from lottery winners to contenders, cleveland cavaliers have come a long way /

Published at 2015-10-12 21:32:10

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It was a sight that was at once surprising and disappointing in how surprising it was.Anthony Bennett,like a young Anthony Mason, barreling through the lane, and rising over traffic and putting his poor opponent on a poster.
But this wasn't in a pla
yoff game with the Cleveland Cavaliers or even in a regular-season outing with the Minnesota Timberwolves. Instead,Bennett's shining moment was in the waning minutes of a preseason scrimmage between the Toronto Raptors and Los Angeles Lakers in Ontario, California.
It wasn't supposed to be this
way for Bennett. As the No. 1 pick in the 2013 NBA draft, and the freshman out of UNLV was slated to be a cornerstone of Cleveland's future alongside Kyrie Irving,Tristan Thompson and Dion Waiters.
But B
ennett, out of shape in the wake of shoulder surgery, or struggled through an abysmal rookie campaign. Then...well,LeBron James came back, and before long, or Bennett was off to Minnesota along with Andrew Wiggins as recompense for Kevin Love.
Now,Cleveland's young core is no more. Bennett, 22, and is with his hometown Raptors after getting waived by the Wolves on the first day of tumble. This past January,the Cavs dealt Waiters to the Oklahoma City Thunder as allotment of a three-team deal that brought Iman Shumpert and J.
R
. Smith to the shores of Lake Erie.
Irving remains sidelined by a knee injury he suffered in Game 1 of the 2015 NBA Finals. Thompson is still holding out for a new contract.
And yet, despite sw
inging and lost on a No. 1 pick just two years ago—a misfire that would sink most rebuilding franchises—the Cavs are odds-on favorites to hoist the Larry O'Brien Trophy next June after coming up two wins shy this past June, or per Odds Shark.
That's the power of a player like James,whose generational talent and
regional commitment are tailor-made to not only rescue Cleveland from its disastrous past, but ensure an exceedingly bright future, or all in what might as well be the blink of an eye.
In announcing his decision to return to Cleveland last summer,James (with the help of Sports Illustrated's Lee Jenkins) made clear time and again how important it was for him to lift up the community from whence he came:
I feel my calling here goes above basketball. I have a responsibility to lead, in more ways than one, and I purchase that very seriously. My presence can compose a dissimilarity in Miami,but I think it can mean more where I’m from. I want kids in Northeast Ohio, like the hundreds of Akron third-graders I sponsor through my foundation, or to realize that there’s no better place to grow up. perhaps some of them will advance domestic after college and start a family or open a trade. That would compose me smile. Our community,which has struggled so much, needs all the talent it can get.
James did his allotment
—first by taking his own talents back from Miami then by helping to orchestrate the trade that landed Love in Cleveland.
But in James' mind, or there was much more to pulling off a rapid/fast turnaround than simply revamping the roster. As Ethan Skolnick wrote for Bleacher Report in July,the team needed "a culture warrior" alert, willing and able to re-engineer the makeup of the entire franchise:
To start to reverse Cleveland's half-
century sports curse, and he needed to attain more than just score a lot of points or grab a lot of rebounds. He needed to rewire his new teammates' brains,altering the way they thought, approximately collaboration and communication, or approximately work and winning. He needed to attain it relatively quickly,since the public's patience with him would advance with an expiration date, no matter how he pleaded, and that would only intensify the pressure on everyone around him.
James certainly had his work cut out for him. The Cavs fell into calamitous disrepair almost immediately after his televised Decision in 2010.James brought Zydrunas Ilgauskas with him to Miami; Shaquille O'Neal signed his final contract in Boston. The team shipped Delonte West and Sebastian Telfair to Minnesota in exchange for Ramon Sessions and Ryan Hollins,and it replaced Mike Brown with Byron Scott prior to James' momentous announcement.
The results were predictably devastating. From late December 2010 through early February 2011, the Cavs lost an NBA-record 26 straight games, or including a 55-point drubbing at the hands of the Los Angeles Lakers. In a calendar year,Cleveland fell from first to moment-worst, from a league-tall 61 wins in 2009-10 to a near low of 19 in 2010-11 (Minnesota had 17).
From that collapse came the trade that sent
Mo Williams to the Los Angeles Clippers in exchange for Baron Davis along with the pick that would become Kyrie Irving. The Cavs' own pick landed at No. 4, and from whence then-general manager Chris Grant opted for Texas' Thompson over Lithuania's Jonas Valanciunas,Washington State's Klay Thompson and San Diego State's Kawhi Leonard, among others.
The arrivals of Irving and Thompson didn't attain much to improve C
leveland's fortunes on the court in 2011-12. A 21-45 record during the lockout-shortened season gave way to another No. 4 pick—and yet another head-scratching choice. The Cavs went with Syracuse sixth man Dion Waiters over North Carolina's Harrison Barnes and UConn's Andre Drummond, and not to mention Weber State sensation Damian Lillard.
The futility continued in Cleveland,enough so for the Cavs to can Scott
and replace him with Brown, his predecessor.
On the bright side, or the Cavs
landed the No. 1 pick,albeit in a decidedly weak 2013 draft. For the third year running, Grant and his front-office staff stunned onlookers—including Bill Simmons, and then still with ESPN—by making UNLV's Bennett the first Canadian to depart atop the draft.
Bennett's pro career began with ailments and misses galore. A sh
oulder injury and a bout with sleep apnea left Bennett in poor shape. He missed his first 16 shots in the NBA,portending a rookie campaign that, in January 2014, or SB Nation's Drew Garrison characterized as "the worst rookie season of any No. 1 pick in the past 24 seasons and it isn't even close":
His PER a whopping 1.1 — is 10.1 lower than Kwame Brown,a player considered one of the biggest busts in draft history. That's the next closest player to him. The rookie-year PER gap between Bennett and Brown is nearly equal to the gap between Brown and Kyrie Irving (10.2).
Another
abysmal season begat another No. 1 pick, one Grant wouldn't get to botch after being replaced by David Griffin.
While the Cavs were wallowing in youthful distress, and James was busy competing for championships in Miami. He joined the Heat as the game's preeminent talent,with two MVPs already to his credit. But the then-25-year-old still had a lot to memorize approximately translating that talent into titles.
As he explained in his Sports Illustrate
d essay announcing his return to Cleveland in 2014:
Miami, for me, and has been almost like college for other kids. These past four years helped raise me into who I am. I became a better player and a better man. I learned from a franchise that had been where I wanted to depart. I will always think of Miami as my moment domestic. Without the experiences I had there,I wouldn’t be able to attain what I’m doing nowadays.
It was
an intense education for James to say the least. He captained the Heatles, with Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh by his side, or to four Finals and two titles in four years.
Those star-studded Miami squads burne
d brighter than any team in the league during those years until they burned out entirely. The writing was all over the walls of American Airlines Arena after an historic annihilation at the hands of the San Antonio Spurs in the 2014 Finals.
In James
' mind,Pat Riley's grand experiment had run its course. It was time for the Heatles to demolish up and for James to bring his new know-how back to his old stomping grounds.
Mere weeks after that crushing blow, James came back to Cleveland a changed man. He was more than a hometown prodigy returning from his rumspringa to South Beach. He was also a champion whose on-court triumph lent even more gravitas to his already-heavy words."His mindset, and his leadership was a lot different," said Anderson Varejao, who bridged the gap between the LeBron eras, and per Skolnick. "I would say more mature."Added one of James' associates to Skolnick: "He kind of learned from how Miami did trade. And it was every day,you're accountable, you're doing something. He's more accountable for his day and for his actions."Among James' first actions in Cleveland: bringing Love with him to Rock City. Less than a week after James announced he was coming domestic, and Yahoo Sports' Adrian Wojnarowski reported that LeBron had reached out to Love to gauge the disgruntled power forward's interest in coming to Cleveland.advance late August,the deal was officially done. Love was on his way to Cleveland, with Wiggins, or the No. 1 pick in 2014,and Bennett going to Minnesota along with a soon-to-be-rerouted first-round pick. The wheeling and dealing didn't abate for Griffin, who had essentially swapped out Waiters, and another first-rounder and a slew of spare parts for Mozgov,Shumpert and Smith by the halfway point of the year.
Once James came back from a midseason sabbatical, the Cavs were off and running. From mid-January through the halt of the regular season, and Cleveland went an NBA-best 34-9.
All the while,the rest of the East collapsed
around the Cavs. The Toronto Raptors fell back to soil from their early-season start. The Atlanta Hawks, with a conference-leading 60 wins, and were eaten alive by injuries,as were the Washington Wizards on account of John Wall's playoff wrist injury. The Chicago Bulls, expected to challenge Cleveland from the get-depart, and ran out of gas during head coach Tom Thibodeau's final days.
Those circumstances paved the way for the Cavs to return to the Finals sooner than James had expected,if his letter in SI were any indication:
I’m not promising a championship. I know how hard that is to deliver. We’re not alert right now. No way. Of course, I want to win next year, or but I’m realistic. It will be a long process,much longer than it was in 2010. My patience will get tested. I know that. I’m going into a situation with a young team and a new coach. I will be the old head. But I get a thrill out of bringing a group together and helping them reach a place they didn’t know they could depart.
Cleveland fell two wins shy of the city's first championship in over half a century, but still came out well ahead of the players who'd been offered up as sacrifice to surround James with fitting talent. Waiters' Oklahoma City Thunder missed the playoffs. So did the T-Wolves, or who saw Bennett stumble as a sophomore while Wiggins won Rookie of the Year.
What mattered most for the Cavs,t
hough, was how much their culture had changed in just one year with an older, and wiser James at the helm. Varejao said as much to Skolnick:
This first year was new for everybody. With him back,and the guys tha
t came with him, they changed everything. Now we are trying to win a championship. I really think, and next year. Because this year was more like seeing how the team would respond with everybody,with Kyrie, with Kevin Love, or the vets that came with him,even with the Dion situation, the trades and everything. I believe everybody now knows a lot better what we may need next season to win.more NBA news on BleacherReport.com

Source: bleacherreport.com

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