Recap: Cavs 93, Nets 91 (Or, Jamison returns, Sessions shows up)
2010-11-09Overview: The Cavs survived a 1-12 night from Mo Williams thanks to strong performances by Antawn Jamison, Ramon Sessions, and Daniel Gibson, hanging on to beat the New Jersey Nets by a final score of 93-91.
Cavs-Related Bullets:
The good news? The Cavs aren’t all that bad. The great news? It looks like they’re getting better.
For the first three quarters, the Cavs showed how dangerous they can be running the Princeton offense with all the versatile weapons they have on offense. The improvement that Varejao and Hickson made to their jumpers in the off-season is nothing short of stunning, and they both look really comfortable playing the high post, keeping the floor stretched when they’re left alone, and finding cutters from the high post and moving without the ball down low.
Everyone on the floor looks really comfortable making those quick reads, moving hard when they don’t have the ball, and letting fly when the defense gives them room. Almost all of the Cavs’ bad possessions were the result of being too aggressive rather than standing around and waiting for something to develop, which is exactly what you want to see from a young team figuring out a new offense. Jamison’s return really helped — he does such a good job of keeping the floor spaced and attacking the rim from a (I am required to say this) variety of angles when he gets the ball down around the blocks.
Mo couldn’t buy a shot tonight, and that’s something that will happen to him from time to time — he doesn’t get to the rim very often, and a lot of his game relies on letting those mid-range jumpers fly when he gets space. Everybody has cold nights from the floor from time to time — when they happen to Mo, he doesn’t have many ways to get himself easy points. I actually liked a lot of what I saw from Mo. He put pressure on the defense, moved the ball from side to side a lot, and probed for seams really aggressively before making the pass or pulling up for a shot. Not Mo’s night from the field, but he’s playing the game the right way.
In the fourth quarter: RAZOR RAMON TAKING OVER. Sessions showed some flashes early when he made a nice hockey assist off a drive-and-kick and had a couple of easy finishes at the bucket, but he was still driving recklessly and made one of his signature blocked drives that turn into a fastbreak opportunity.
Then, in the fourth, Ramon Sessions the point guard showed up. First he drove to the basket and found Boobie open beyond the arc for a three that cut the lead to two. On the next possession, he went baseline, kept his dribble, and found Boobie for another three that cut it to one. On the next possession, he got a rebound and pushed the break, which scrambled up the Nets defense and left Jawad Williams wide open for a transition three that gave the Cavs the lead. Then he hit a floater to put the Cavs up one.
Later on, he drove for a layup, found Hickson along the baseline for a dunk, hit a beautiful pull-up jumper, and found Jamison in the corner for a huge three. Again, Ramon did all of this in ONE QUARTER. After an incredible, clock-saving, contested, rainbow three by Anthony Parker, the game was all but over. The Cavs are 4-3 and 3-1 on the road. Jamison is back and making shots. Ramon Sessions might pan out after all. The bigs are looking like they can run this offense. It’s a good day.
This defense can work, and it’s because of Anderson Varejao. So many people underestimate him as a post defender because of his frame, but he’s got wiry strength, he’s long, and he’s always putting pressure on his man and staying so tight on him that he doesn’t have time to set up his moves. When the offensive big does try to create space, Varejao is usually sitting on the shoulder he wants to turn to and waiting to draw the charge. On a related note, Brook Lopez went 6-18 from the floor and drew all of four free throws on Tuesday night.
Hickson is starting to mix up his improved jumper and inside moves with the off-the-ball movement that made him effective in his first two seasons — beautiful secondary cut off a Varejao pick-and-roll for a dunk tonight, and the 4th-quarter dunk he got from a Sessions assist was beautiful.
Jamison: 3-4 from three, 0-3 from the free throw line. How we’ve missed you, Antawn. Also: Mike Fratello said on the broadcast tonight that people “sometimes forget” about Jamison’s ability to make threes. Austin Carr, who exclusively refers to Jamison as “The Jump Shooter,” does not have that issue.
Daniel Gibson was both being aggressive, making good decisions, and hitting his threes. Huge jumper in the fourth quarter to ice the game. Also, it’s kind of hilarious how much better the Heat would be if Boobie was their starting point guard. I’d say the same thing about the Lakers, but I renewed my one-year vow not to say anything bad about Derek Fisher during last year’s finals.
Al Thornton and Travis Outlaw, two very similar and not particularly good players, had huge nights against the Cavs on back-to-back nights. Should I worry? Nah. RAMON SESSIONS. Until next time, campers.
I feel this needs to be said every couple of weeks: THANK GOD MIKE BROWN DIDNT PLAY HICKSON IN THE PLAYOFFS!!!!!!/sarcasm
It seems that Lebron had plenty of supporting cast after all. When will he realize that the Cavs didn’t win a championship because he was the #1 option instead of Kobe?
1. In regards to the Gibson conversation, it seems to me that he is actually playing just above expected skill level. The fact is that his prior coach didn’t believe in him and wouldn’t play him, which caused him to play well below his skill level. If you look at his stats, from year 1 to year 2, there were obvious great improvements. But as minutes were taken (reflecting a lack of trust), his stat totals declined as well. But his efficiency actually went up. Last year, though playing the fewest minutes of his career (since his rookie season), he… Read more »
The Nupe, Difference between bench and starters is good for regular season, but not very great for the playoffs (according to Hollinger and the observed logic that teams lean on their starters more in the playoffs.) Fortunately for this year, though, i think most fan expectations are more about making the playoffs (which starter-bench parity is good for) than winning in the playoffs (where starter-bench parity suggests your starters may not be that great). The only way I’ll be disappointed in this team is if they fail to beat the Vegas over of 29.5 wins, thus failing to make Bill… Read more »
Jim, if Joey has illicit photos of Byron, wouldn’t that get him MORE playing time?
This is a completely different team without LeBron. Many of the same players but all of them have very different roles and the offense is considerably different as well. I think the offense is really set up to exploit the talents of this team, where previous offense was set up to exploit the talents of just one player. With that said, some guys I thlink are playing more natural roles like when they played on the playground. The Princeton allows them to move, shoot, drive or look for the open man while reading what the defense is doing. At the… Read more »
I was worried how Andy and JJ would play without Number 6 around to create space for them to manuveur in. Thus far, both have laid my fears to rest. JJ especially looks much improved, especially with the 10 foot jumper. Andy continues to find the same lanes that existed last year. Also super impressed with Boobie Gibson. The kid could always play but lost favor last year with Coach Brown, presumably because of defensive deficiencies. He has also added the mid-range jumper to his game and doesn’t seem afraid to take the ball to the hole. Jawad Williams –… Read more »
I think for someone like Boobie, who has played his entire career next to LeBron, it’s hard to even say what his mean without LeBron is. This may be it. It may not be. I’ll gladly take what he’s giving us now, and in 20-25 games we’ll see where he’s at.
Mo’s had plenty of good regular season games the past two years, Chris.
It’s the playoffs where he struggles.
@Chris – well, obviously guys need to continue to step up for the Cavs to be successful. If Boobie “regresses to the means” the Cavs will be in trouble. But honestly, Hickson has made the natural progression a player his age makes and the fact that he is hitting open jumpers is going to open up drives to the rim. Jamison has been putrid before tonight and Mo WAS putrid tonight. I don’t think any one other than Boobie has been unexpectedly great so far and may regress over the long haul. If anything, I expect Sessions and Jamison to… Read more »
i’m excited by how this team has been playing to start the season, but it scares me b/c i feel like they’re fueled by pride right now of not being “just lebron and a bunch of sidekicks”. i fear the regression to the mean that inevitably happens during the course of 82 games…. mo has been playing considerably better than we’ve ever seen him play, and i don’t know if it’s just that he decided to play better or if eventually during an 82-game season reality will catchup and we’ll be back to the mo we’ve always known. as always… Read more »
really like the Cavs composure. They seem looser than ever in these games hanging in the balance. Even on the road. When your bench scores 52 points on the road, you have a good team. We’ll see if they can beat the big boys on the road, but they might not have to to even get into the playoffs.
“Overview: The Cavs survived a 1-12 night from Ramon Sessions thanks to strong performances by Antawn Jamison, Ramon Sessions, and Daniel Gibson, hanging on to beat the New Jersey Nets by a final score of 93-91.”
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