The Cavs Really Should Trade Kyrie Irving (Probably)
2014-04-01In the words of Magnum P.I., I know what you’re thinking: “Nate is nuts.” Kyrie Irving is a 21-year-old two time All-Atar who was just the NBA All-Star Game MVP, was the No. 1 pick of the draft and rookie of the year in 2012. In the NBA, players like that are untouchable. But the dirty little secret of this Cleveland playoff push is that the Cavs may play better without Kyrie, and at the very least, they don’t play any worse. I’m actually worried about the Cavs missing the playoffs if Irving comes back. Am I a hoops blasphemer?
The Evidence
In the first 12 games of the current roster configuration (with Spencer Hawes) the Cavs played with Kyrie. They went 4-8 with a point differential of -4.5. They shot .438 and allowed an opponent field goal percentage of .449. This admittedly brutal stretch of games came against all playoff teams, save the Knicks.
In the last eight games, sans Kyrie, The Cavs are playing .500 basketball, with their only losses coming to playoff teams. The point differential is a nominal -0.7 per game. They are shooting .483 with an opponent field goal of .448. This stretch of games has been against all playoff teams save the Knicks and Pistons.
To further investigate the phenomenon let’s look at one of my favorite stats, RAPM. Regularized Adjusted Plus Minus attempts to estimate, in an unbiased way, a players impact on the game in terms of impact per 100 possessions.
2013-2014 RAPM | SWAgR (Wins) | Combined RAPM | Off. | Def. | Min. |
Kyrie Irving | 3.00 | -1.13 | 1.53 | -2.66 | 2274 |
Dion Waiters | 3.85 | 0.04 | 0.92 | -0.89 | 1595 |
Jarrett Jack | -0.43 | -3.02 | -1.84 | -1.17 | 1915 |
Matthew Dellavedova | 1.94 | -0.35 | -0.15 | -0.20 | 991 |
As can be seen, Waiters and Dellavedova both have a RAPM near zero (0.04, and -0.35, respectively), while Irving’s is -1.13, and Jack’s is -3.02 on the season. This analysis suffers from a couple flaws. The first is Dellavedova’s small minutes sample. The second is that the Cavs improved fortunes have come with Jack and Deng’s improved play, which may be the result of getting healthy after lingering injuries. Jack is clearly playing better now than he has most of the season. What can’t be argued is that Wailters does not give up nearly as much on defense as Kyrie does. The theory I’ve surmised from this chart and the Cavs records with and without Kyrie Irving: Cleveland would not be any worse if they gave Kyrie’s minutes to Matthew Dellavedova and Dion Waiters (and probably any other “average RAPM” guards in the league).
Finally, while Irving had a Rookie year for the ages, he’s barely improved since. Take a look at his RAPM.
Year | SWAgR (Wins) | Combined RAPM | Off. |
Def. |
Min. |
2014 | 3.00 | -1.13 | 1.53 | -2.66 | 2274 |
2013 | 3.33 | -2.07 | 0.71 | -2.78 | 2048 |
2012 | 1.50 | -3.09 | -0.21 | -2.88 | 1558 |
His PER and other advanced stats, courtesy of basketball-reference.
Kyrie Irving Advanced Statistics | |||||
Season ▴ | Age | G | MP | PER | |
2011-2012 | 19 | 51 | 1558 | 21.4 | |
2012-2013 | 20 | 59 | 2048 | 21.4 | |
2013-2014 | 21 | 64 | 2274 | 20.0 | |
TS% | eFG% | FTr | 3PAr | ||
2011-2012 | 0.566 | 0.517 | 0.262 | 0.245 | |
2012-2013 | 0.553 | 0.503 | 0.271 | 0.261 | |
2013-2014 | 0.532 | 0.479 | 0.27 | 0.280 | |
ORB% | DRB% | TRB% | AST% | STL% | |
2011-2012 | 3.1 | 11.2 | 7 | 36.5 | 1.8 |
2012-2013 | 1.8 | 10.8 | 6.1 | 32.7 | 2.3 |
2013-2014 | 2.2 | 9.3 | 5.6 | 32.6 | 2.0 |
BLK% | TOV% | USG% | ORtg | DRtg | |
2011-2012 | 1.0 | 16.1 | 28.7 | 109 | 110 |
2012-2013 | 0.8 | 13.8 | 30.2 | 108 | 110 |
2013-2014 | 0.8 | 12.1 | 28.4 | 109 | 109 |
OWS | DWS | WS | WS/48 | ||
2011-2012 | 3.4 | 0.6 | 4.1 | 0.125 | |
2012-2013 | 4.2 | 1.1 | 5.3 | 0.125 | |
2013-2014 | 4.2 | 1.7 | 5.9 | 0.125 |
Irving has improved his turnover percentage significantly. In all other areas, he’s regressed slightly, or stayed almost exactly the same since his rookie season. His win shares per 48 minutes have not budged in three years. There are fair criticisms of his game. Irving still runs far too many plays in isolation. His assist rate is dropping. He gets trapped in corners. He tries to do too much. He’s easy to scheme against when the game is on the line. He gets lit up by the Danny Greens of the world.
The Argument
Kyrie Irving’s trade value will never be higher than right now. He’s still on his rookie deal for one more season. He is widely regarded as one of the best young point guards in the league, and he just recently turned 22. Irving won’t be in his “prime” for probably five more seasons. He has nowhere to go but “up,” but his sky high reputation greatly outshines his actual production. Also, aside from the fact that the Cavs don’t seem to be better with him on the floor, they have some other reasons to consider trading him.
First, Kyrie’s comparison to the great players ignores defense. If you’re going to compare Irving to Chris Paul, you’ll have to note that Paul was a pretty tenacious defensive player when he came in the league (his defensive APM was almost five — unheard of for a rookie). The other greats, Oscar, Jordan, and Magic, were all good defensive players too (or at least in terms of Magic, great rebounders), as opposed to Kyrie. Second, Irving’s injury prone. Irving has missed 22-percent of his games in a Cleveland uniform. That is just over one in five games — a startlingly high number for a 21 year old player. Third, Kyrie Irving will probably receive a contract that outweighs his value.
Kyrie Irving will be eligible for a five year contract extension that pays him 25% of the salary cap in years one and two, and 30% of the salary cap in years 3-5. If Irving is voted to start another all-star game, he’ll be eligible for 30% of the salary cap in all five years of the extension. (Further explanations, here). Is Kyrie Irving a player worth tying up 30% of the Cavs salary cap for five years? $17+ million per year? Will he improve to the point that he’ll make his teammates better, and not is not a complete liability on defense? The answer, unfortunately, is that Kyrie Irving is not worth the risk.
Why? For one thing, there isn’t enough scarcity when it comes to quality point guard play to justify paying Irving that much. In a perfect world, with no salary cap, that might make sense. But to pay Irving that much means the Cavs will not be paying as much to other positions. The recent NBA seems to favor the dominating larger players that can get their shot off against anyone in the playoffs, rather than shorter players who distribute and hit open shots. Wins are about crunch time and defense. Crunch time and defense are about size, skill, and athletic ability. Highly skilled, Irving doesn’t possess enough size and athletic ability to generate enough wins to warrant that investment. If Cleveland can get the same production out of Delly and pay him half that, they should seriously consider it.
My argument is borderline in many ways. It assumes that Kyrie will not improve and become the transcendent player that his rookie year hinted he would. Irving’s rookie season was top 20 all time, but his improvement since his rookie year has been negligible at best. He’s made small strides on defense, but still gets lost off the ball, and seems to still not know how to make his teammates better. He’s being outplayed badly by Dellavedova in terms of setting up the offense and playing defense, and Kyrie hasn’t shown any progression towards improving those traits. There’s no guarantee Irving does.
If the Cavs were to shop Irving from a position of strength, they would certainly get a lot of intriguing offers, and might be able to build a more balanced team instead of a team built around a taller, less athletic, Allen Iverson, with a better jump shot, who plays defense like Steve Nash.
The Counterargument
No one has done what Kyrie has done at point guard at such a young age, at least not anyone as short as Kyrie. As Conrad Kaczmarek noted on FTS a couple years ago, only Michael Jordan, Oscar Robertson, and Magic Johnson joined Kyrie in averaging 18 points and five assists with a TS% over 55. Furthermore…
When we compared Kyrie’s rookie PER to other rookies in NBA history, he matches up pretty well. Once again, he ranks 22nd. The only active players to have had better rookie PERs were Tim Duncan, Blake Griffin, Kenneth Faried, and Chris Paul. That’s a solid list to be on.
If we only look at the PER of rookie guards, Kyrie is fifth all time. Only Chris Paul, Walter Davis, Michael Jordan, and Oscar Robertson were better. Believe it or not, Kyrie even narrowly topped Magic Johnson’s rookie campaign, 21.4 to 20.6.
Irving is still only 22 years old. He has time to learn to become a great point guard, or he can be a shooting guard and be paired with a great point guard who has the size to cover other teams’ taller guards. Smart teams don’t throw away that kind of prodigious talent.
The final counterargument is most convincing: Cleveland probably can’t trade Kyrie and get the kind of value they’d need to make a trade worthwhile.
If the Cavs Were to Trade Kyrie, What Could They Get?
Could Cleveland get enough? The goal of trading Kyrie should be to improve some of the Cavs most glaring needs: shot blocking/interior defense, efficient interior scoring, and two way talent at the wings. A Kyrie Irving trade has two other caveats. The salaries have to match, which could be difficult because Kyrie is still on his rookie deal, and the Cavs will be under the cap this offseason after Hawes and Deng are free agents. Additionally, no team will trade for Kyrie unless he is willing to sign an extension with them.
Kevin has broached this subject before. In his most recent exploration, “Blowing Up the Cavaliers,” Kevin got this offer out of the box for Irving.
Michael Schwartz of Valley of the Suns offered Goran Dragic or Eric Bledsoe, either Morris twin, and two first round draft picks. Honestly, I didn’t hate it.
Not a bad haul, but aside from improving on Tristan Thompson, offensively, it doesn’t move the needle much for Cleveland.
The Cavs have two routes to go for getting all-star level talent in return for Kyrie. The first is to acquire high draft picks and hope those players turn into all-stars, the second is to trade for established players at that level. The first is riskier, the second will eat up a lot of cap room. In response to the cap room dilemma, Cleveland just made this creative deal to give them more non-guaranteed contracts: Scotty Hopson got a two year, $2.8 million dollar deal with $1.5 million non-guaranteed for next year. Contracts like Hopson’s are great for trading, because the other side can waive the salary.
If the Cavs do move Irving for a draft pick, it should be to get Andrew Wiggins. He’s the only elite player who fits a need in this draft and isn’t a tweener. Since his stock has dropped this season, it’s probably doable. Cleveland would need to get into the top one or two spots to do it. Utah, the Bucks, and the Sixers have the talent and the top level pick it will probably take to make this work. The Bucks could send Larry Sanders and the top pick(s). Utah could sign and trade Gordon Heyward and their pick(s). The Sixers could send Thaddeus Young and their pick(s). The problem is that Irving and agent, Jeffrey Wechsler, may be reluctant to sign an extension in any of those losing situations. Philly, maybe… It’s a bigger market with a lot of draft picks, cap room, and an ability to rebuild quickly. MCW is tall enough and passes enough to play with Kyrie, and that could form an effective back-court.
The Philly trade I would ask for? The Cavs trade Kyrie and Tristan Thompson for Nerlens Noel, Thad Young, and swap picks with Philly for their high lottery pick. It gets the Cavs better in a big way. Would Philly go for it? Does Irving want to sit through more years of rebuilding?
A place Kyrie would definitely sign an extension is L.A. but to get a top three pick, the Lakers would have to have some lottery magic. (But we all know that David Stern only retired to go work at Ernst & Young to make sure the Lakers get the number one pick). I proposed this trade to Tom: Cleveland gets a sign and traded Jordan Farmar, a sign and traded Jordan Hill, the Lakers’ No. 1 pick (I believe L.A. has to actually draft him before they , and a future No. 1 or two. Tom’s response? “It’s not enough.” He’s probably right.
Another interesting destination? Boston. Boston has two first rounders in the top 15, right now. Would two first rounders, Jeff Green, and Jarred Sullinger work for Kyrie? I’d hate to see Kyrie under Brad Stevens. Stevens would figure out how to maximize Irving’s effectiveness, and a Rondo/Kyrie back-court would destroy teams in transition. Also, Jeff Green is a model of inefficiency. Cleveland would really have to love those draft picks.
Would Orlando Trade? As devastating as an Irving/Oladipo Backcourt could be. The Magic don’t have enough talent to add to the #1 pick to make it work. Well, maybe if they gave Cleveland Vucevik…
What about Sacramento? It would probably take a three way deal with them moving Isaiah Thomas, giving Cleveland the lottery pick , and Thomas’ new team giving Cleveland something. But does KI extend in Sactown?
On the other end of the spectrum, Cleveland could try to shop Kyrie for established stars. I’d love to see them go after Marc Gasol and Mike Conley, but Hollinger is too big of a believer in advanced stats to move the greatest PER/Dollar player in the NBA, Conley. And a Conley/Irving Backcourt makes no sense.
What about Houston? Omer Asik, Chandler Parsons, and draft pick(s)? Now that’s intriguing. I would love to watch an Irving/Harden back-court score 50 a game, and give up 48.
Toronto? Amir Johnson and DeMarr DeRozan? They probably say no. They can just re-sign Lowry.
New Orleans has no one I want outside of Davis, San Antonio’s not breaking up their team. OKC isn’t trading Westbrook and Ibaka. Dallas doesn’t have the ammo. Portland already has Lillard. Denver? Kenneth Faried and who else? Minnesota? To see Love walk in a year? Or to get Rubio?
There’s just no perfect trade for Kyrie Irving.
And maybe Irving knows this. Maybe that’s why he called trade talk, “blasphemy,” in a USA Today interview, yesterday. A Sam Amico piece expounds.
“I’m on my rookie deal,” he said. “The team that can extend me is the Cleveland Cavaliers, and, you know, for me to even think about getting traded is blasphemy. It’s ridiculous…”
Most people close to the organization, however, believe Irving will sign a maximum extension. His recent comments seem to support that theory.
Of course, if Irving seems determined to sign an extension, maybe the Cavs should talk to Utah, Milwaukee, and Philly (my three favorite hypothetical trade candidates)… Or maybe, now that he’s been cleared to return, Kyrie should play better defense when he comes back, help the Cavs get that last playoff spot, and lock down the point guard spot for years to come as a two-way player who makes his teammates better. That’s not blasphemy, is it?
Here’s an article about how Doc Rivers got CP3 to change his game.
Doc Rivers encouraged Chris Paul to give the ball up, and the Clippers are flourishing as a result
http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nba-ball-dont-lie/doc-rivers-encouraged-chris-paul-to-give-the-ball-up–and-the-clippers-are-flourishing-as-a-result-222717381.html
Maybe we should think about trading Mike Brown for Doc Rivers ;o)
Nate- really enjoyed the article.
I think a number of the arguments from the ‘trade camp’ are fundamentally flawed. Some people point to career win percentage and stats utilizing +\-…but of course he’s going to have an awful win% or +\- when he’s playing on an awful team! Those stats are a stacked deck!
Just the fact that people are willing to trade a transcendent talent- even if willing to stay-shows how impatient people are! Unless we are getting a Godfather offer, Kyrie and the rest of this team should be allowed to develop!
If the Grizz could trade Hollinger right now, they would. That’s a statistical fact.
I think Hollinger wouldn’t be able say yes fast enough if we offered Kyrie for Conley or Gasol.
Kyrie is 22 years old. I mean seriously – you guys act like he’s a finished product. It’s not at all a stretch to say that he may end up being the best PG in the NBA during his prime.
Fifth, WitMi? That’s a bit much. LbJ, KD, CP3, Davis, Blake, Noah, Harden, Howard, George, and Curry all edge out Kyrie. 11th might be closer to the truth, and it’s in the eye of the beholder. If you offered Kyrie for Conley or Gasol, I doubt Hollinger says yes.
Historic production. Historic. Those guys career arc ends in failure how often exactly? I mean Cleveland being the FA haven we are, surely we can get these types at any time, rite? Replace Bynum and Clark with Deng and Hawes last off season, instead of midseason, and the Cavs are fighting for a home playoff spot right now, even if Kyrie had an even worse PER, or WRAP or WOOP or whatever meaningless stat you can come up with. Then again demanding that your 21 year old historically productive PG lead a scratch rebuild team to the playoffs in 2.5… Read more »
Vesus – losing was acceptable because Kyrie wasnt good enough to get this team to even sniff a playoff spot. And no TV63, the record isnt solely on him, but a big part of the reason they havent sniffed the playoffs is because he doesnt actually help the team win games like a top 25 player should. And thats it as simple as you can make it. Kyrie, for all his accolades, titles, commercials, and exciting play does not help his team win enough games. Maybe he can learn to do that, but if you can trade the hype for… Read more »
@ Nate Smith
All those players you mentioned played with, and won with, multiple-time all-stars. The cavs should be looking for those high-level role player types, not trading away their multiple-time all-star PG.
If this is NOT an April Fools joke……
Then you’re terribly wrong, Kyrie is the 5th most valuable asset in the NBA, you’re never getting equal value for him.
It’s not close, we shouldn’t trade him, or even consider trading him unless we can get Anthony Davis.
I firmly believe your analysis to be in error, good sir, and would like to settle the dispute like gentleman. Where’s my tophat?
Great analysis Nate but this would, quite frankly, be one of the worst front office decisions in the history of the nba.
All-Star games are a pretty reliable measure of who’s good in the NBA, particularly if you make it multiple times. Brad Miller was also quite good in his two All-Star years. At any rate, there are many measures that put Kyrie in a rare tier of young NBA players. You simply can’t trade that type of player because you won’t get one back in return and they are extremely hard to replace.
Waiters (I will always know him as Saint Weirdo) has shown just as much immaturity as Kyrie in his short time here, and there were calls to trade him at the deadline while he still had some value. But now we watch him play alongside Delly and he looks like a completely different person, a guy who really plays winning basketball instead of being a lone wolf on offense and a slouch on defense like he was earlier in the year. Now, in retrospect, we realize that Dion’s value was actually at a low point a couple months ago, and… Read more »
Completely disagree, Kyle. “All-stars” may be valuable commodities in terms of selling tickets and trades, but just because someone is voted to an all-star game, doesn’t mean he can necessarily help your team win games. Brad Miller was a two time all star. Robert Horry and Derrick Fisher never played in all-star games Cedrick Maxwell led Boston to a title and never played in an all-star game. Mike Bibby, never an all-star. Ron Harper, never an all star. Marcus Camby led the NBA in blocks four times and never made an all-star game. Tyson Chandler didn’t make an all-star game… Read more »
*isn’t feasible
The most valuable commodities in the NBA are All-Stars, particularly multiple time All-Stars. Kyrie is one of these such players. None of the potential trades we might look at would bring back a multiple time All-Star in return. Therefore, I don’t think this idea is feasible no matter what you think about the difference in actual vs perceived value. It’s still not high enough to get us a top 15-20 player in return, so these trade ideas are impractical. And if you doubt Kyrie’s status as a top 20 player or at least very likely to become top 20 player,… Read more »
Carmelo is a good player to compare Kyrie to, but I don’t think it’s fair to attribute their style of play too much with non-winning. I would argue more than most that defense wins championships, but those players’ penchant for the game-winning shot is priceless at the end of close games. For all his flaws, Melo led some excellent teams in Denver that often had the misfortune of facing the Spurs or Lakers in the playoffs (though the Knicks situation has been more of an enigma). Kyrie hasn’t enjoyed the luxury of playing on both a talented and healthy team… Read more »
Grover13, Agreed, but there’s too much noise in RAPM to break it into that small of components. I tried to separate it out a little in terms of how the team did with and without Kyrie after the trade deadline, but more analysis might be needed. I am betting this is something we’ll do when the season is complete (after the playoffs). Go Cavs!
@Nate- Just saw this, and don’t have time to read through all the comments to see if anyone else asked this question. I approve of the logic and measurements used to come to your conclusion….but I’m not convinced. There is another step to be taken. While not as scientific as hard data, my “eye test” tells me that Kyrie has improved greatly as a player since Grant was fired. Can I ask this of you: rerun the same analysis, but break out 2014 into before and after Grant’s firing. I think lumping all of 2014 into a single observation does… Read more »
There is no doubt the team has played with more unity and fight without Kyrie. He is probably expendable. Just seeing him sick 30 points at the expense of the guys playing with Jim is frustrating. Give me a champion team and not a team of champions. Get what cash we can for him now with max value and let’s build around the core doing a good job of competing ferociously each game. Refreshing article with excellent data and a well rounded counter argument.
Wow! Thanks for all the comments guys. Let me reiterate that this wasn’t an April Fools thing, and that it’s a serious idea worthy of discussion. I hope the Cavs are discussing it. I think even Irving’s camp backtracked a little bit with the “blasphemy” comment. He knows that a trade out of Cleveland would certainly hurt his brand in the short term. Also, as to trolling for page views, or “why I wrote this now”: I wrote it because it was on my mind, and I think it’s worthy of discussion. I’m not trolling for page views, even though… Read more »
@Steve You are seriously pinning Cavs record solely on Kyrie?? That’s just amazing. With that same logic, ridding of him the Cavs magically win twice as much.
The only trade that works for both sides would be if Lakers get a top pick and a guy we think is worth it is available (Embiid, Parker, Wiggins?). Everyone else has a semi-serviceable PG or is a destination Kyrie would likely not commit to re-sign in. Cleveland needs to for once utilize the power they have here to not set themselves up for failure in the long run…ie: #1 seriously consider if Kyrie is even worth the max before offering it to him and #2 if he balks at our offer, ship him The counter point is that we… Read more »
I see it now Tom, thanks!
Irving is a gifted offensive athlete, even though he operates more on isolation rather than consistent team ball movement. I have gotten tired of his lacking defensive performance. Having your leader play weak defense rubs off badly on the rest of the team.
I think it is fascinating to examine an all-star like Irving as being a negative component for a successful team game.
Trading Irving would be a devastating PR move. But at this point, it is interesting to establish meaningful/justified reasoning for doing so.
This event is somewhere between an April Fool’s Day thing, and naked ratingsHo. It is a mistake to respond, it will just encourage him.
Nate seems to go along like a bright guy with good analysis for a week or two, and then he gets possessed by a demon and spews crazy stuff for a day or so, and then recovers (or, gets back on his meds). There might be a few drinks involved.
Of course, we all go ape once in a while. For most of us, it takes a couple bad games, or something!
ySteve, all-star may be a title but its still a prestigous one that’s influenced bycoaches and players as well. Ultimately, if kyrie doesnt end up becoming a great player, its more likely that it would be a failure by the Cavs rather than on him because the kids potential is stratospheric. And my bad if I misinterpreted u as antiplayoffs, I always feel the need to fight that mentality
I’m trying to respond, but my comments aren’t showing up. If I’ve posted 5 times in a row and they’re just invisible to me, sorry for the mess and please go ahead and delete the redundant ones!
Nathan I rescued your comment a while ago. Do you not see it? (I do)
Ugh…gathering data is the bane of my existence. I hope to make a draft rater for this year, but it’s such a pain to create an error-free dataset with all the information I need. I’ll admit that I don’t have much experience when it comes to regressions, but my intuition is that a model that assumes team performance is simply a linear function of which five players are on the court is too much of an oversimplification to be useful. Player-player interactions, whether positive (Dion+Delly) or negative (Kyrie+Bynum) are just too big to be neglected, and there’s no good way… Read more »
OH MY GOD, OH MY GOD! YOU GUYS, WE ARE SCREWED! KYRIE JUST PRACTICED FOR THE FIRST TIME IN TWO WEEKS!!!! HE MIGHT BE PLAYING FRIDAY!!! SON OF A! THERE GO OUR PLAYOFF CHANCES!! WE ARE SOOOO SCREWED!
PLEASE POST A NEW ENTRY SO THIS RIDICULOUS TOPIC CAN BE AN AFTERTHOUGHT.
MAKE AN ENTRY ABOUT OUR NOT GONNA HAPPEN PLAYOFF CHANCES, PLEASE.
@ Steve
Players need to learn how to win. Kyrie spent 2 seasons in a situation where losing was acceptable. Eventually you have to teach players how to win and you can’t do that if losing (and more lottery picks) is the goal.
Kyrie is a dollar in that Bill Simmons scenario. He just needs to learn how to play winning basketball and that had to start this season. Tanking for MORE young players is counterproductive.
Cwzswagger basically said what most of what I wanted to say. Great comment.
My only addition is to say that this is Cleveland. We are talking about the Cleveland Cavaliers. Cleveland doesn’t have the luxury of trading 22-year old All-Stars with the potential that Kyrie Irving has. He hasn’t even begun to tap into his potential as a distributor. Normally I agree with Nate but this idea is way out there.
Also, I think the fans are overrating Dion. He has a chance to be a very good, maybe great player. Kyrie has best-PG-in-the-league potential.
I really hope this is some kind of April Fools joke, and even if it isn’t you should probably try to play it off as one. Because the thought of trading Irving for any reason other than that we absolutely have to is pretty ridiculous.
Nate, You clearly put a lot of time and thought into this, which I respect, but… a) Why make this argument now? It’s April, and the Cavs have semi-realistic playoff hopes. We haven’t been this fortunate in four years! Look, you’re a fan and blogger, and free to post about whatever you so please. But, other then Cavs playing even ball against some meh teams, I don’t see the peg. I won’t say you’re trolling for page views, but I’d be curious to hear your reason. b) I’ve got serious problems with some of your trade scenarios. You’d trade the… Read more »
Underdog,
From my POV Rubio can’t defend or shoot, just pass cool.
On some of the other (clean) websites and blogs I peruse people tend to talk about ‘click-whore’ titles and writers writing stuff they dont believe just to get traffic. This really seems like one of those. If that was the goal, good job… It worked for me. Then again, you could have titled the article ‘Pickles: are these things kosher: Cavs edition’ and I would have clicked it.
I’m not reading an article talking about trading a 2 time all star who is 21.
I generally like to be receiving the 1 player with 3 for 1 trades. You know, like Tristan, Jack, and Gee for Kevin Love (chuckle).
Has Rubio hit a ceiling or something? Haven’t heard much about him this year.
@Nate, Thanks for clarifying…although I don’t really trust the 2-man lineup at all. APM and RAPM incorporate all the same information you can find there and much more, which naturally results in a more accurate view of things. @Tom, 1. I feel like I need an emoticon to do justice to how hard I laughed at this. Is there any way you could get emoticons in the comments section in the future for purposes like this? 2. I find it interesting that GotBuckets’ RAPM disagrees so strongly with the RAPM available at shutupandjam.net, which appears to be calculated in the… Read more »
Nathan – yes, our comment section needs an update. Although, it makes me want to start a geocities page and search in altavista, and nostalgia’s a good thing, so…. As far as RAPM disagreeing, there can be many sources of that. In my experience calculating RAPM, getting a good dataset is actually the hardest part of the whole operation. It takes a lot of work to reconcile anomalies in the data. Once that’s figured out, yes the initial conditions of the regression can greatly affect the final values. For one thing, you can choose to add players to the matrix… Read more »
Nathan – you may be correct, the highest divergence may have been last offseason. But he did just win all-star game MVP. My biggest concern with Kyrie in general is simply this: superstars make their teams better when their shot is off. Does Kyrie have the physical tools, playmaking abilities, energy, will, and leadership to do that? It bothers me that everyone just assumes he’s a max contract player and that the Cavs would never even dream of trading him. This is a TRAP. Just because someone is incredibly talented doesn’t mean those talents will translate to team success. I… Read more »
Kyrie and TT and an1st for Love and Rubio.
cwzagger – Getting voted to the start the All-star game by fans who like your fancy dribbling and making a bunch of shots in an exhibition game doesn’t mean you are one of the best 24 players in the league. Kyrie Irving is not a dollar. He’s three straight years of (exactly!) .125 WS/48 and hasn’t cracked .500, much less a playoff win yet. The folly is assuming that Irving actually wins games for this team like an All-Star should. He doesn’t. If you can get back guys who do in a trade because Irving’s value is over inflated as… Read more »
@Tom Thanks! I appreciate the compliment. First off, I don’t think we, as fans of a team 15 games below .500 that’s still in a playoff race should read too much into Eastern conference standings. I would argue “the Bulls Model” jives with my comment. Talent: – Likely DPoY and heart and soul of the team, Joakim Noah – 6MoY Candidate and defensive force, Taj Gibson – Jimmy Butler, defensive force with a lot of potential – Boozer…yeah, you’re right that’s a stretch. Coaching: -Thibs, of course. An obviously phenomenal defensive coach, underrated offensive coach and clearly outstanding culture changer.… Read more »
Jason – agreed. I don’t think we have the talent to give up on Kyrie either. The Cavs need to work to maximize his talents and get he and Waiters to play well together.
This argument hinges a lot on possible outcomes and overlooks what already is… I usually try to avoid relying too much on stats, but how about this one: there are maybe a dozen players in the NBA capable of putting up 40 points in a game while scoring not inefficiently from any spot on the floor. Kyrie happens to be one of them. You can’t place a value on that. And if I were to speculate on ONE thing changing in Kyrie’s game, it would be improvement on D. This is a young, intelligent, self aware player who is not… Read more »
I don’t care if we trade Kyrie. Just lock up Delly.
#’s in order SWAgR, Combined RAPM, Off. RAPM, Def. RAPM, Mins Derrick Rose (Rookie): 2.14 -3.14 -0.68 -2.46 3314 Derrick Rose (Year 2): 2.82 -2.81 -0.77 -2.03 3083 Derrick Rose (MVP Yr): 8.40 -0.44 1.12 -1.56 3675 Damn, I guess Dion and Delly are better than peak D-Rose. The SWAgR is interesting compared to Kyrie but that year Rose came 45th in the league in SWAgR (man that’s fun to say)…just ahead of Raymond Felton. Rose’s teammate and current Cav Luol Deng came in 4th that year with a whopping SWAgR of 21.68 & Combined RAPM of 5.38, which was… Read more »
Great contribution, Jason. Thanks.
Given the eye test, Derrick Rose’s RAPM values seem low. Then again, who’s that tied for 3rd in the East with the league’s 2nd best defense? The Bulls?! After losing Rose AND Deng?
It is very simple:
only trade KI if someone offers more than he is worth.
Otherwise, we have nice building blocks going forward.
Also, this: https://twitter.com/tompestak/status/451075733406748672
Nathan 1.) Check out bball-ref’s April Fools joke – link is in one of my comments 2.) Nate used RAPM (regularized adjusted plus minus) in this article, you are referring to Kyrie’s APM between MAY 05, 2012 – March 28, 2014 I’ve found APM to be better in general than raw plus minus but inferior to RAPM. You can read about the problems of APM, mainly co-linearity here: http://godismyjudgeok.com/DStats/2011/nba-stats/a-review-of-adjusted-plusminus-and-stabilization/ 3.) True, Kyrie improved upon a dissappointing early season. Before geting injured. 4.) Nate makes a compelling argument. My opinion is that Kyrie is the Cavs most talented player and will… Read more »
Nathan, RAPM and APM are two different stats. RAPM is “regularized” using ridge regression. Conventional adjusted plus-minus is shown to do a poor job of predicting the outcome of future games, particularly when fit on less than one season of data. Adding regularization greatly improves accuracy, and some player ratings change dramatically. The enhancement with the RAPM is a Bayesian technique in which the data is combined with a priori beliefs regarding reasonable ranges for the parameters in order to produce more accurate models. That is what ridge regression (a.k.a. regularization) does. To be brief, this argument is not an… Read more »
If we could trade Kyrie for Asik, Parsons and draft picks I’d do it. I don’t think Kyrie will become that transident player that his rookie year suggested. While I do think he’ll improve, I only think we’ll see marginal improvement where he’ll make a few more all-star games but never become a superstar and never become a strong defensive player and hence, never become enough of a difference maker to improve the team as much as an Asik/Parsons combo can improve the team. I’m not sure if Wiggins or Parker will be the superstars some think they will, but… Read more »
“Why would you just throw away 3 years of experience”
What has that three years of experience gotten us? A 30-35 win team? I’d rather blow it up and start over than hope Irving can get us all the way to 45 wins and an almost competitive first round playoff loss.
1. April Fools?
2. GotBuckets lists Kyrie’s APM as 4.21 (O), -2.92 (D). Why doesn’t this agree with what you have listed?
3. Kyrie has improved dramatically as the season’s gone on from a statistical standpoint. Looking at season averages doesn’t accurately reflect how well he was playing in the last few months.
4. But actually, April Fools?
Tom — so funny.
the bball-ref guys are clever
I think Kyrie will play a lot better when he is off the ball more. One thing this stretch without him has shown is that Delly and Dion can handle the ball well. So, perhaps that will convince him that he can play the 2, and (here’s hoping) he can play better D when he isn’t using as much energy pushing the ball up. Still, good article and thinking. I like the Philly trade, but I doubt they’d go for it. That said, I like Kyrie a lot. it’s good having him in town. He’s so much fun to watch,… Read more »
Took me a minute, but that’s fantastic, Tom.
you’re crazy nate
Hell Yes it is!! blasphemy Don’t believe me, here from Kyrie’s own words what he thinks of YOUR idea. He DOES NOT appreciate it!
http://www.usatoday.com/videos/sports/nba/2014/03/31/7105149/
Why would you just throw away 3 years of experience on an unproven rookie who will make a zillion mistakes and turnovers. We would go back a year of progress . No Thanks
http://www.basketball-reference.com/friv/bynuman01_practice.html
Why do we want the Cavs to make the playoffs again? To watch a sub .500 team get swept by the star that spurned us? That would be more demoralizing than missing the post-season once again. IMO
Have to apologize for the numbers of typos and errors when this first went up. I cobbled it together on short notice after a podcast fell through, last night. Hopefully it’s cleaned up now.
And Richard: Jrue Holiday is average and Ryan Anderson has a very serious back injury. There’s no guarantee he returns the same player. Part of the point of the article is that the Cavs don’t need another guard with the rotation they have now, if they keep playing like this, at least not one making as much as Holiday.
I think NOLA works just fine. We don’t really get any better, but we’d at least be considerably cheaper. Jrue Holiday, Ryan Anderson, the right to swap with theirs pick in 14 ( won’t happen, going to Philly), 15 and 16 for Kyrie, getting out of Jack’s contract (not looking as bad as it was a month ago), and other cap fodder (Gee, Hopson, etc.) We get the best 3 point shooting PF in the game, a still very young, tall, and talented PG that can hit the 3 and play terrorizing defense on a very reasonable contract, and a… Read more »
“What about Houston? Omer Asik, Chandler Parsons, and a draft pick? Now that’s intriguing. I would love to watch an Irving/Harden back-court score 50 a game, and give up 48.” That would be the most ideal trade I think. Dion is sort of Harden esque so the issues of chemistry would hopefully be less.
Your whole analysis is flawed.
During the first part of the “current roster configuration” while Irving was healthy, Andy, Dion, and CJ were all hurt for a stretch of games.
While Kyrie has been out, everyone else has been healthy except for CJ.
And, as you noted, the schedule has been a lot easier.