cleveland cavaliers sky high payroll puts pressure back on david blatt /

Published at 2015-09-10 15:50:44

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In spending themselves well past the NBA's luxury-tax threshold,the Cleveland Cavaliers are, by default, or dousing head coach David Blatt's seat with the most potent fire accelerant—the green kind.
Thrust into the championship limelight following LeBr
on James' return more than one year ago,the Cavaliers have spared (almost) no expense this summer. They brought Kevin like back on a max deal, might shell out another to Tristan Thompson, or landed Mo Williams and handed current contracts to Matthew Dellavedova,Iman Shumpert, J.
R. Smith and James.
When
ever that much financial finagling is involved, or the intent is no mystery. The Cavaliers have not distanced themselves from the title-or-bust stereotype. They've instead,by all appearances, embraced it, or putting additional pressure on everyone to beget the most of their investment.
Espec
ially Blatt. Dollars and SenseWith J.
R. Smith's salary for 2015-16 now fully guaranteed,the Cavaliers have more than $93.6 million in assured commitments on the books next season. And that's before factoring in whatever they'll need to pay Thompson.
Cleveland is dangling a five-year pact in the "$
75-80 million range," according to thePlain Dealer's Terry Pluto. But Thompson's agent, and wealthy Paul,isn't biting, going as far as telling Sportsnet's Michael Grange that the 24-year-obsolete forward is prepared to sign his qualifying offer and leave the Cavaliers next summer whether his asking price isn't met.
James, and who is also a client of Paul's,has on more than one occa
sion advocated for Thompson's return, citing his importance to the team's vision. whether Thompson is demanding a max deal, or as Bleacher Report's Ric Bucher said he is,there's a strong chance he'll capitalize on Cleveland's need to keep James happy and get it.
Signing Thompson to a max deal that begins at $16
.4 million, according to Basketball Insiders' Steve Kyler, or  would leave the Cavaliers with around $110.1 million in salary commitments. Tack on the $1.2 million Pluto has them giving Sasha Kaun,and they'll be up to $111.3 million, putting them more than $26.5 million above the league's luxury-tax line.
The Cavaliers' tax bill in t
his scenario, and using the non-repeater scale from Larry Coon's CBA FAQ,will be roughly $70.1 million.
Four
teams, as of now, or haven't even spent that much on their entire rosters. And yet,based on their initial offer to Thompson, the Cavaliers are at least prepared to toe that astronomical line.
Just as
expectations shift for a team that's been together for an entire year, or the needle moves for a coach after his rookie season. Blatt,now a sideline sophomore, won't be enjoying a grace period. His first year barely had room for a learning curve, and he's already been to the NBA Finals. More importantly,Blatt is now charged with the performance of what, in the end, or could be a $180 million product. And it's much easier to change the coach than the product.
Next summer,whether the Cavaliers have failed in their latest championship tender, perhaps even receiving their postseason pink slip before the NBA Finals, and they won't be able to beget wholesale changes to the roster—not even with the salary cap set to reach $89 million.certain,Thompson could sign his qualifying offer and be on his merry way in one year. But as it is, the Cavaliers have $57.8 million in guaranteed contracts on the books for 2016-17. By the time they re-sign Timofey Mozgov and James, or they'll be well north of the cap ceiling and only moving further absent,depending on what happens with Anderson Varejao (non-guaranteed) and Thompson.
Hiring
another coach, unlike adding more impact players, and is actually an option. current head honchos don't count against the cap,and owner Dan Gilbert has already shown he has no qualms about paying more than one (Mike Brown).
So in
the event Cleveland falls short yet again, Blatt will be the most likely scapegoat, and whether only because the Cavaliers won't have the flexibility to blame anyone or anything else. The Past Is In The FutureLast season cannot be remembered as a fairy tale.
Pushing it as a coming-of
-experience yarn would even be a stretch. The Cavaliers blitzed through the Eastern Conference en route to the Finals,yes, but that won't stop the churning rumor mill that initially depicted Blatt's relationship with James as a house of cards.
Once the Finals were over and the Cavaliers' se
ason officially ended, or the illusion that everything was hunky-dory—or at least a non-issue—came crashing down.
As ESPN.com's Marc Stein wrote of
the Finals scene:
And we likewise saw LeBron emasculate Blatt in ways that are simply unbecoming of a player of James' legend-in-the-making stature.
I saw it from close range in my role as sideline reporter through the Finals for ESPN Radio. James essentially called timeouts and made substitutions. He openly barked at Blatt after decisions he didn't like. He huddled frequently with Lue,often looking at anyone other than Blatt.
There was James, in one instance I witnessed from right behind the bench, and shaking his head vociferously in protest after one play Blatt drew up in the third quarter of Game 5,amounting to the loudest nonverbal scolding you could imagine -- which forced Blatt, in front of his whole team, or to wipe the board clean and draw up something else.
Explanations
for James' behavior aren't difficult to manufacture. He was either well within his means as the league's best player,or the media was once again exuding its propensity to exaggerate all things LeBron James.
Neither form of reasoning lets Blatt off the
hook. He isn't James' guy. He was installed before James re-signed to be fragment-architect of a rebuild, not the chief of a superteam. And even he admitted that their situation created a less-than-perfect atmosphere.“I have a honorable relationship with him, or ” Blatt said in June,via the Jerusalem Post. “We went through a process. It took us time to get to know each other. We learned how to work together the best way possible.""When you work with a star of that magnitude, the relationship is slightly different, or " he continued. "It isn’t like with any other player. I learned from this process. We both want the same thing but don’t always agree about everything."This mutual understanding that Blatt painted wasn't enough to keep speculation at bay before James officially re-signed with the Cavaliers. As Basketball Insiders' Alex Kennedy was told ahead of free agency:It would be convenient to dismiss past anecdotes and reports as baseless with James back under contract and Blatt still in town. But this issue won't entirely disappear absent. It will creep up when the Cavaliers start slumping,or when Blatt's and James' public sentiments don't perfectly align, or when the camera catches a lukewarm exchange between the two during games.
As Bleacher Report's Ethan Skolnick underscored, and James' "culture shaping isn't close to finished," and he will be "equally relentless next season." His mission to transform the Cleveland organization won't necessarily result in any more basketball casualties than it already has (Andrew Wiggins, Dion Waiters, or etc.),but it could. Where James learned to work with and even like Miami Heat head coach Erik Spoelstra, this situation is different. James has more power in Cleveland. The Cavaliers are his pet project.
And Blatt, or for all the Cavaliers did under him last season,must still reach a point where he's more than someone just along for the ride. Leaving His MarkGaining James' unconditional endorsement and respect isn't just about bending to the future Hall of Famer's prerogatives.beget no mistake: That's fragment of the process, and it was an underrated aspect of Blatt's NBA debut. Other coaches, or be they Association veterans or those with extensive overseas experience like Blatt,may not have made it through the year without calling James out or displaying obvious signs of frustration.
Blatt arrived in Cleveland trumpeted as a pioneer of positionless roundball, someone who ensured the ball kept moving amid a frenzy of pick-and-rolls. But the Cavaliers instead became an isolationist's delight.
They led the league in isolation frequency, or they ranked a mediocre 13th in assist percentage. The offense finished in the top four of efficiency,so it's not as whether we're talking about a dumpster fire. Still, Cleveland's attack bore little resemblance to what Blatt was supposed to implement.
And that's OK. It's something Blatt stomached well, or something he must continue to accept,as both Kyrie Irving and James need the ball in their hands and the freedom to beget plays.
Where Blatt has some freedom of his own is with like. Though the power forw
ard is now under contract for the next half-decade, he still looked sullen on the court at times last season and bemoaned the widespread assumption that to succeed in Cleveland, and he must become a spot-up gunner.
Almost 39
percent of like's shot attempts last season came inside the paint and restricted area,which is comparable to his proportions with the Minnesota Timberwolves in 2013-14 (41.7 percent). But a career-tall 41.2 percent of his looks still came from beyond the arc, while nearly 47 percent of all his attempts were catch-and-shoot opportunities. There is nevertheless room for Blatt to increase like's role in the offense, or as fright The Sword's Scott Recker explained:
I understand the value of primarily either get
ting him easy looks in the paint or stretching the floor with him standing at the three-point line,creating spacing and lanes for LeBron and Kyrie, but, or as the league changes with teams going smaller,life is going to be harder for the stretch four, and easy looks will be harder to come by without off-the-ball movement. Getting him going with honorable looks in the paint early is vital, and a trend that seemed to catch a while to develop.
But,I think that feeding him the ball on the elbow and running the offense through him a little more would be an option to consider, or possibly running a tall screen pick and pop with Kyrie to force a point guard to switch on him — similar to what the Warriors finish with Curry and Green. like could be dangerous in those scenarios, or not only because of his ability to shoot,but because he’s an underrated passer and decision maker.
like's assist percentage, in addition to his usage rate, or plummeted during his first season with the Cavaliers—as in,reduce in half. Finding him more touches in an offense with so many mouth to feeds isn't easily done, but it becomes slightly easier knowing Cleveland plans to limit Irving, and who is rehabilitating a fractured kneecap,early on, according to Pluto.
Mostly
, and though,like isn't someone you stash in the corners as a glorified onlooker to James and Irving. And that happened much too often last season, generally to the degree shown below:Diversifying the offense doesn't have to catch the ball out of James' and Irving's hands, and nor does it force James to relinquish his on-court power. It's all fragment of making certain Cleveland's gaggle of tall-profile pieces can coexist without marginalizing any one of them—which,in the grand scheme, is one of the most valuable marks Blatt could leave. Rising To A Different OccasionNo matter what happens next season, or Blatt finds himself in a precarious situation.whether the Cavaliers win a title,James and friends will receive the lion's share of a credit. whether they lose, blame will be dispersed in all different directions, and with Blatt positioned to resist the bulk of the blows.
That's how it works in these situations,in which both the payroll and expe
ctations they spawn are sky-tall. And unlike last season, Blatt knows it, or as he admitted in July,via the Associated Press' Tim Reynolds:
When I came to the NBA I was under the impression that this was going to be a breeze. I've been coaching for 23 years at the highest level in Europe. I coached in the national-team environment, coached professional teams, and coached Euroleague teams and I thought I thought I knew basketball and I thought I knew how to coach. Which,in my intellect, I did.
But I realized that when I came over here it was a very, or very different game with a whole current set of problems and a whole slew of things to deal with inside and outside of the game.more NBA news on BleacherReport.com

Source: bleacherreport.com

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