A Pu Pu Platter of Lack: A C:TB Roundtable
2013-11-26Question 1: What’s the most surprising thing about the Cavaliers’ season thus far?
Tom: Everything about the Andrew Bynum experience has surprised me. I’m surprised he’s already playing, surprised at how depressed he seems despite playing (and being on track for all his contract incentives), surprised at how serious he seems (I thought he was going to be goofy in a Manny Ramirez kinda way), and I’m surprised how little his presence is moving the needle for the Cavs.
John: Kyrie’s ineffectiveness. I thought people were prematurely anointing him as a top-10 player before the season (I’m not a RINGGZZZ guy, but I do think you should have played on a team that wasn’t terrible to be considered one of the NBA’s elite), but I had no idea he’d struggle like this. He’s barely shooting 40%, and while his assist ratio has remained about the same as it was last season, it certainly looks like he’s pressing a lot more and looking to pass less. The offense has been a disaster, and the biggest problem is that the team’s star point guard doesn’t seem to be on the same page as anyone else on the floor. And he’s been playing waaay too much hero-ball in crunch time — I know he’s developed a reputation as a closer, but he’s been hurting the team by putting the blinders on late in games.
Patrick: How bad they’ve been. In the season preview podcast, most everyone picked them to make the playoffs, or at least hover. With the East as awful as it is, it’s still possible but the team just looks dreadful across the board. Defensive improvement has been heartening at least.
Robert: I’m trying to think if anything beyond “shocking number of ways in which this team is a smoking train wreck to start the season” qualifies as a surprise. Clearly, we’re all surprised by the extent to which we’ve been force fed alternating waves of nausea and disappointment while watching this team. But, really, I think the fact that Andrew Bynum is playing as regularly as he has been since the season’s start is actually more surprising than the team’s struggles. Bynum is learning how to play as a 25-year-old 45-year-old and the team is learning how to play with a significant (if only intermittently effective, right now) post player, but if you asked me before the season if it was more likely that the team would be 4-10 at this point or if Bynum would be playing in back-to-back games … well, I’ve watched enough Cavaliers basketball in my life to never be too surprised by 4-10.
Nate: This is probably everyone’s answer, but they’re just so… bad. It’s not just that they can’t shoot, dribble, defend, etc.. It’s that they look so poorly prepared for every game, give no effort, and seem to have no ability to make reactions to changes in real-time. Awful in-game adjustments have long been a Mike Brown staple, but that failure has reached new lows this year. Given such a young team, if the opponent they’re playing doesn’t run their plays according to the scouting report, then Cleveland seems helpless to counter.
Kevin: Anthony Bennett. I know he’s a rookie who had shoulder surgery this summer, but his shooting percentages are: 26 / 13 / 33. After eleven games and 122 minutes, how is that possible? There certainly exists a contingent of fans & media that didn’t like this pick, but surely no one predicted that level of fail. I don’t know what ability the team has to influence players over the summer, but there is no way he should have arrived at training camp as unprepared as he did.
Question 2: There’s been rumors of off-court drama with the Cavs. Very few details, but lots of whispers of deeper problems than their point differential. Do you think there is anything to this?
Tom: Maybe – but the Cavs seem to have a collection of high character guys. I doubt they are fighting with each other – or at least I doubt it’s unhealthy. It’s more likely they are depressed and shell shocked. Brian Windhorst used to say something like: Winning covers up a lot of warts (in the locker room). This kind of losing is going to put an electron microscope on any blemishes.
John: No idea. Rumors are rumors. What I do know is that the 5 guys on the court seem to have 5 ideas of what’s supposed to happen, especially on offense.
Patrick: I hope not, but it seems probable. When you have a team that adds an all-star and is stocked with young talent theoretically ready to improve and that team falls on it’s face immediately, there will be a fair bit of tension. Expectations can be tricky like that.
Robert: I’m having a very difficult time liking this team right now, so it wouldn’t shock me if some of them don’t care too much for each other either. If they start winning and the rumored drama-stoker, Dion Waiters, is playing well, even if he’s coming off the bench, look for that to go away. But, it can’t be fun to play on a team where the player tasked with getting you the ball in your favorite spots to score resorts to an And-1-dian display of dribbling excess and only seems willing to pass to that tall Brazilian guy and, only then, as a last resort.
Nate: The off the court stuff is mostly benign. No one is going out and getting DUIs. This isn’t Jason Kidd and Jimmy Jackson fighting over Toni Braxton. This is a bunch of guys sick of getting their butts kicked, and being ticked off about it. I wish they were ticked off about it on the court, but other than that, what are we going to do? We’re not privy to the day-to-day interactions of the players and coaches, nor would I want to be. Dion and Kyrie both want the ball. I don’t know why they don’t like passing to each other, but if I was Brown, I’d be making public comments about it or call time outs when it happens. Maybe he should do what my Mom used to do to me and my brother: make us write 1500 words about what we like about each other, or make us hug for five minutes every time we fought over the T.V. (the brotherly equivalent of freezing each other out on the court). The Cavs could really use a “team Mom.” Maybe Donovan McNabb’s Mom is free since she’s not doing those Chunky Soup commercials anymore.
Kevin: I definitely do not think anyone punched anyone else. Through 14 games though, we’ve seen Kyrie blow off Coach Brown, the team hold a players only meeting, and some efforts that have been downright lethargic. I have no idea to what extent, but there has to be some level of poor kindredship and communication hindering the team. These guys are definitely not having fun right now.
Question 3: What is most ailing the Cavs? Lack of talent, lack of effort, lack of chemistry, or lack of execution?
Tom: Lack of effort. The Matthew Dellavadova saga is all the proof we need. During the travesty that was the home game against the Wizard’s there was a sequence with 5 minutes left in the 1st quarter that summed up the Cavs defensive woes. After a John Wall rebound the Cavs packed the paint and refused to contest any 3-point shooters. This has been a maddening trend, and I assumed Martell Webster would can the wide open 3 that he was gifted. He missed, but Marcin Gortat flew in between 4 (FOUR!) Cavalier defenders that were all inside the painted area to secure the rebound. (Again, FOUR guys!) Seconds later, Webster cut to the hoop, received an unimpeded pass and threw down a dunk (with the 4 Cavaliers still planted in the paint). I’m not sure any Cavalier touched any Wizard during this sequence. It seems like this should be a difficult feat against cardboard cutouts, much less organic beings with movable appendages. The lack of effort by the majority of the roster in the game was egregious. It may not be an intentional lack of effort (can you really quit on your coach 2 weeks into his tenure?), but it’s impossible to compete in the NBA playing with such little intensity.
John: Like I mentioned above, complete lack of cohesion. Nobody is making anybody better in any fashion, and whether that’s the offensive system (or lack thereof) failing to put the players in positions to create for each other or the players’ unwillingness to create for each other making it impossible for there to be an offensive system, it’s not good.
Patrick: Probably talent, but there is a glaring cohesion problem. The Cavs look mediocre on paper and even worse on hardwood.
Robert: The only thing this team seems not to lack is things to lack. This team is like a pu pu platter of lack. But, if I had to pick the tastiest morsels from the platter, I’d say that the effort and execution questions are very much linked. I don’t believe that the team is quitting on Mike Brown or that any of its players think they are not giving effort. But, as Austin Carr pointed out during the broadcast of the Wizards’ loss last week, “Sometimes guys think they’re playing hard, but they’re not actually playing hard.” The perception of overall team effort, though, is dampened by the the team being completely in their own heads when it comes to executing the defensive or offense (I know, I know … such as it is). Five guys on a string? Right now, we’re lucky to get two guys on a string and maybe one other guy who those two guys met once at a work party a couple months back and don’t think is entirely lame. If the team can weather this learning curve that has made a punching bag of their collective confidence, we should get a more accurate sense of who is actually playing hard, who plays well with whom, and who won’t be around in 2014-15.
Nate: Effort: as I wrote Friday, when you work for someone who makes arbitrary decisions that don’t make any sense, and you see someone being favored over you for no good reason, you’re going to have a very hard time working hard for that person (Ahem, Mike Brown). When Anthony Bennett is playing awful because of lack of conditioning, talent, effort, etc. and then Henry Sims comes in and completely outclasses him, and the Bennett comes back in for no reason, it has to be really hard to want to try. NBA players aren’t blind or dumb. If I’m an employee and some idiot suit from marketing gets promoted because he was the CFO’s hire, and not me, then what’s my motivation to work harder, rather than do just enough to get by? There is none. Further, this begins and ends with Kyrie. If the best player on the team isn’t going to try hard: work to get better, get his teammates involve, hustle, and play defense, then the team’s not going to get better. When Kyrie gets to play after he’s played no defense for the last three quarters, and Dion is on the bench taking the brunt of the criticism, that sends a clear message that there’s arbitrary hierarchy within the Cavs organization. That’s what is most ailing this team: it doesn’t seem like a very fair meritocracy. The Saturday before last, against Washington, Kyrie was the up-and-coming star we’d thought he’d be. This last weekend against the Spurs, he and the Cavs’ players took a dook in the urinal of the executive washroom.
Kevin: The last three things (effort / chemistry / execution) are all intertangled, and from my couch, I can’t separate them. Regarding execution, I am not sure if the players are not doing it, or if there just isn’t a very good plan to execute, particularly on offense. A lot of bad offensive habits are being manifested. If it can be harnessed, the talent is there to be the 40-win team that was expected.
Question 4: If the malaise continues, does it make sense for the Cavs to be “buyers” and try to improve their standing this season, or accept their fate and take a gamble on a stacked draft?
Tom: The Cavs have tried to draft players with high upside. Unfortunately, despite a cache of draft picks the last few seasons they’ve never had the luck to select a can’t-miss talent. Seems like there are a handful of can’t-miss prospects in the upcoming draft. The Cavaliers are desperately missing an overwhelming wing player that can create offense. Their current offensive talent is small and incapable of making passes that force defenses to rotate. The Cavaliers need to acquire a player that can – and they may need to do it through this draft.
John: Accept their fate. As bad as it sounds, the Cavs are EXTREMELY lucky to be 4-10 right now. 2 of their wins have come in overtime, and their other two wins have come by 1 point and 4 points. Meanwhile, they’re getting blown out in most of their losses. Their record makes it look like they could maybe try and make a run at the 8th seed, but if you look at the point differential, they’re one of the three worst teams in the league. I’m not looking forward to another tank through the season, but if this type of play continues, any thinking that the team is a trade away from the playoffs is completely deluded.
Patrick: I think the Cavs should tank. It’s certainly a risk with Kyrie’s contract situation looming, but if there was a year to punt and seek more talent, it’s this one. The East is awful, and a playoff spot isn’t out of reach just yet, but with the way this team looks, the ceiling may be a seven seed and a first round bounce. Of course, this ignores the LeBron James scenario, but the Cavs current basketball woes and organizational ennui look fairly preventative on that front.
Robert: The organization would be foolish to try to force fit the playoffs on this team, especially now that we’ve gotten a chance to see some of the top players start to play some college ball. If things don’t improve, it will be because our young “core” has not improved enough — has not shown that they are ready to be consistent winners at this level — and, as Kevin pointed out, that will make trades involving those players much less appealing. Trading Varejao is probably on the table whether we’re rounding into playoff shape or not, but if the team’s problem is about the overall talent level, I’m not sure there’s a trade out there that will bring a better infusion of it than having a good pick this year.
Nate: If the Cavs continue to fail, it only makes sense for them to be “buyers” if they can get guys who they feel can help the team long term. It doesn’t make any sense to pick up short term fixes to claw to the eighth seed in the playoffs. Omer Asik is an example. His contract skyrockets to $15 million next year. That would be a player not worth bringing in. On the other hand when there’s guys around like Thaddeus Young, Luol Deng, Wilson Chandler, etc., it might be worth giving up some future assets to plug a hole with a positive +/- who may be underrated around the league. The problem is, I no longer trust Chris Grant to make these decisions. I don’t know what metrics he’s looking at, but as a whole, his decisions seem poor. To give Earl Clark four million dollars when Demarre Carroll is making 2.5 is madness.
Kevin: I’ll answer your question with questions. Who is the team selling? Andy plus draft picks? Some of the youngsters? What can any of that produce that pays a long term dividend? It’s a question without an easy answer, because the value of many of the players is not ideal right now. I think the answer to whether the team is a buyer also depends on the answer to the previous questions. How real and / or irreconcilable are any chemistry issues? If those are not imaginary or can’t be patched, a locker room shakeup may be needed. Tanking doesn’t sound like a good outcome this year, because that basically requires that Kyrie, Dion, Tristan, Bennett and Zeller don’t improve…then we get to hope that the next 20-year old is the answer. This rebuild will turn into a 6-year plan really fast.
Question 5: Any good news to report?
Tom: Andrew Bynum’s health seems to be progressing. Even if limited, an active Bynum is someone to help score some easy points and prevent a layup line. Also, despite what you’ve read on twitter and in the comment sections (or from Nate) Mike Brown is an excellent coach. In time he will right the ship.
John: I could say something about Matthew Dellavedova or give a bronx cheer to Anthony Bennett for essentially doubling his career points total in garbage time against the Spurs, but the answer is that this has been the worst start imaginable for this team. At least this is a loaded draft, and the Cavs would “deserve” one of the coveted top-3 spots in the lottery if it went by Hollinger ratings and was held today.
Patrick: Dion Waiters has been okay!
Robert: There’s stuff out there… statistical proof that Mike Brown has already improved the team’s defense, Bynum, the fact that they can’t possibly play this poorly over an entire season (could they?). But none of that really passes the smell test right now. There may be good news to speculate on, but to report? No, gang. Sorry. Bleak.
Nate: There’s good news and bad news. Good news: First, This is all fixable. Look at Portland. They were completely directionless last year. There was talk of trading Aldridge, and now they’re 12-2. Look at Atlanta. They’re third in the East right now at 8-6. Both these teams made moves to improve by adding players that were eminently gettable. Portland added Robin Lopez. Atlanta added DeMarre Caroll, Paul Millsap, and Gustavo Ayon. All of these players have a positive adjusted plus/minus. Bad news: Chris Grant and the Cavs aren’t using APM or any other system that is having good results. They’re not getting players that are helping them win. They’re losing at Moneyball to guys like Danny Ferry. Good news: Andrew Bynum seems like he’s rounding into a solid center who can play 25 minutes a night. Good news: Cleveland is a game and a half out of the playoffs, and there’s plenty of time for improvement, but they have to stop tolerating half-assed effort, and start rewarding players who are exhibiting effort with playing time. And if they don’t, next year’s draft is stacked — so that might be good news, right?
Kevin: The team still has a lot of cap space and draft picks. Tristan is making 75% of his free throws. Andrew Bynum has played in 10 games already. Andy is back. It’s pretty limited right now, but those have all been good things.
Commentariat, how would you answer these?
Nice that 3 of the 4 bottom East teams made huge trades or transactions this off-season. The supposed tankers in Philly and Boston are hovering near the top of the pile. I don’t think the Cavs need to tank, they are doing it naturally. Guys “getting healthy” isn’t going to solve this problem, at least not this season. Maybe there was something special about those Herculoids…
Players don’t leave after their rookie deals. It just doesn’t happen. It’s a terrible financial decision. Kyrie will be a Cav for roughly the first seven years of his career at the very least.
David Thorpe has an article today on espn.com listing the top 20 players from last year’s draft. Jeremy Lamb: check. Brian Roberts: check. Dion Waiters? Nope.
Can’t say that I agree with all of his choices, as usual, but it’s not just pessimistic Cleveland sports fans who are down on the Cavs’ recent draft picks. (http://insider.espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/10037262/ranking-top-20-sophomores)
Just hoping there’s no ranking of this year’s draft class. Oh, wait: http://espn.go.com/nba/players/rookies/rankings
I have been reading posts on this website for well over two years, and have never posted before. I have seen the cavs play every team in the league. I was also at Lebron’s first visit back to Cleveland. In my opinion, something is wrong. Besides the Bennett problem, I think some people have the wrong idea about what is going on. I have been an Andrew Bynum fan since before his breakout season for LAL. He has potential to be the best player on our team. Will it end up that way? I’m not sure yet. IMO, our problem… Read more »
As painful as it may sound, i think we should tank the season. no matter how much our team improves, what’s the prospect, going against a top 2 seed to win maybe three games in the first round? we’d probably be stuck in the dreaded NBA limbo. We want our first trip to the playoffs to be deep. that’s what makes people want to join your team no matter how small your market is. There seems to be a lot of solid small forwards in next year’s draft and that just happens to be what this team needs. After that,… Read more »
I’m in the middle on this one. Stay the course at least until the All-Star break. I’m against tanking but I’m also against making a panic trade. There are countless guys in the league who have struggled in their first two years, been dealt and flourished. If Kyrie and Dion don’t work together I want to see it through the end of this season. Make sure you know that Dion won’t improve off the ball before you move him. They really haven’t played together that much. Bennett can’t possibly get worse than he has been and Thompson should get much… Read more »
A 5×5 post about the current catastrophe and Jarrett Jack isn’t mentioned one time. His devastating mediocrity flies under even the best radars.
Walton and Livingston offered that, “Hey, let’s play basketball the right way” sanity off the bench when the youngsters were reeling. So far, Jarrett Jack has been the random 30 year old TA pounding beers in the frat house.
Mike brown is a terrible coach. That’s the biggest problem. He has stalemated guys but no idea how to use them.
Good point Keith.
The long two is the worst shot in basketball.
The Spurs and Heat have made a living out of playing for 3s or creating plays that get players to the rim.
Look at the Trail Blazers; they play at the rim or out at the 3 point line. Very little wasted in how they play. They’re one of the most efficient teams in basketball this year, and the results are a lot of wins.
Also, until Jack and Dion stop jacking all those long 2s, I don’t wanna hear anyone defend them. Jack is a veteran, he KNOWS better. Dion should be focusing and learning.
I don’t understand why everyone is do quick to defend Waiters. His posture is horrible all game. Look at how many times he dribbles for long stretches of the shot clock. Rarely moves without the ball. RARELY. That’s poor IQ.
Watch Karasev the minute he steps on the floor. Cutting. Clearing out. You can see the pro-genes in his head.
I think the Cavs are disappointing given our high expectations. I think the biggest issue is that each position, outside of PG, seems to be inconsistency; players that just don’t seem to be the right fits given Kyrie is locked in at PG. We invested in Bynum. But can we trust he’s going to be our every game center? Is it worth the experiment? Too many Qs there. Tristan. Has shown promise. Increased FT%. Great. But unless he can step out and hit jump shots, he’s not a starting caliber PF. NIce player, I don’t see the upside. Gee and… Read more »
The Beal / Waiters debate is moot. Beal went before we had a chance to pick him. Both have flashed potential. I’d give an edge to Beal. He went #2.
Can of worms time: I know he has a lot of followers and gets a lot of love – but what has Karasev done that makes everyone here think he’s accomplished anything more than Bennett? I saw him hit a couple of 3’s. Nice stroke, too. But why all the love? I am not saying he’s not going to be a solid starter eventually. If he learns how to find openings perhaps he can shoot like Kyle Korver. Doesn’t have an NBA body . . . tries hard on D – but guys go right by him. I’m rooting for… Read more »
The surprise is they are hardly watchable If I were a Cav I’d punch someone in the face too. As a fan it’s about all I want to do Lack of effort isn’t the problem I think it’s there is no consistency with it. You’ll see Kyrie on the floor then Delladova the only one running around and he’s on the bench. I want them to improve. Trade for Deng. Losing this bad sucks to watch and Bron ain’t coming back to a 4 year tirefire Good news to report? I’ll be deployed to Afghanistan during the 2nd half of… Read more »
Right now Beal and Drummond are better than Waiters. Both have higher PERs. From a position standpoint Beal has more points per game, and a higher TS%. Plus he plays much better defense than Waiters. It’s been said many times but the biggest factor is fit and Beal would be a much better fit than Waiters. I’m not sure Waiters would play well with other PGs because he needs the ball in his hands. I hope Waiters improves but right now he seems like he’s regressing.
To be honest id trade for Luol. This team needs a scorer that can carry the load when they need to. A defender and legit 2nd or 3rd at SF. I’ve wanted Deng the past couple years and now he’s available. As long as they don’t give up too much. I also really don’t care.
Jon, no Beal is NOT clearly better than Dion. Kyrie is not helping Dion’s cause at all. I’m blaming Kyrie for quite a few of the reason’s that Dion is not seen better in your eyes.
Terrible is the only word I can think of to describe the Cavs this season. That goes for every aspect of the game except half-court defense. Offense, transistion ball, chemestry, etc nothing good to say about the team. As long as players are healthy, I really don’t think the Cavs can ‘tank’. Guys that don’t get along or play well together and/or don’t have the talent and maturity to win – don’t have to try to tank. My biggest concern is the seemingly lack of development. Has Kyrie already peaked and he’s not playing so bad because other teams have… Read more »
Lemme just say this: when I think back to all the many people on here who were hoping we would get MKG in that draft who are now bitching up a storm about draft “mistakes,” it gives me heartburn. Maybe I should mention all the Jonas V lovers too? Btw, Beal and Dion had nearly identical numbers last year. I didn’t think Beal has shown that he’s “clearly” better than anyone, including Dion. Still waiting for someone to challenge my point that Drummond hasn’t made the Pistions any better, so how could anyone possibly extrapolate that somehow if the Cavs… Read more »
Kj, Beal is clearly better than Dion, but it doesn’t matter. He was gone by the 4th pick.
Stop it everyone! Kyrie hero ball is not the team’s problem. How is hero ball the problem when we’re consistently down by 20 points midway through the second quarter and blowing 20 point leads? Kyrie does have to play better within a team concept and he is off to a slow start shooting. Those are Kyrie’s issues. The 40 point game proves his shooting will return. (I’d also like to see him get the ball up the court more quickly without stopping at the top – a la Delavadova.) Kyrie needs to improve in those few areas. After that, there… Read more »
Patience is the key. The Cavs are and have been among the youngest teams in the NBA. Sometimes the potential looks to be there, but ultimately we have no idea how these players will develop and gel together over time, and there are too many unknown elements to decide to change course now. To trade is almost guaranteed to lose value; to tank is to destroy development. LeBron is NOT walking through that door. The only real choice is to sit back and hope that the talented young guys we already have can get it together. If the Cavs players… Read more »
Kj, I’m with you on Dion and I’m still hopeful for Bennett, but what “obvious talents” has he flashed? Flinging bricks in the general direction of the hoop immediately upon catching the ball? Air ball 3s? Number of breakfast burritos consumed in 10 minutes?
I’m with James Prentiss. Stay the course. This team will only improve as the season progresses. I think Chris Grant has done a commendable job as the team’s GM. The narrative will swing the other way in regards to Mike Brown, Chris Grant, and some of our young core once they overcome this disastrous start to the season.
Barnes had a far worse rookie campaign then Dion. And Lamb? Are you serious? Drummond has played well but Det stinks. In other words Drummond has not been making a difference in, you know, actually winning games!
I could go on about how until about a week ago, Beal was shooting 40% or how about what abust MKG has been. I mean, this drafts have produced nearly no stars so far. Maybe because it’s way to early to judge Dion’s draft? Jesus! Then you all have judged Bennett, despite the obvious talents he has flashed. Ugh.
“Are the choices of Dion and Tristin and Karasev that bad?” Tristan- no. Valenciunas still may turn out to be the better player, but TT is an asset. Dion- YES. Passed on Barnes & Drummond, among others. Lamb is becoming the deadeye outside threat in OKC that everyone thought should be the optimal pair for a young point guard (except Chris Grant) Karasev- unknown, but probably not. Irrelevant anyway, because Mike Brown won’t be able to figure out how to use him. Plus, you’re forgetting Zeller (unimpressive to date), and Bennett. So, out of six top-20 picks in the last… Read more »
Kyrie hero ball has been a problem since he started his rookie year. Jamison was confident enough to play his own game, but since he left nobody has contested Kyrie. Scott wanted Kyrie to play hero ball, because it gave him some leeway when it worked. It doesn’t work anymore. Kyrie and Dion are not assets anymore. Their market value is decreasing by the day. The team would be best served by blowing it up and bringing in only players that can play team ball. How come Casspi is a star player in Houston when he could not see the… Read more »
Why do we have to choose between buying in the short term v tanking? I propose: Staying the course. Mike Brown is a good coach. The players are all young. It takes time to build a great system. Look at why the Spurs are great. Most the players are switching from only knowing Byron Scott and having to adjust to learning an actual defense. We need to trust in Grant & Co. So, we keep improving. Who cares what the overall record is this year? As long as we are building for success in the long term. If it requires… Read more »
I understand all the hype around the 2014 draft. I do. But I would not tank this season. This is an important season for Kyrie/TT/Dion especially given that you expect them to start making the “leap” up to the next level of play sometime soon if you want them to be perennial top 10 or top 20 or top 50 players. There’s too much talent on this team to not make the playoffs in the East. Just look at the East, how many teams have more talent than the Cavs? Miami, Indiana, Chicago. That’s it. Brooklyn and New York are… Read more »
“Also, despite what you’ve read on twitter and in the comment sections (or from Nate) Mike Brown is an excellent coach. In time he will right the ship.” Thank you, Tom. You continue to be one of the most reasonable, level-headed C:TB writers. I couldn’t agree with you more about this. The amount of Mike Brown hate is unfathomable to me. He’s a proven commodity. I continue to believe lack of effort is what’s most ailing the Cavs (lack of execution a close second–but as many noted, players appear lost as to what they are even supposed to be executing).… Read more »
Don’t tank the season, try and live with whatever pick you get. NBA Finals teams are built through trades and FA more often than not. You can’t build from the draft if you don’t have a good development staff. We have assets and picks to trade during the draft to move up if we want.