Recap: Cavs 102, Raptors 100 (or, just add water and sunshine)
2014-03-25The Cavs built a 21 point lead only to watch it slip away. They didn’t so much win the last six and a half minutes as lose less. All five starters finished in double figures and took turns making an impact. The Jonas Vs Tristan debate could go on for years, but tonight, TT won the bout in a TKO.
1st Quarter:
The Cavs jumped all over the Raptors. Once again behind a suddenly spry Jarrett Jack they pushed the tempo, kept bodies moving in the half court sets, and completely shut down the Raptors on defense and on the glass. Jack and Waiters took turns setting up their teammates and the Cavs lead 26-17 after one.
2nd Quarter:
The Cavs really picked apart the Raptors defense in the 2nd. The passing was superb and it generated a parade of layups and free throws. Funny moment: Zeller got poked in the eye and during the timeout Varejao put his bunny-finger hand right in Tizelle’s face. I guess the “how many fingers am I holding up” test is a respected medical diagnostic in Brazil too. (He hit both free throws). Tristan Thompson must have read my last recap. Instead of calling for the ball on the block and trying to bully his way into padding his shots blocked total, he just crashed the offensive glass and drew contact trying to throw down putback dunks after a healthy array of pump fakes and pivots. The refs rewarded him with five trips to the free throw line tonight and he converted 9 of 10. He totally outclassed the Toronto frontline tonight. The Cavs went into the half up 14.
3rd Quarter:
The only reason the Raptors weren’t down 30 at the half was 50% shooting from the 3-point line. In the 3rd quarter, they came alive from everywhere, throwing down dunks off baseline cuts and continuing to bury deep 3s. Fortunately, the Cavs matched them for a while, continuing an offensive clinic that began in the 3rd quarter of the Knicks game. Dion Waiters made three straight shots to rile up twitter and keep the Cavs comfortably ahead. But then the Cavs went cold on offense while continuing to bleed points at the other end. The Raptors embarked on a 15-2 run behind the brilliant play of Kyle Lowry. They cut the lead to four before Luol Deng hit a 3 as the 3rd quarter expired to put the Cavs up seven entering the 4th.
4th Quarter:
The Raptors continued right where they left off in the 3rd, starting on a 14-6 run to take the lead at the 6:45 mark on a Greiviz Vasquez triple. They were 14-27 from 3 at that point (they finished 14-32). Jarrett Jack swished a rainbow jumper ending a 2 minute stretch of goosegg-ery. The game seemed primed for an epic dogfight, which team would blink. Instead, both teams vomited all over themselves in an embarrassing and at times hilarious finish. They combined for just 13 points in the final 6:45 and 7 of those were free throws on bail out calls. Lowry was practically out of bounds underneath the hoop and just leaned into a vertical Tristan Thompson who was still practically behind the basket under the hoop. Lowry lost the ball, flared one side of his face, and drew the foul. (In an attempt to be objective, I thought the Cavs were bailed out in a similar fashion multiple times tonight). But the Cavs and Raptors couldn’t even get the free throws right, missing 5 of the 12 they were awarded in the final 6:45. And finally, the ending.
The Ending:
Someone needs to take DVR-ed footage of the final 40 seconds, apply one of those sepia film filters, and mix in some Benny Hill. Lowry, despite how much SWAg he oozes, blew an open layup (fortunately Amir “RAPM Phenom” Johnson was there for the putback). Then, Jarrett decided to just dribble dribble dribble JACK a brick, effectively trading clock time for a possession. Alonzo Gee sent DeMar Derozan to the line where missed the first free throw. And then it got funny. The Cavs were unable to inbound the basketball, electing to use a timeout to try again. (Unbeknownst to them, Cavs Twitter was nervously praying for anything but an epic fail on the inbound). On the second attempt, Varejao just threw the ball 6 feet past Luol Deng out bounds under the hoop. It had literally no chance of being caught and was puzzling because the Cavs just needed to catch the ball (anywhere), crouch into the fetal position, and get fouled. They didn’t need a home-run back door play. (In the interest of fairness, replays showed that Deng was bear-hugged which had a lot to do with why he wasn’t close to catching the pass). So now the Raptors had possession, down just 2, with 7 seconds to play, inbounding from half-court. And I don’t even know what happened, except Greivis Vasquez lost his footing somehow, sorta flipped over his own hips and dramatically shot put the ball into the waiting arms of Luol Deng (despite no obvious contact from anyone). And the game just sorta ended. The Raptors didn’t foul, even though there was still 3 seconds left on the clock. I guess they were so stunned they forgot. Even Deng kinda hesitated before trying to scoot away from an impending foul. Ah well, just keep swimming.
The Good:
-The Cavs are fighting, scratching, clawing, and most importantly, starting to play as a team. Jarrett Jack and Dion Waiters in particular have done a fantastic job running the offense in recent games. They don’t look too shabby on defense either, and Matthew Dellavedova’s mid-season uber-slump seems to be a distant memory. Varejao is thriving in his 25 minutes a night off the bench, and Luol Deng looks considerably less laboring, and more efficient. I’m proud of the way they are playing, even if it is too little too late. The Millenium Force of emotions that they put the fan base through has subsided, and really, with no chance to make the playoffs, no one would lose too much sleep if they succumbed to these playoff teams while missing Kyrie Irving and CJ Miles. But they’re tired of losing, and starting to figure out how to break the habit. This team will break through, maybe not this year, maybe not next year. But they will. And we’ll be ready.
-Mike Brown may yet survive this. After an apocalyptically bad January, the Cavs are 11-11 since they parted ways with Chris Grant. That stretch includes 6 wins against playoff teams. Of the 11 losses, only 1 was against a non-playoff team (the Knicks). The Cavs are starting to show signs of offensive cohesion and even though they are still poor at running defenders off the 3 point line and lousy at protecting the rim, they seem to beat themselves less on defense. Maybe most importantly, they are clearly responding to Brown emotionally. They’ve fought back despite huge deficits against some good teams, mustering enough grit to shock the Thunder, Knicks, and Warriors (all on the road).
-Waiters is playing well. He looks comfortable, he’s making bad decisions less frequently, his jumper is respectable enough to open up the floor for everyone, he’s had success as a spot up shooter from the corner, and he’s racking up the dimes alongside Jarrett Jack. He’s averaging 18 points and 4 assists a game in March with a .519 TS% even as his usage has approached 30. That’s not bad, it shows nice growth, especially from the start of this season.
Jarrett Jack’s contract has quietly gone from eliciting this….
To This:
-TT played great tonight, it was just about the perfect game for him in my opinion. No plays were called for him, he was a nuisance on the boards all night, he got to the line 10 times and made 9 of them. He finished 15 and 13 on 4 shots. He made the most of his 27 minutes.
-I snuck a Mass Effect 3 ending reference on ESPN’s Recap. #thanksMarauderShields
The Bad:
-Poor late game execution has plagued this team all season. It happened again but they played well enough to beat a playoff team fighting for optimal seeding. Not gonna complain too much.
-Spencer Hawes isn’t shooting 75% from 3 in 1st quarters any more. Bummer.
So have we given up on Karasev?
Dario Saric is out of the draft, FYI. Just signed a three year extension to stay in Europe and probably won’t even declare. Kyle Anderson is shooting up draft boards. If UCLA keeps advancing, he may be a lottery pick. Check out DraftExpress for more accurate draft info, Kojo.
http://hoopshype.com/rumors/tag/dario_saric
Anderson’s stats are monstrous.
http://www.draftexpress.com/profile/Kyle-Anderson-6177/
Another player I had forgotten about but is legit and would bring a lot to the team is Cle’anthony Early the SF from Wichita St.
Dude is a leader, a hooper, and brings an intensity that only Waiters brings right now.
JHill,
You talking about Kyle Anderson at UCLA? ESPN has him ranked 34 overall as a prospect and falling. I’ve never seen him play so I’m not sure what he brings. He’s the only Anderson on the ESPN player ranking so I assume that’s who you meant?
@Charlie- I noticed that as well. You’d think the Cavs with all of their advanced stats would have caught that little tidbit.
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again- Mike Brown is coaching the exact same defensive system he coached when he won with the Spurs 15 years ago. The league has caught up to him- players today have too much range for pack-the-paint to work anymore, and he hasn’t adjusted. This is the end result.
JHill, refresh my memory … Who the mother F is Anderson? I wouldn’t mind drafting Dario Saric in that 8-10 range. Dude can play SF and has range. Not sooo sure how much he helps immediately but long term he could be legit. If we draft a guard or a forward we are going to need to facilitate a trade. I love Gordon but we’d have to find trade partners for Tristan and our team just got a lot younger which is bad in crunch year for getting Rie full time. Getting Rodney Hood doesn’t help at all with Kyrie.… Read more »
Thanks for posting that link to the Charlotte coaching changes. One of the things that jumps out is the strategy of conceding rebounds and getting back on D. The Cavs definitely go for the offensive boards quite a bit, which ends up costing them in transition defense.
I think this could be the first draft where we go from best player available to fitting the needs of the club (barring a big trade before). Our needs are at SF and C, and I think that’s where we’ll draft. Rodney Hood is #9 on the nbadraft.net board (no access to ESPN for me) and by getting another Duke player we have a little extra incentive for Kyrie to stick around. Jeramie Grant would also seem like a possibility. At the center position, Willie Cauley-Stein seems like the likely choice. Maybe take him and use him in the D… Read more »
If we are at the 6-9 you take Anderson or Arron Gordon.
I love McBuckets but I don’t think there is any way he can guard any three in the NBA that averages 6 points a game. The guy is a strech 4 in the NBA. He has less than 40 steals in 4 years of play. He has a Dirk like midrange game, and can pass and cut but he’s going to be one of the worst defensive players we’ve ever seen. I’m on board with Gordon. We would have to reconstruct our roster via trade but he looks pretty good to me. I think he looks better than Randle. I… Read more »
@grover13 We played like a top 10 defense the first bit of the season. But when we can’t score the players morale drops and they start to slack on defense which leads to bad defensive games. The defense is supposed to lead to more offense but it wasn’t doing that this season. I has been since we had that bad loss to the Lakers.
could the upcoming CAVS/ HAWKS game be a huge game for the 8th spot—-STAY TUNED—KEEP SWIMMING (CAVS ) NEMO
@JHill- agree with you on one point, disagree on another.
I agree that to find a defensive-minded center, you sign a veteran, not draft one. They take too long to develop.
And while I think adding a shooter is also a necessity, it’s not entirely accurate that offense is the only problem with the Cavs. They are in the bottom third in most defensive measurements- not much better than under Byron Scott. This was a problem that defensive-whiz-guru-genius Mike Brown was supposed to rectify. Hasn’t happened.
Good aticle by Zach Lowe on the rebuilding of Charlotte. Focus of their success is a coach who installed a simplistic offense and defense which are tailored to the talents of his players.
I wish we had a coach like that.
This Cavs team has immensely improved and matured since the beginning of the season… the past few weeks they have been playing like a mid- to high-40 win team and one of the better squads in the conference. They really seem to have bought into Mike Brown’s workmanlike coaching philosophy, and now they are bringing the effort, beating middling to bad teams and hanging with the heavyweights who are gearing up for playoff mode. It’s easy to criticize MB, but one positive staple of his teams has always been taking care of business against inferior opponents; those 60-win Cavs teams… Read more »
Just think how much better the Cavs would be right now if they had JV, Barnes, and Oladipo. Oh wait, maybe they would be worse.
We need a long three who can shoot and at least not play terrible defense, you don’t draft a C you go out and you sign one. (By the time said Center is any good Kyrie Dion, Zeller, AND Thompson are all gone). That leaves us with Rodney Hood, Anderson, McDermott. Would he struggle on D against LBJ and Kevin Durant? Yeah, but so does everyone. But does he have trouble guarding say Paul George? I say no. This team struggles on offense, not defense. Their faults on offense are what sap their defensive will. You need to put someone… Read more »
@Greg Siesel. Agree on both I am not advocating that we must trade kyrie, rather that we can if thd right offer comes, and as I said last week, tgere will be a team out there that would be willing to give us way to much for him.
And yes MB needs a better off coach and he needs to let that coach be in charge of the offense. I bet Milwaukee would seriously comsider trading there first round pick for kyrie
the cavs ar in the drivers seat ( in the fact that they DON’T HAVE TO TRADE KYRIE ) –but if a truly remarkable deal comes up I think they have to listen—-if brown is retained I think they still need to look for an offensive minded coach ( and brown needs to LISTEN / LEARN )—D’ ANTONI SHOULD BE AVAILABLE—
I am somewhat impressed by this team and how well they r playing teams in the playoff hunt. I’m not over confident due to the last game collapse, but they r playing this way without the”best player”. After watch this team play without kyrie I am starting I think we should trade kryie. I know that JJ is not a longer term option because his age but I now want kyrie to stay out the rest of the year. Lets see what a team can due without him. We kno what they can do with him. I wonder what someone… Read more »
I think the BIG question is can kyrie and dion play together ( along with does kyrie want to be here )—the last 5 games have proved/ shown what dion can do ( along with his attitude development)—if they can play together it could be something very special—I read where saric just signed a 3 yr contract to stay in the European league–
Anderson!! I’m telling you! Perfect fit for this team as currently constructed. Just like with Dion, stop thinking about where guys *should* be drafted. That’s NFL draft stuff. Not applicable in 2 round draft. Identify your guy and go get him. There are no “reaches” in the first round, basically…
Rodney, Nvm ESPN has Stayskas at 21. To clarify my point on Smart. Say we get lucky enough to be drafting at 6. The top 5 look like this … Wiggins Parker Embiid Exum Randle That leaves us with Smart, Ennis, Harris, Vonleh and Gordon as not exact reaches at 6. Willie Cauley Stein is ranked 10-12. Out of that list who are you drafting? Either Gordon or Smart. We draft Gordon we now have Thompson, Bennett and Gordon which doesn’t make sense. Now say we get sucked out on and wind up at 12. You’re looking at the likes… Read more »
I think Stauskas is like 12 on the big board. Idk if you’ve been reading past threads but I’ve been advocating for Stauskas for quite some time now. He is exactly what the team needs. McDermott wouldn’t be bad but I’m not sure go we matches up with other SFs in the L. He’s at least a Kyle Korver with Hansbrough like skills down low. (Why did I pick only white dudes to1. Draft and 2. Compare McBuckets to. Of the two I really like Stauskas. I’ve also talked a little about Smart. If you get rid of JJ he’s… Read more »
Nick Stauskas that is.
Ok. I’m usually not this wrong about a guy I just looked at the Big boards at CBS, NBAdraft.net and Draftexpress and none of them have him as a lotto pick and only draft express has him as a top 20 guy. Does anyone know where Espn has him?
Also @ people who want Smart. Are you advocating trading Irving? (I’m not opposed to trading Irving since we already have an MVP caliber guard in Dion but I don’t want Smart)
Someone else started it but I thought it was appropriate and helped him out. I have Dion just behind Durant and LBJ in my MVP race lol. @Rich last week you claimed that Mcdermot-Anthony Bennet was a bad comparison. Which isn’t really what I was saying but I wasn’t around to defend my opinion. First I was poorly stating that I don’t think they could function on the same team since they are both undersized strech 4’s who absolutely cannot guard a 3 with any offensive game. Your right that they don’t have the exact same college game. Bennett was… Read more »
I love this post game quote from Greivis: “It was just a bad play for me,” Vasquez said. “It was me going to my weak hand and I lost my balance, stepped kind of weird. I turned the ball over. I’ll take responsibility. I’m not going to run away. I’m a man.”
haha
Rodney were you the guy chanting “MVP” for Waiters? https://twitter.com/DentonReports/status/448631454004940800
Jack’s contract still looks closer to the first picture than the second.
It would be amazing if NY and ATL lost tonight and tomorrow (tomm only for ATL), and we win at Detroit. That would put us half a game back of NY, and 3 of ATL if my math is correct, with 10 games and a game against ATL. I think the 1.2% chance Hollinger’s odds gives the cavs is a little low. We are in the hunt like the Browns were earlier, for the same reason. Our conference took a crap this year. I’d take a taste of the playoffs and a chance at McBuckets or some young prospect around… Read more »
Didn’t catch the game, but when I saw the Mass Effect ending reference on ESPN…. oof. It paints an ugly picture. Win’s a win, though. No style points.