Recap: Cavs 102, Pistons 93(Or, The Resiliency of Love)
2015-02-25The Cavaliers rolled into the Palace at Auburn Hills looking like a budding title contender. The Wine and Gold looked to sweep their three game road trip after destroying D.C. and NYC. The Detroit Pistons, fresh off a roster makeover, wanted to continue their momentum toward a playoff spot. With Tayshaun Prince and LeBron James back with their original teams, it felt like old times. Let’s get to it.
1st Quarter: The game’s scoring started in rather emblematic fashion. Reggie Jackson used a double screen to get himself a 15 footer off the bounce with a semi-contest from Kyrie Irving. Yes, he made it, but it was a theme throughout the evening. The Cavs were happy to let Jackson try to beat them with Heroball.
On the other end, LeBron got out into early transition for a layup. His extra step wasn’t as bad as Sweet Lou’s balletic jaunt in New York, but it was still rather humorous. That “gather step” is getting longer and longer in the NBA. Shortly after Kyrie blew by Greg Monroe on a left hand drive off Pick and Roll, Kyrie delivered an Oop to Mozgov off a baseline inbound play. It was the first of two such quick hitting alley-oops to Mozzy on the evening. LeBron atoned for a lazy turnover by ripping the subsequent outlet pass and taking it in for a dunk. He had two quick steals in first minutes of the game. Swarming defense, solid rim protection in the form of Mozgov blocks and two Kevin Love three balls pushed the lead to 17-8 and a Piston timeout at the 6:36 mark.
Unfortunately, Detroit went on a quick 9-0 run that included a throwback jam by old/new Piston Tayshaun Prince and a dagger three from the quietly emerging Kentavious Caldwell-Pope. Kevin Love again had the answer by nailing a right corner three from LeBron’s kickout pass. The new Cavalier bench rarely sits down. They were in full throat cheering early and often. LeBron’s rest came a touch later than in recent games when Iman Shumpert and Tristan Thompson checked in at the 4:11 mark of the quarter.
The Cavalier defensive intensity picked up with the substitution. A great hedged screen by Love, quick hands by Shump, and a fantastic contest from J.R. led to a 24 second violation. The Cavs were playing good ball, getting better shots and challenging everything, but Detroit got some tough possessions to miraculously end in points to keep the Pistons even. Bron and Delly entered at the :59 mark and promptly hooked up for a Delly-trey. Anthony Tolliver answered with one of his own before the Cavs finished the period with a beautiful passing sequence that ended with a right wing three from pseudo backup PF James Jones. 30-27 Cavs after one.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cdEOjG27RPQ&t=2m19s
2nd Quarter: Delly, Shump, Jones, Bron, and TT started the second quarter. Both David Blatt and Stan Van Gundy rolled with only one true bigman on the floor. Shumpert did a nice job chasing Jodie Meeks around multiple screens on a possession that ultimately ended with a tough Caron Butler three. Dellavedova did a great job digging in for a defensive rebound that was somehow credited to LeBron, who took it in transition for an and-1 opportunity. It is a play like that that endears Delly to so many basketball people. Another fan favorite, T-Moz rejected a Greg Monroe layup attempt and released for a rim run. Though the Pistons stopped the break, Mozzy got his second alley-oop off an inbound play -this time from a LeBron pass- to put the Cavs up 39-33.
Even the Cavs’ offensive misses came off great action. Love blew his easiest chance of the night when LeBron found him over the top after Shump sucked the defense to him on a baseline curl off Love’s screen. Kevin was left with a wide open layup that spilled off. Still, it was a beautiful play. Defensively, Mozgov straight owned Greg Monroe. If not for a cheap foul that sent Timofey to the bench, the Cavs might have been on their way to another blowout. Instead, the Pistons regained their footing late in the quarter.
Before that however, LeBron’s assist to Kevin Love for yet another left wing three put the King ahead of Scottie Pippen as the all-time assist leader for a forward. I wonder whether they are counting his rookie year assists when he was listed as a point guard. Regardless, it is an amazing accomplishment. Congrats, Bron.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0L1nr3k4SE4
The Love three had put the Cavs up 44-37. A Pistons 14-0 run punctuated by a Tayshaun Prince left corner three put the home crowd in a frenzy. Kyrie Irving couldn’t get anything to fall. The ball movement didn’t completely stop, but wasn’t humming like before. The Pistons couldn’t miss. The Cavs’ defensive pressure wasn’t all that bad. It was simply one of those runs. J.R. finally broke the seal with great hanging finish off a hard C-cut.
At 2:19, Kendrick Perkins made his Cavalier debut. Wearing Dion’s old number 3 had me confused. They might as well be twins. Alas, he didn’t wave his hands around for a perimeter pass. Instead, Kyrie found the big fella for his first and only bucket on a baseline drop pass. Of course, Perkins followed that up by picking up fouls on each end in the screen game. He is who we thought he was. After a 1-3 PnR led to foul shots for Kyrie and a three point deficit, the Cavs old “end of the quarter blues” made an ugly return. A Kyrie miss, the aforementioned offensive screen foul on Perk, and a fouled three point shooter later, and the road team found itself down nine points. In all, the Cavs gave up 25 points over the last six minutes of the quarter. Heading to the break, 62-53 Pistons.
3rd Quarter: The first minute and a half of the third was as sloppy as the end of the second quarter. Mozgov had a bad sequence where he passed up a three-foot layup attempt against Prince to kick it out to LeBron with only two seconds to shoot. It didn’t help that Bron was 30 feet away from the bucket. The rebound led to Piston early offense. Both Love and Mozgov leaned toward Monroe on the early break leaving Andre Drummond alone to throw down a lob from Jackson. David Blatt had seen enough when Caldwell-Pope drilled a pull-up three to go ahead 67-53 with 10:30 remaining.
Out of the timeout, it was all Cavs. James found Mozzy for another alley-oop. The Cavalier defense got nasty. Hounding ball pressure and properly funneled drives put the Pistons offense on lock down. On the other end, it was the Kevin Love show. LeBron and the rest of the Cavs looked for the GQ model and he delivered with four three pointers in the period. On the occasion that the Pistons defense closed out in time to disrupt his flow, Love found Mozgov down low for a no nonsense dunk. Kyrie got his jumper going a bit as well. All in all, the Cavs ended the quarter on a 24-7 run by playing insanely good defense and pick and popping the Pistons to death. Even with some questionable calls going against Cleveland, the Cavs rolled into the fourth leading 77-74.
4th Quarter: Delly, Shump, Jones, Bron, and TT started the fourth quarter with tremendous defensive pressure. Shump finally got a three to fall that pushed the lead to six. A slick hesitation dribble from LeBron netted an and-1. Delly made a push in transition that led to a LeBron assisted left wing three from James Jones that put the Cavs up 86-78 with 8:41 left.
When James made a driving layup to put the Cavs up 12 with 6:33 remaining, it felt over. The Cavs defense held the Pistons without a point from 9:42 to 4:43. It wasn’t a fluke. Kyrie went Uncle Drew on the Pistons with a sick split of the double team and finish. He got Tristan a dunk with a slick baseline drive and dish. Reggie Jackson hero-balled his way into some numbers, but it was over.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cdEOjG27RPQ&t=8m4s
Thoughts: Iman Shumpert played thirty minutes of meaningful ball in this one. His shot wasn’t falling for much of the contest, but he was a beast defensively. He narrowly missed out on a highlight alley-oop opportunity from LeBron. It would have been nice to get him a sweet dunk to reward his strong defensive work.
I still love how supportive J.R. Smith is even when he isn’t getting huge minutes. Blatt rode the Delly/Shump backcourt for much of the fourth quarter, but J.R. and the rest of the bench guys were completely in the game. Great chemistry.
Kevin Love had an interesting game. He did as good of a job hedging on Pick and Roll than I have seen since he has been a Cav. It seems that Blatt has decided to hedge with Love depending on the PnR combo. With Mozzy behind him, he can afford to take some risks. Kevin was quick laterally and got back to his man with far more (dare I say) vigor! Offensively, Love scored all of his points from behind the arc connecting on 8-14. Though there were probably instances that a post opportunity would have been successful against Van Gundy small ball, Love stuck to Pick and Pop. Tristan and Moz are doing a good job of rolling hard as the secondary screener. Love fired when open and hit the roll man if the defense closed out in time. It might not have been what Charles Barkley wants, but if Love hits 8-14 from behind the long line and his three assists lead to dunks, it sure is effective.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kHMCloLmmwU
James Jones got a lot of run playing behind Kevin Love in this game. Considering how the Cavs used Love against the Pistons, it makes sense. He got beat on the defensive glass a few times, but in general he played well. His two threes came at important junctures of the game.
LeBron had a rather strange game. He tallied nine of the team’s 14 turnovers. Some of them were simple miscommunication and some were poor ball handling. Still, he didn’t hold the ball that often and his defensive pressure was fantastic. After averaging about 31 minutes in the month of February, it was almost strange to see him play 39 minutes.
The Cavs played much better basketball than the Pistons for almost the entire game. It was nice to see that the timeout in the first two minutes of the third had an effect. Good win.
Loving these reviews, Ben.
We should meet up at Blondies, or Manny’s, for a game, so you can explain basketball to me. Might help with the rec league woes I’m currently experiencing.
haha. I would love to, Mikey! You think Kim likes basketball too? Man, I miss those days.
Nice write-up — love the observation about the bench never sitting down.
Super game with great mental toughness in the second half. Very satisfying to confront some bad stretches of turnovers, dumb fouls, and hot shooting by the other team and still cruise to victory down the stretch.
Love’s shot is coming around, even in a game that he worked hard on defense and the boards against a big, active frontline.
I think this was LeBron’s best defensive game. He was really engaged for the whole second half.
Great recap Ben! I didn’t even fully realize how Blatt was utilizing KLove until you broke it down. I know a lot of us would like to see Love play more inside, or at least at the elbow, but the tactics last night were smart given who they were playing. Forcing a big man like Monroe to leave the paint to guard him, or a smaller man to rotate onto Kev turned out to be great strategy… and Kev made it pay off by having one of his better shooting nights… It was also a surprise to see that LBJ… Read more »
You’ve got a point about getting Love in the post, but the Pistons, with Drummond and Monroe are probably not the team to do that against.
I don’t know why, but Love hasn’t seemed as effective in the post this year as in previous ones. Maybe its the back, maybe that he’s working harder defensively, but most of his shots down low have been tough ones. Check out the shot chart and you can see he’s 48% from the right low-post this year, down from 63% last year.
http://vorped.com/1-nba/2013-2014/player/897/kevin-love/shotchart/
http://vorped.com/1-nba/2014-2015/player/897/kevin-love/shotchart/
Great point Ben, Charlie, and EG about the Pistons’ D with Drummond and Monroe. Love’s shot looked great last night, every one had some arch to it, unlike some earlier in the year.
To you other point, Charlie… other have said, and I’m convinced, something’s up with his back. But he’s fighting through it like a boss.
I really, really love Shumpert’s long-term potential. He’s a couple of good offseasons away from Jimmy Butler territory, imo. What’s comical to me is how Knicks fans had convinced themselves he was overrated because of his injuries. JR gonna be JR. I like what he brings, and I accept the negatives to go with the positives as long as he buys into what Blatt is selling and is not a disruptive presence in the locker room. He hasn’t been dogging it on the defensive end like he did at times in NY. Love is still a better player than he’s… Read more »
Shump’s biggest weakness is his handle… He’s shown he can be a catch and shoot/3 and D guy, but he needs to work on his ball-handling and driving. If he can do that, then I completely agree about the Jimmy Butler ceiling…
Yeah, that’s always been a frustrating thing about him, even at GT. I think he’s shown some improvement this year, along with his vision, but he’s never come close to the “big PG” talk that followed him in college and the draft.
That was easy. As for rose it sucks because he was fun to watch. But the Bulls were no threat anyways.
Bulls were definitely a threat. The only real threat in the East IMO.
Gasol, Noah, Butler, and Rose have starpower to rival the Cavs.
Had*
And by rival I mean comparable.
I think we’d have taken it in 6-7. Without Rose, I think we take it in 6 easily.
Bulls were a threat… but without Rose, they probably don’t make it out of the second round (either against the Cavs or the Hawks).
HAHA… love your confidence, Cols… but that didn’t look easy! Detroit’s tough, only thing they lack at this point it seems is a bench.
Picking up on your Love defense comments, I really have admired how much KLove has grown as a defensive player. Dude is SOOO much better than he was at the beginning of the year. That says a lot about him.
Also, you didn’t mention the Rose injury, but count me in the group that thinks Chicago isn’t going away. They will continue to challenge us for the division. But they are less of a threat in playoffs.
Rose’s injury, though important, will be covered elsewhere on the blog. But, I wasn’t afraid of the Bulls with Rose. They might actually be better off without having to waste possessions on him. He wasn’t playing that well before anyway. Still, it is a shame to see him go down.
Bulls are still going to be tough, but less troublesome without Rose. Butler is now going to be playing 42 minutes a game…
I agree Hot Sauce. Kevin Love’s defense in this game against Munroe and Drummond was excellent. It looks like they are running the offense through him a little more, not at the elbow but near his sweet spot on the left wing. I wonder if he has been practicing his 3 pt shot so much he forgot how to do lay ups and dunks. The missed dunk against the Wiz and the spilled lay up tonight are missed shots that stick out like sore thumbs for him. Kyrie didn’t have a great game overall but I thought he really iced… Read more »
I like the comment about kyrie, last night it looked like he was off and even pouting a little in the first half but he turned it around and found ways to help this victory. Another step in maturity for him and taking his mental game to another level. Love Love and all the things he does that aren’t always noticed. His passes are on target and meaningful his hands are up and way up unlike before, and then rebounding is an obvious. I found myself more shocked when he doesn’t reach ten or more than when he racks up… Read more »