Eastern Conference Second Round
#1 Cleveland (61-21) vs. #4 Boston (50-32)
Season series: Tied, 2-2
Boston can win if…the Celtics turn back the clock and recapture the defensive intensity that they displayed during their 2008 championship season. The Celtics will also need to receive strong offensive production from at least two of their "Big Four" (Ray Allen, Kevin Garnett, Paul Pierce, Rajon Rondo) to win any given game.
Cleveland will win because…the Cavs have the best individual player in the series (LeBron James) and the best overall depth. Both teams are defensive-minded but the Cavs can shift lineups from big to small and uptempo to slow tempo much more readily than the Celtics can. Other than the Rajon Rondo-Mo Williams duel at point guard the Celtics do not appear to enjoy any individual matchup advantages: the Celtics like to push teams around but the Cavs can match them man for man in the frontcourt, James has an edge over Pierce at small forward and the combination of Anthony Parker plus Delonte West should be able to contain Ray Allen, though Allen might break out for one big game.
Other things to consider: When these teams faced each other in the 2008 playoffs the Celtics had a hungry trio of Hall of Famers in their primes who had yet to taste championship glory while the Cavs were still getting used to playing together after a series of roster moves--and the Cavs still nearly beat the Celtics. Now the Celtics are older, less dominant and not quite as desperate to win the championship while the Cavs have a superstar in his prime who has yet to win a title plus veteran All-Stars who are either seeking one final run at glory (Shaquille O'Neal) or else a first taste of winning it all (Antawn Jamison, Zydrunas Ilgauskas, Mo Williams). Over the past two years, GM Danny Ferry molded this roster specifically to match up with the Celtics, Magic and Lakers, so this series will be an important measuring stick for the team's progress.
You can find a more in depth take on this series in my newest article for CavsNews.com (6/19/15 edit: the link to CavsNews.com no longer works, so I have posted the original article below):
The Cleveland Cavaliers and
Boston Celtics each cruised through the first round of the playoffs with 4-1
victories over Chicago and Miami respectively, setting up a rematch of their
classic seven game 2008 Eastern Conference semifinals duel—but both teams have
made significant personnel changes in the past two years.
Cleveland’s 2008 playoff
rotation (the top eight players in mpg) included LeBron James, Delonte West,
Zydrunas Ilgauskas, Wally Szczerbiak, Daniel Gibson, Ben Wallace, Joe Smith and
Anderson Varejao, while Sasha Pavlovic and Devin Brown were the only other
players who averaged at least 10 mpg; Boston’s 2008 playoff rotation consisted
of Paul Pierce, Ray Allen, Kevin Garnett, Rajon Rondo, Kendrick Perkins, James
Posey, P.J. Brown and Sam Cassell, with Leon Powe being the only other player
who averaged at least 10 mpg (rookie Glen Davis averaged 8.1 mpg).
Cleveland’s 2010 playoff rotation (the top
eight players in minutes played during the first round) includes LeBron James, Mo
Williams, Antawn Jamison, Delonte West, Anthony Parker, Anderson Varejao,
Shaquille O’Neal and Jamario Moon. Zydrunas Ilgauskas and J.J. Hickson played
significant roles at various times during the regular season but only saw spot
duty (8.5 mpg and 4.4 mpg respectively) versus Chicago; Boston’s 2010 playoff
rotation (the top eight players in minutes played during the first round) is
Rajon Rondo, Paul Pierce, Ray Allen, Kevin Garnett, Kendrick Perkins, Glen Davis,
Tony Allen and Rasheed Wallace. Shelden Williams averaged 18.0 mpg but he only
appeared in one contest—game two—after Garnett was suspended by the league.
Michael Finley played just 8.8 mpg versus Miami.
Only James, West and Varejao
remain from Cleveland’s
2008 playoff rotation (Ilgauskas is still on the team, of course, but his role
has been vastly reduced). James and Varejao are clearly better players now than
they were two years ago, while West overall is about the same player that he
was. Each of the five new players in the playoff rotation is clearly superior
to his predecessor: Williams has replaced Gibson (who, like Ilgauskas, is still
on the roster but with a much reduced role), O’Neal has supplanted Ilgauskas
and Parker has taken Szczerbiak’s spot, while Jamison and Moon are getting the
minutes that went to Wallace and Smith in 2008.
Superficially it looks like
Boston has not had quite as much turnover but even though the top five players
remain the same their roles have changed: Rondo has emerged as an All-Star and
is arguably the team’s most important player, while Garnett—who was the
backbone of the team’s suffocating defense during the 2008 championship run—has
been hobbled by a knee injury and is no longer a dominant rebounder (7.3 rpg
during the regular season, his worst average since his rookie year) or defender
(he averaged a career-low .8 bpg this season). Pierce and Allen have both shown
signs of age at times, though their overall production now is comparable to
their production in 2008. Perkins has improved since 2008, becoming one of the
league’s top defensive centers while also ranking second in the NBA in field
goal percentage this season (.602). A big difference between the 2008 Celtics
and the 2010 Celtics is that the 2008 squad had a deep bench comprised of
playoff-seasoned veterans Cassell, Brown and Posey, plus young big man Powe
(who later suffered a knee injury and is now a reserve for the Cavs), while the
2010 squad has a bench that is much more suspect: Davis is a solid contributor
and Tony Allen has had some good moments, but Wallace has been a huge
disappointment both literally—in terms of the excessive pounds he is carrying
around his midsection—and figuratively.
Although the 2008 Celtics
proved to be one of the most dominant defensive teams in recent memory en route
to winning the championship, the Cavaliers pushed them to the brink, extending
the series to seven games before dropping a 97-92 decision in the Boston Garden
as Pierce (41 points, five assists, four rebounds) and James (45 points, six
assists, five rebounds) staged a duel for the ages. James and Pierce are still
the closers for their respective teams; James is now a consistently effective
jump shooter, while Pierce added career-high three point shooting accuracy (.414)
to his already deadly midrange game.
The 2008 Celtics led the NBA
with a 10.2 point differential and a .419 defensive field goal percentage while
ranking second in points allowed (90.3 ppg); the 2008 Cavs ranked 15th
in point differential, 11th in defensive field goal percentage and
ninth in points allowed, though some of those numbers are a bit skewed because
the Cavs made some trades and dealt with some injuries to key players: by the
time the playoffs rolled around, they were playing at a higher level than those
regular season statistics portray, as demonstrated by how competitive the Cavs
were versus the Celtics. However, one statistic that really jumps out from that
season is that the Celtics ranked second in field goal percentage (.475) while the
Cavs ranked just 27th (.439); perhaps lingering memories of that
Cleveland team’s struggles on offense explain why some people still carp about
Coach Mike Brown’s alleged deficiencies as an offensive coach but the reality
is that the 2010 Cavs are a very potent offensive team, ranking third in the
league in field goal percentage (.485), just ahead of fourth place Boston
(.483). The Cavs have also improved defensively since 2008, ranking in the top
five this season in point differential (second), defensive field goal
percentage (fourth) and points allowed (fifth). The Celtics ranked ninth, ninth
and sixth respectively in those categories this season.
The teams split the 2009-10
season series 2-2 but—as is often the case—you can largely disregard the
statistics from those games: Cleveland’s first loss to Boston took place in the
season opener when the
Cavs were still getting used to their new roster additions, while the second
loss happened on April 4 when O’Neal was out due to injury. Cleveland’s first
win against Boston came on February 25 when the Cavs were nearly at full
strength (missing only Ilgauskas) while the Celtics were without the services
of Pierce, but the second win was a bit more significant: a Cleveland team
without both O’Neal and Ilgauskas beat a full-strength Boston squad 104-93.
One weird statistic about the
2010 Celtics is that they actually did better on the road (26-15) than they did
at home (24-17). That does not bode well for the Celtics, because the Cavs have
been almost unbeatable at home the past two seasons and they are just as good
on the road as the Celtics are, matching Boston
with a 26-15 road record this season. The home team won every game in the 2008
series and has been very dominant in general when these teams have faced off
during recent seasons, but those statistical splits suggest that Cleveland is more likely to get a win in Boston than vice versa.
Cleveland’s homecourt advantage could obviously prove to be
significant if a game seven is necessary but I do not expect that this series
will go the distance. A dominant 2008 Boston
team stacked with three healthy future Hall of Famers barely defeated a Cleveland team that was not as deep or talented as this
year’s Cleveland team, so it hardly would be
logical to expect that an older, less dominant Boston team will beat the Cavs this time
around. The one X factor, as every Cavs fan certainly knows by now, could
possibly be the status of LeBron James’ mysterious elbow injury—but even though
the troublesome joint has caused James some discomfort and even temporarily
affected his play, overall he has been performing at an extremely high level for
weeks despite this problem, so at this point it does not seem that the injury
is likely to get worse in the course of normal game action nor does it seem
likely that it will seriously impair James’ productivity or efficiency.
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