Cavs Surge to the Top of the Eastern Conference
The Cleveland Cavaliers might be the most misunderstood team in the NBA. Their star, LeBron James, is no worse than the second best player in the league, their bench is good enough to be the starting lineup for a lower rung Eastern Conference playoff team and their coach, Mike Brown, is a level-headed defensive specialist who is turning the Cavs into San Antonio East--and yet media members are still proposing ludicrous trades to "improve" the team and criticizing Brown for his alleged shortcomings. What exactly is "wrong" with owning the best record in the Eastern Conference and posting victories against both of last year's NBA Finalists? Brown is not a former NBA player nor does he spout colorful quotes so apparently he will never be a media darling or fan favorite.
My newest CavsNews article explains that the Cavs passed a major test by going 8-1 in a nine game stretch that culminated in an impressive win over the defending champion L.A. Lakers (6/19/15 edit: the link to CavsNews.com no longer works, so I have posted the original article below):
While many
fans and some “experts” fretted about the Cavaliers’ slow start and made rash
suggestions about potential trades and/or strategy changes, I declared that the first
significant test for the Cavs this season would be the nine games that
culminated in the Christmas Day showdown with the defending champion,
league-leading L.A. Lakers. The Cavs rolled to an 8-1 record during that
stretch, including an impressive
102-87 win over the Lakers. The Cavs now sit atop the Eastern Conference
and trail the Lakers by just one game for the best record in the NBA. Despite
Friday’s loss in Denver, the Cavs have won 13 of their last 16 games (just
short of a 67 win pace projected over 82 games) and they have posted some
impressive numbers in their past 10 games, ranking first in the league in
points allowed (92.4 ppg), first in scoring differential (11.3 ppg), first in
rebounding differential (9.3 rpg) and fourth in defensive field goal percentage
(.430); the Cavs currently lead the league in defensive field goal percentage
(.433) and rank in the top four in each of the other categories.
The Cavs did
not storm out of the gates this season because they made three changes to their
starting lineup and because key contributor Delonte West was only available on
a sporadic basis; also, Coach Mike Brown needed some time to experiment with
his player rotation to get a sense of which combinations work the best against
various kinds of lineups. Coach Brown has done an excellent job of managing the
difficult and tenuous West situation, utilizing the valuable guard when he is
fit to play and seamlessly inserting other players into the rotation on those
nights when West is ineffective or completely unavailable. After the Cavs
opened with a 3-3 record, Coach Brown put J.J. Hickson into the starting lineup
in place of Anderson Varejao and this move has paid numerous dividends: the
young, active Hickson has proven to be an excellent complement to Shaquille
O’Neal, while Varejao has thrived playing alongside Zydrunas Ilgauskas with the
second unit. Think about that: two thirds of the starting frontcourt for the
team that led the NBA with 66 wins last year now comes off of the bench for the
Cavs—and yet many people (even some so-called experts) still seem to be
oblivious to just how talented and deep the Cavs are!
LeBron James
is having another wonderful, MVP caliber season but the Cavs have proven that
they can maintain or even extend leads when he is resting on the bench, a
luxury that Kobe Bryant does not enjoy with the Lakers; the 2009 champions have
been forced to give significant minutes to Cavalier castoff Shannon Brown--a
player who would not crack the Cavs’ 10 man rotation this season (which is,
after all, why the Cavs could afford to get rid of him in the ongoing roster
upgrade process that Danny Ferry has accomplished since the Cavs made it to the
2007 NBA Finals). The heavy burden that Bryant is carrying—Pau Gasol and Ron
Artest being in and out of the lineup, the Lakers’ woeful bench and the injury
to the index finger on Bryant’s shooting hand—combined with Bryant’s newly
refined post game courtesy of offseason workouts with Hakeem Olajuwon, his
career high field goal percentage, his league leading 30.1 ppg average (the
third best mark of his career) and the fact that the Lakers still own the best
record in the league give Bryant the early edge over James in the MVP race but
that contest will surely go down to the wire this season. Both players have been
dominating the player of the week and player of the month awards in their
respective conferences. Bryant and James have been more productive, durable and
consistent than any of the other supposed MVP contenders, so they really should
be considered the clear frontrunners but since Bryant won the award in 2008 and
James earned the honor last season the voting members in the media could get
the strange idea that someone else is “due,” much like Charles Barkley and Karl
Malone received MVPs in 1994 and 1997 respectively even though it was obvious
that Michael Jordan was still the best player in the league during those years.
Barring unforeseen developments, it would be disappointing—and unjust—if
someone other than Bryant or James wins this season’s MVP.
I picked
the Cavs to be the best team in the East this season and I see no reason to
amend that choice now. The Atlanta Hawks have made nice strides but ultimately
it will be a three team battle for Eastern Conference supremacy between
Cleveland, Boston and Orlando—the Hawks are capable of competing with any of
those teams in a seven game series but cannot beat any of those teams unless
the Cavs, Celtics or Magic are depleted by injuries to key players. The Cavs,
Celtics and Magic have each had their ups and downs so far this season but the
encouraging signs for the Cavs are that the team has largely been healthy, that
despite a disappointing game here or there the overall trend has been decidedly
upward in general and that the new additions have strengthened the team’s depth
without adversely affecting team chemistry. The Cavs were able to push the
Celtics to seven games two years ago in the Eastern Conference semifinals despite
having a roster that was much less talented than the current edition and
despite the fact that James was not the defender, free throw shooter or three
point threat that he is now; at full strength the Celtics are still a
suffocating defensive team featuring three future Hall of Famers in Paul
Pierce, Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen but each of those stars is on the wrong end
of age 30 and thus it has become increasingly difficult for Boston to keep all
of them healthy at the same time—and that situation is unlikely to improve
during the playoffs in the wake of the 82 game grind of the regular season. The
Magic are a younger team than the Celtics but they have also suffered their
share of injuries to key players; more significantly, their offensive attack
featuring Dwight Howard in the paint flanked by three point shooters will not
be nearly as effective versus the Cavs in the playoffs this season now that the
Cavs can single cover Howard with Shaquille O’Neal plus utilize Anthony Parker
and Jamario Moon as perimeter defenders alongside James--and, hopefully, West,
who actually did a quite credible job during last year’s playoffs versus Hedo
Turkoglu, who the Magic since replaced with Vince Carter. Labels: Cleveland Cavaliers, LeBron James, Mike Brown, Shaquille O'Neal
posted by David Friedman @ 4:00 PM