NBA
Honeymoon Is Over, But Cavaliers Will Figure It Out

You know the saying, βWhat a difference a week makes?β Boy has it ever applied to the Cleveland Cavaliers in the month of February.
Their very first game, on the 3rd, they gotβputting it favorablyβtrounced by the Houston Rockets on national television at home. Then came an embarrassing 18-point loss to the Orlando Magic on the road, a game where the wine and gold were up 16 at the half.
If that two-game sample didnβt make it clear enough, something had to change. In their final time sharing the court together, the old Cavaliers won an emotional overtime game against the Minnesota Timberwolves in an instant classic. But even with that victory, it was only a matter of time.
Five days removed from a complete blitzing by James Harden and company, Cleveland had thoroughly re-shaped its roster. Out went six players and in came four new faces.
The excitement in general manager Koby Altmanβs voice was palpable. The sense of relief on the remaining roster was evident. The enthusiasm from the fresh crop of players was obvious.
Even more so, it sparked the short-handed Cavaliers to play free and easy to start their three-game road trip, leading to a lopsided visitorsβ victory over the Atlanta Hawks. A short 48 hours later, Clevelandβs face-lifted group made an outstanding debut against the Boston Celtics at the T.D. Garden, winning their first game together in convincing fashion.
The roadie concluded with a stop in Russell Westbrook country, where the Cavaliers bared down and defeated the Oklahoma City Thunder for their second straight win on national television. They had lost all eight previous games in those scenarios.
All in all, the trade acquisitions looked good in their respective roles.
Jordan Clarkson stood out as an energetic dynamo that ran the break and scored with ease. Rodney Hood played with more of a deliberate tempo, but shot the ball extremely well and defended his assignments admirably. Larry Nance Jr. provided the dirty work on the glass and in passing lanes while putting on a show with his patented dunking abilities. George Hill took some time finding his niche offensively, but really put a stamp on guarding his assignments.
Then, unfortunately, the All-Star break came. It slowed down the momentum that Cleveland had after four straight wins, with two of those coming courtesy of a re-invigorated roster.
βI think that was one of the worse things we had to deal with,β Hill said. βFinding that rhythm and then taking that 10 days off. But we canβt make excuses.β
Hood and Clarkson agree with the veteran guard about the ill-timed hiatus.
βJust learning each other,β Hood said. βThe break just kinda hindered what he had going the first two games. Weβll get it back.β
βAll-Star break kinda didnβt help us,β Clarkson said. βHave to get in a groove with everybody offensively and defensively. It just shows that we still got a long way to go.β
Since then, the Cavaliers have gone 1-2 and hit a bit of a setback for the first time.
The sample size is rather small, but telling enough to draw certain conclusions from. In five games together, hereβs what we know about the Cavaliers.
The Rims Have Been Kinder Away From The Q
In the last two games Cleveland has lost, the teamβs three-point percentage was one more miss away from being identically awful. Both times, they only knocked down eight threes and attempted over 30. Contrary to the poor shooting before the deals went down, these guys are capable of hitting outside looks. Sometimes itβs poor offense and selection, but in the case of games against Washington and San Antonio, itβs flat-out misses and unfortunate luck.
βWeβre gonna have some games where we look great, weβre gonna have some games that we donβt look as great,β LeBron James said. βI think we played well [Sunday]. We just didnβt make shots. Same thing with the Washington gameβI think we played well that night.
βItβs not a surprise, not to me. I know. Iβve been through this. Itβs gonna be a transition period and itβs gonna be some games where we play exceptionally well. Thereβs gonna be some games where we couldβve played better. But one thing about it, I donβt fault our effort. Not [Sunday] or the Washington game. Our effort is there.β
The Half-Court Offense Isβ¦A Work In Progress
Notice that in those defeats, James has had to carry the load as Clevelandβs everything, which makes sense considering that somebody has to make shots. But when heβs out there as a one-man wrecking crew for the entirety of a game with others struggling, thatβs not the recipe for success and wins with this kind of roster.
Starters have not done their part consistently enough. Cedi Osman brings the energy, but has shown his first sign of rookie struggles in the last two home games. J.R. Smith and Tristan Thompson are fine contributors when theyβre playing up to their abilities, yet absolute team killers when theyβre not doing their part.
The Cavaliers are going to need Clarkson, Hood, and especially Hill to convert those perimeter shots on a nightly basis. Kyle Korver can benefit from other shooters being on the floor to draw attention away, so heβll likely get going again.
There will be off nights for sure, but those threes give them that extra push. Theyβre getting into the paint and finishing inside for the most part, but when it turns into drive and kick, the shooterβs got to hit.
Of course, this is only an issue when the pace slows down. A crucial reason why the trades went down in the first place is that Altman was looking for speed and athleticism. Thatβs the pace Tyronn Lue likes to play and itβs worked out well for the most part so far.
Itβs been proven with every game so far that Cleveland is at their best when on the fast break. If thereβs a miss after a defensive stop, theyβre off and running. If they get the ball after an opponent makes a shot, the tempo blatantly lets up and thereβs discombobulation as a result.
Larry Nance Jr. Needs To Play More
Tinkering with rotations is not an easy job. Lue has been under fire for the majority of the year. With all the injuries and moving pieces and parts, heβs been the guy people are pointing the finger to — and the wrong source of blame.
That being said, he is a little too stubborn for his own good. Thereβs a loyalty to the guys that brought the Cavaliers their first championship in franchise history, almost to a point where he plays favorites. He elects to let Smith and Thompson figure things out a little too long and in some games, it costs the team.
Which leads to this: Nance Jr. deserves more run. Letβs face it, heβs probably been the most productive piece acquired the deadline as far as a two-way player goes. Yes, he has issues staying out of foul trouble at times. But aside from that, heβs disruptive to the opposition with his versatility and length, leading to aggressive steals and rebounds to get the Cavaliers out in transition, where, again, they do the brunt of their damage.
He fills the lane on those fast breaks beautifully, catches lobs from teammates on backdoor cuts and is a hard roller off of screens. Simply put, Nance plays with conviction and brings more than numbers to this team. Finding less than 25 minutes for him is foolish, and fewer than 20 minutes is not acceptable. And matchups are not an excuse here, because he is slotted at the five and can truly guard forwards, centers, and hybrids of those. Itβs early and theyβre trying to look at rotations, but there is no reason this should continue.
A Little Adversity Isnβt A Bad Thing
Basketball Insiders asked Clevelandβs four newest guys about experiencing some adversity after the loss to Washington. All of them concurred it can be taken as a positive as they try to put this thing together over the final stretch of games before the postseason.
Hill: βDefinitely so. Weβre still learning each other, still learning defensive schemes and offensive schemes here. Weβve still gotta learn plays, coach gave us a small playbook so far.
But weβve still got a lot of plays that we need to learn just when weβre out there in different situations where things may not get to move, the ballβs not moving as much as we would like it to, to call different things. Weβre still learning, but weβve gotta take it one step at a time.β
Hood: βI guess you could say that. Just getting acclimated. Being in a close game helps. Being in different situationsβgotta foul at the end of the game, gotta get a bucket at the end of the game, whatever it may beβitβs good to be in those positions and as we do more of those, I think weβll come out on the other side.β
Clarkson: βI think so. Itβs still early, but feeling it a little bit is pretty good for us. But you know weβre coming in here to win every game. Stuff like that happensβmissed shots and making mistakes defensively, they just capitalized.β
Nance: βI agree. Better now than June, obviously.β