null and void because you insulted Dion. I’m going to insult everyone until you all realize that Dion is the second coming of MJ! Its Kyrie’s fault nobody recognizes our lord Dion Christ!