Recap: New York 107, Cleveland 97 (Or, kizzing the floor and the playoffz)
2014-03-09This game was a “must win” for both teams coming into tonight, if either wanted to stay competitive in the playoff race. Unfortunately, the Cavs dropped this one with a combination of bad pick-and-roll defense, a lack of rebounding, and lackluster shooting. Zydrunas Ilgauskus’ jersey was retired at halftime. A vast array of former teammates and coaches were on hand to help honor him (yes, including LeBron).
“Danny Ferry came to me and said, ‘You know, you’re the only person that bring this group together in one room. Nobody else could…”
Also on the bench were former general managers Ferry, Jim Paxson and Chris Grant, former coach Mike Fratello, former assistant coaches Hank Egan and Melvin Hunt and former players Daniel Gibson, Anthony Parker, Delonte West and Ira Newble. (Knicks coach Mike Woodson, a former Cavs assistant to Randy Wittman, obviously, did not take part in the ceremony.) The current Cavs players, including Anderson Varejao, also came out of the locker room to watch the ceremony, and Varejao and Ilgauskas embraced as it ended.
Fittingly, the humble giant gave the best speech of the evening. After the speech, Z’s father kissed the floor, crossed himself, and waved to the crowd. It was the highlight of the night in a game that was utterly forgettable.
First Quarter: Spencer Hawes came out blazing, scoring 11 out of the pick and pop game and out of the post to start the quarter. Unfortunately, Tyson Chandler matched him with layups, and the Cavs defense pretty much gave the Knicks what they wanted. Even more unfortunately, the Cavs guards were quite content to launch contested two-point jump shots throughout the quarter, and play at the Knicks’ pace. Irving was 0-2, Waiters was 0-2, Deng was 0-1, and Gee was 0-1 on long twos. Only Hawes scored outside of the paint as the Cavs were completely undisciplined on offense. New York was the beneficiary of turnovers, missed shots, and offensive rebounds. Deng played decent defense on Anthony, holding Melo scoreless — scary, since the Knicks were still up 23-19.
Second Quarter: Defense flew out the window as Melo heated up, the pick-and-roll d broke down. The Knicks were 11-17 in the quarter, and if not for Spencer Hawes, this game might have been over in the first half. Spencer for Hire made two more triples, but Cleveland did a poor job of closing out shooters, and the Knicks did a good job of forcing Cleveland to collapse on dribble penetration. New York set up their bigs for layups, or kicked out for three pointers. Anderson Varejao made an appearance and looked mostly like his old self, but he couldn’t help Cleveland rebound either, and he couldn’t help Jack and Kyrie from playing defense like bullfighters waving a red flag.
This quarter would have a total loss if not for a sweet Gum Drop Bear reverse slam early on, and Kyrie single-handedly taking Cleveland on a 7-0 run to end the quarter, including a sweet and-1 with four seconds left, to cut it to 58-50, Knicks.
Third Quarter: After a very long halftime ceremony honoring Z, the third quarter started off slowly, with both teams cold. After a scoreless 2:30, Irving hit a three to break the seal, working with Hawes on the pick-and-pop two man game. Melo canned a J, but Tristan and jack got in the lane to fuel an 9-2 run, and cut the lead to 1. But asking Jarrett Jack to guard J.R. Smith is a fool’s errand. Smith hit a three like Jack wasn’t there, and then the Knicks started dominating the offensive boards, which led to an Amare putback, one of many.
From out of nowhere, Deng, who’d been cold all night, hit twin threes from the opposite wings. He even heat checked (a brick) after those two. But Jack fell over while trying to cover Smith, and J.R. splashed for three more from the left wing. The Cavs kept it close by getting inside. Irving scored on the C-cut off a nice feed from Deng, and Jack got into the middle for two teardrops at the end of the quarter. The Cavs were up 76-74, going into the fourth.
Fourth Quarter: The Dion Waiters show started the quarter. First Dion hit a no-no-no-YES! Jumper from 21, and then he put this filthy move on about four Knicks for a layup. But Dion forgot to read his scouting report on Prigioni, who countered with a three that he needed no space to get off, and then J.R. Smith just launched from 29 feet over Jarrett Jack who did not expect to have to guard J.R out there. Stoudemire scored on a putback again, and then the Cavs went cold. Cleveland scored three points in the next four minutes: a Waiters free-throw, and a 15-footer from Gee. Hawes and Irving piled up misses, and the Knicks rained threes: Prigioni (cover him, already) and Anthony this time.
Now when I say the Cavs went cold, what I really mean is, holy crap, Iman Shumpert must have pictures of someone from tonight’s officiating crew, because he fouled Spencer Hawes on two plays in this stretch where he came through Spencer’s arm for the foul, and no call was made (here and here). It was pretty ridiculous. Meanwhile, the Knicks were falling over from loose ball fouls, and the refs were sending New York to the line.The frustration was clear in the Smith living room and on the players’ faces.
Irving cut the lead to seven by throwing his body into someone and finally getting a call, with 3:38 left. But Cleveland couldn’t get stops. Two straight abuses of Kyrie by Ray Felton in the pick-and-roll led to a Chandler dunk and a Felton teardrop to seal the deal — stretching the lead to 11 with two minutes left. Some garbage time buckets, including another Smith three-pointer mercifully ended this game.
Notes:
- Tristan Thompson kind of disappeared in this one, especially on the boards. Four boards and 3-8 shooting, is not going to win against the Knicks, especially when TT spent much of the night going against Amare and his knee full of deer antler spray. Amare played a fantastic game with 17 points, 12 rebounds, and three blocks. Tristan had his weak shizz rejected on multiple occasions, and was a major factor in this loss, as was the Knicks 49-37 rebounding advantage.
- Kyrie has gotten great at sensing when defenders are off balance, or are in poor defensive position, and throwing himself into them to get to the line. He did it throughout the evening.
- Pablo Prigioni’s 11 points really hurt. He was the lone bench player to really impact the game, and most of this was on Dion, who just didn’t close out a guy who’s known as a three point shooter.
- Dion Waiters took a lot of stupid jump shots in this one, too. His -9 was a team low.
- Hawes kept Cleveland in this one with his offense, and frankly, he should have gotten more shots. Kyrie was 11-25, and if five more of those had gone to Hawes, it would have been smart. Hawes seems to not be as effective shooting, late, but he got jobbed by the officials. As good as he is on offense, he does not have the range, defensively, to play against a long, athletic big like Chandler, especially when he’s trying to cover up Kyrie’s mistakes. He’s just not a good enough defensive disruptor to be able to protect Kyrie and Jack and defend his own man.
- Andy looked solid in nine minutes: four points and three boards. The hug Wild Thing had with Z at halftime was pretty dang cool. I read that those two like to go fishing out of Sandusky. I’d pay a hefty sum to get on that boat. Get healthy, Andy, and lead this team to the playoffs. (I can hope, can’t I?)
- Brown’s substitutions were goofy in this one. The Knicks are playing their starters heavy minutes, right now, and instead of letting the bench try to push them, Brown played the starters heavy to compete with the Knicks. This was an odd decision considering the Cavs were on the back end of a back-to-back.
- Luol Deng’s long twos are killing the Cavs. Luawful was 3-12 tonight, with those twin threes being his saving grace.
- Irving wasted a lot of possessions tonight with long twos early in the shot clock, and contested threes. Kyrie finished with 30 on 25 shots. I realize his need to keep the Cavs in it, but those shots are not the way to do it.
Cleveland needed the last two games badly, as their schedule turns brutal this week. Sadly, the only team they can seem to beat right now is their bloggers. A loss couldn’t ruin the evening for me though. I’m glad the Cavs took time to honor how special Z’s career was, and it was great to take a walk down amnesia lane. I never thought I’d see Ferry, Parker, Delonte, LeBron, Boobie, and Andy all together in Ira’s Newblehood again. It made me feel bittersweet for what we had, and what we lost.
I agree. I also thought it may have been due to lesser defensive players getting more PT in light of our injury woes.
Idk I didn’t calculate the NBA stats . But our scheldue was against the easier teams in Feb. It may have more to do with the injuries of Andy, Dion, Miles. Could be factors. ..
Thanks for sharing that TV63. I never would have guessed that we had been worse on defense since Deng’s arrival. I’m inclined to think that’s a coincidental correlation (maybe our schedule was against better offensive teams during those 29 games?), and that there isn’t any causation in Deng’s presence leading to Cleveland being worse defensively.
They aren’t tanking but it might look like it against these tougher teams trying to secure their playoff spots. It’s unfortunate what happen to Bennett and yeah it does get Brown off the hook to play him (like he would that much anyways) . Jason Lloyd’s article was interesting on the inner workings of management. But I also found out despite the so-called expert bloggers on the FTS that Cavs are worse defensively than before the Deng trade. This really suprised me. http://www.nba.com/powerrankings/ Cleveland (24-40) Pace: 95.5 (20), OffRtg: 99.9 (24), DefRtg: 105.0 (20), NetRtg: -5.1 (25) The Cavs’ playoff… Read more »
I still don’t think we are going to tank, nomad. I’d be very surprised if Kyrie doesn’t take the court tomorrow night in Phoenix.
RickOH, not only did Delonte and LeBron say hello to each other, they were seen joking around and posing for a picture with Boobie, Newble, etc.
Since no one has brought up any story lines from this excellent article by Jason Lloyd (http://www.ohio.com/sports/cavs/jason-lloyd-lebron-james-visit-to-cleveland-to-honor-z-is-surreal-1.471855), what do people think about all of that? Pretty crazy stuff if you ask me.
I realize this comment is ” not following the topic “——but with the SO CALLED INJURY TO A.B. ( GOOD EXCUSE FOR BROWN NOT TO PLAY HIM / WHICH IS GOING TO STUNT HIS DEVELOPMENT EVEN MORE ) AND REPORT THAT KYRIE IS SICK / PLUS THE START OF TOUGH WEST COAST TRIP—IS THIS THE START OF TANK MODE—–KNICKS HAVE WON 4 / ROW—–HAWKS HAVE MILLLAP BACK—–4 TEAMS–CELTICS/ JAZZ/ KINGS / LAKERS HAVE ONLY 2 LESS WINS —IF THEY PASS US WE COULD BE IN VERY GOOD POSITION FOR LOTTERY—-I’M NOT SUPPORTING DOING THIS—-BUT IT IS AN OPTION—–YOUR THOUGHTS ON… Read more »
@ Cory – I’d trade the 9th pick for Tibs, too.
Great halftime ceremony for Z, but I have to say the first two speeches were incredibly underwhelming. Really didn’t do anything at all for me. But Z’s speech was great, and the whole thing was well executed.
“Ira’s newblehood” – that one had me laughing.
I have reached the point where the “Gum Drop Bear” nickname has gotten stale… :(
Playoff , what playoff ? This team doesn’t have what it takes to be a playoff caliber team. They lack leadership both on and on the sideline of the court . By going to playoff and getting killed they accomplish nothing , except losing an opportunity to draft a future star. Phil Jackson would be great running Cavs if LeBron end up coming to his senses and sign with Them. It’s just my opinion . Go Cavs
The Z tribute was incredible. Kyrie and Hawes played their hearts out. They wanted this win a whole more than than the rest on the team. Our other starters of Deng, Jack, Tristan just are not working. Cavs can’t defend the 3. Deng got stripped more times than a dancer at the Crazy Horse nighclub from downtown. The love affair for Jack and his boat load of minutes of stagnant ball movement and stingy 13 mins for Dion yet again proves the same outcome of another loss. WHen has this ever worked? AS far as benching Dion for defensive lapses,… Read more »
Completely agree Zek. Whoever gets the 8 seed will be the smartest kid on the short bus. Cavs/Heat in the playoffs has been a dream of mine since Lebron decided and Gilbert sansed. We’d come out of the short end, because we always do, but it would be a rallying cry to save those dead batteries for a week, pregame at Ontario St. Cafe (the best bar in downtown Cleveland) and spit white hot venom on the opponent like the Berlin Wall came down. I live 2,000 miles from Cleveland now and I’d fly home for that. The East is… Read more »
@Cory Let’s be real though, no one really deserves the #7-8 spots in the East; that’s exactly why the Cavs have as good a shot as any of these teams at a playoff spot. Atlanta is in total collapse, and Detroit and New York have almost identical records to the Cavs. That means whoever gets that #8 spot will be the team that really deserves it these next couple of weeks. The main problem with the team right now is that Jack is getting way too many minutes and Dion needs to be getting forcefed more. The Jack signing has… Read more »
How ridiculous is it we are only 3.5 back of the 8?
Bryan B, good point. But, didn’t Delly get a DNP while JJ got 39? How can that make any sense on the second night of a back to back?
That’s a nice pic of Andy and Z.
Any sightings of Lebron and Delonte saying hello to each other?
I don’t buy that the NBA is scripted like WWE, but if it was you would think that putting over the Cavs and them facing Miami in the first round would be more marketable nationally than Knicks/Heat. Lebron and Melo have faced one another in the playoffs the past three years. Whether it’s good or not, Kyrie has become one of the rising faces of the league. Honestly, the Cavs don’t deserve to make the playoffs. They’ve given away 10 games this year at least. Our expectations probably should have been tempered by the youth of the team. It’s going… Read more »
I agree with you bryan—-although I thought the minutes could have ben a little closer divided/ shared—-jhill you are probably correct on you statement—–and the n.b.a has got what it wants in the eastern coference—-5 sub par teams creating fan interest in a so called ” playoff race “—
Nomad, I’m normally not one to defend Brown, but don’t forget this was only Dion’s third game back after his injury, and the second half of a back to back. Might have something to do with his reduced minutes.
Been like this all year now that there is probably a ruling coming down from the big shots that NYK needs to be in the playoffs.
Is it just me or are the cavs just getting destroyed by the refs… This game and the San Antonio game really standout. The no calls on hawes and Thompson were ridiculous and when you aren’t getting calls a lot of players start to hang their heads. Hopefully the cavs grow from this and don’t let a series of bad calls lead to a bad game.
ONE OTHER THING ——DION 14 MINUTES——–JACK 39 MINUTES ???——–AND YOU WONDER WHY DION GETS AN ATTITUDE AT TIMES——BIGGEST MOVE IN OFF SEASON IS GETTING A QUALITY COACHING STAFF
you need to give dan gilbert/ cavs organization credit —-1st class retirement for “Z “-( MUCH DESERVED “—-1ST CLASS IN ALL REGARDS EXCEPT FOR THE GAME—-are the playoffs still in the hunt –mathematically so but with the tough scheduler ahead it will be a battle —–wins fri night and last night would have been huge—-still hope they compete/ play hard for the remainder of the season—-AGAIN THANK YOU DAN GILBERT AND “Z” FOR A JOB WELL DONE
The playoffs are gone unless they can put together a ridiculous 10 game winning streak or something. I don’t blame them for trying and hope the keep trying. Too many games earlier in the year were wasted for a lack of effort. The Z number retirement was off the hook. MJ didn’t get it that good.
I don’t know which was funnier, the Spencer for Hire gloss or that Andy could get healthy (ha) and lead this team to the playoffs (double HA.) I wish the team was as entertaining as these blog post. Or at least as endearing as Big Z was to the fans. Wish for what you wanted, end up with what you got.