Preview/Live Thread: Cavs vs. Heat (Home Opener!)
2015-10-30What a difference a year makes. Exactly 365 days ago, the Cavs arrived at the Q in storybook fashion, celebrating the return of the King (and his new court) with a giant street party, a live performance by the Imagine Dragons and a spine-tingling black and white Nike commercial that brought many a long-suffering Cleveland sports fan to tears. That night didn’t end the way most hoped or imagined it would, with the lowly Knicks knocking off the Cavs 95-90 in front of a disappointed sold out crowd. Though all of the starters finished with double digits, and new recruit, Kevin Love, performed well (19 points, 14 rebounds), LeBron himself had a night to forget (17 points on 5-15 shooting and eight turnovers) and the Cavs bench was nearly non-existent (one future Cav J.R. Smith almost outscored them on his own, and another, Iman Shumpert, actually did).
In the place of all that pomp, circumstance and wildly optimistic expectation surrounding a team that had the makings of greatness, is the centered focus, resolve and eye-of-the-hurricane calm that was bourn out of an epic and gritty Finals run, fortified by a bench overhaul that nearly rivaled the one David Griffin conjured up to remedy the starting lineup in the middle of last season. Sure, there is the specter of injury hovering over the shoulder (and back… and knee… and wrist) of this year’s squad, but that appears to be the only tangible obstacle standing between them and the promised ‘Land.
It’s with that calm and focus that the Cavaliers take the court in a game that counts at the Q for the first time since Game 6 of the Finals in June. To celebrate, the Cavs will don an updated version of their “CavFanatic” mashup jerseys (first worn during the 2009-10 season — as seen in the headline visual), featuring the “CAVS” wordmark from team’s jerseys of the 1980’s, complete with the popular net-and-ball “V.” Aside from now sporting an Adidas logo, this jersey also features a small “All for one. One for all.” tag along the bottom.
And, in the “throwback” spirit, their opponent will be their old rivals from South Beach, DWade, Chris Bosh and the rest of the Miami Heat. The somewhat sexy pick to be the “team most likely” to knock the Cavs from their perch at the pinnacle of the Eastern Conference, the Heat still have their own injury cross to bear before they can be considered even in a realistic conversation for that feat. While they have Chris Bosh back and healthy from his blood-clot scare last year, they still will be relying heavily on the knees of Dwayne Wade to keep them in the hunt. From a starting five perspective, Miami does have some undeniable talent. Joining Bosh and Wade are promising big man, Hassan Whiteside, one-time Cav, Luol Deng, and up-tempo PG, Goran Dragic, who signed a long-term deal with the Heat in the off-season. Beyond those five, however, there are bigger question marks on a bench that features rookie Justise Winslow, a surprisingly rejuvenated Gerald Green (who’s suddenly transformed into a decent outside shooter) and newly acquired Amare Stoudamire, along with holdovers Josh McRoberts, Mario Chalmers, Chris Andersen and Udonis Haslem.
The Cavs will counter with the same starting five from the first two games: LeBron, Kevin Love, Timofey Mozgov, Mo Williams and J.R. Smith. Unlike a year ago, however, their supporting cast off the bench has some real punch to it. With a spry Richard Jefferson, more confident-looking Delly, refreshed and healthy AV, a slowly-rounding-into-shape TT, and some spark from Much Danger Ninja, Jared Cunningham, they appear (at least in the early going) to be a much more formidable force with which to be reckoned.
For LeBron, much of the discussion in the past few days has revolved around his back, and the degree to which it might actually be ailing. Some have speculated that his recent penchant for lying prone on his back when he checks out of a game could be real cause for concern, and have compared him to other greats with balky backs like Larry Bird and Steve Nash. This has in turn led to discussion about whether the King might need some more time off to recuperate, similar to the fortnight vacation in the middle of last season. However, today, he seemingly nipped that thought in the bud with the media…
Most interesting thing from today? LeBron said he plans on playing in all 82 games this season.
— Jason Lloyd (@ByJasonLloyd) October 30, 2015
In the meantime, there are two milestones possibly within LeBron’s reach tonight: He is five defensive rebounds away from passing Zydrunas Ilgauskas (3,568) for second place in team history (first place is Brad Daughtery at 4,020); he is also just 50 points shy of 25,000 for his career. Doubtful that Bron drops a half dollar on his old Miami pals, but you never know…
Chime in and share your thoughts on Opening Night… and GO CAVS!
Bench with 32 pts tonight! Heat’s bench 19pts. Delly has a great chemistry with this bench. He has a history with these guys. Mo & Delly are getting this team more assists from last year. That was a problem before. Kyrie averages 5 per game. Mo has always been 6 per game. Delly is at 3 but improving in increments. This team is committed to improving that.
@JasonLloydABJ: In 3 games, Matthew Dellavedova has an assist/TO ratio of 17/1. It was 10/0 tonight. He has played about 62 minutes since his last/only TO
I think the one TO may have been when Rose stole the ball from him. I wonder if Delly’s assist/TO ratio is nearing any records?
What a great stat. He has the record for season and career assists at St. Marys. It is great to see him get that going. Just awesome for the Cavs to have this kind of input from a walk on. GO Cavs.
irving should rest until the Eastern Conference Finals so he can get warmed up for the Finals. We don’t need him until we play the best teams in the league.
Dave McMenamin @mcten 16m16 minutes ago
Favorite postgame moment had to be J.R. Smith looking at the boxscore and marveling to no one in particular about Delly’s 10-ast, 0-TO line
that’s awesome
The mst fascinating story for me so far is how Love is playing exactly the same as he did last year (with actually slightly lower shooting %’s), yet the national media has decided he is somehow great again. He was great last year. He is doing exactly the same thing this year. Yet the same people who ripped him last year now say he is great. The media is so stupid.
According to http://www.basketball-reference.com/players/l/loveke01.html , he’s 1 assist, 1 rebound and 1 point better than last year’s combined per-game average.
You agree that is a very small difference, right? Also, those type of aggregat statistics are mostly a function of more touches. His shooting percentages are slightly lower, which suggests lower efficiency.
But the point is I love Love. Unique player that is critical to our team and success. We were at our best with him healthy last year. It just seems like people are over-reporting a narrative that he is a lot better this year. I don’t see it (at least so far).
Basically agree, Love was good last year, and good to his year. If Irving was playing these games this season so far, Love’s numbers would probably be less impressive, since Irving would be taking a lot of shots. Love should be getting a lot of usage while Irving is out.
That should read ‘and good this year’. Stupid phone.
Did any one notice the lineup out there in the fourth. Delly at the 1, RJ at the 2, LeBron at the 3, Love the 4 and TT at the 5. That was a dangerous lineup.
Kings with 40 points in 1st quarter against Lakers. Fly the Laker flags proudly.
So many interesting teams and players around the league. Wish the best of health to everybody. I don’t recall being as intrigued by an NBA season as I am for this one.
I agree with your previous statement re: Eastern Conference. Also, a lot of solid rookies came into the league this year. For instance, Montrezl Harrell looks pretty nice so far in this GS/HOU game. I didn’t really expect him to do much as an undersized front court player… but he looks like he belongs.
Question to CtBers – Is that Blatt’s offense we’re watching . . . with all the ball movement and second team effectiveness?
Certainly seems like it. Through this offense and bench production, Lebron not only plays lower minutes (34 tonight), but the minutes he plays are far less demanding.
Plus, I agree with Campy that all our players have very high basketball IQ’s.
I’d agree with bLAND… but also, JB225 mentioned what I think is the most important point, continuity. The guys are learning how to play team basketball. Lots of unselfishness and exploiting mismatches. Even though Mo is new, he’s played with LBJ for a long time… AV being back, also played with LBJ forever. RJ is smart guy, Delly’s improved. TT’s a team player. Cunningham’s bought into the program of ball movement. KLove’s comfortable, I could go on and on, but just having experience together is allowing them to work together on the fly. I will say though to your point,… Read more »
Detroit beat Chicago. Pistons are 3-0! They are rising
Durant with 43 and Westbrook with 48. Mercy.
It’s surprising how well the Cavs are playing together, considering the lineups they played with in the pre-season. It’s scary.
They have gotten better every game so far.
I think the Eastern Conference is a lot better than people think
Orlando-OKC game is insane
Dang, these Rockets absolutely hate the Warriors
Both teams are pretty hateable.
I’m guessing Oladipo (with 45 minutes at this time) was matched up with Westbrook tonight. Westbrook with 43 points. Surprising, considering Oladipo was considered a lock down defender coming out of college.
It also appears that Utah’s C Gobert (+35) dominated Philly’s Okafor (-35) and Noel.
Drummond with 20 pts and 20 rebounds against Gasol / Noah.
. . . but admittedly, Gasol had 14 pts & 11 rebound game (but -18) himself.
. . . D Rose w/ 8 points and 5 turnovers in 34 minutes, while Butler scores 23 and grabs 11 rebounds. Maybe ESPN will turn its attention towards that dynamic.
Pistons also have taken the Bulls into OT…