CLEVELAND -- It's dangerous in the NBA to overreact; it gets people
fired and it costs people wins, respect and money. The season is long,
and that makes it forgiving, which is why anyone who has much experience
preaches patience.
But the Cleveland Cavaliers
are out of time. It's preposterous to say that in February for a team
with a history of turning things around and doing it when they have to.
However, they are in a preposterous situation.
They aren't just looking at losing this season, but they are looking at losing LeBron James. If tomorrow were the beginning of free agency, there's a good chance that would be the case.
The Houston Rockets played beautiful basketball Saturday night, and they destroyed the Cavs 120-88. Chris Paul was a maestro from the opening moments; it was a display of the reason why the Rockets are brilliant when he and MVP candidate James Harden
are so great together (now 23-3 when both guards start). Paul was a
breathtaking plus-47 for the night. The score probably could've been
anything Paul wanted it to be.
But
it was almost as if the Rockets were unwitting participants,
executioners just there to do a morbid job and get out of the way.
Before the game, Rockets coach Mike D'Antoni fell all over himself
trying not to talk about the Cavs. In the postgame interview, Paul kept
repeating over and over, "It's about us" to Lisa Salters, wanting to get
on the plane and get the heck out of the way. The drama was all with
the Cavs, and it was hard to miss and hard to watch.
The Cavs
players do not trust each other. It appears as if some of them don't
like each other. Two of them have been told they'd probably get traded
two weeks ago but then weren't. And their coach has been hesitant shake
up the lineup, as he has failed to motivate his veteran team.
Kevin Love,
his left hand in a brace, had a slip of the tongue before the game. He
said that sometimes with hand surgery "you can actually come back
faster. With this, I think it's great to be able to avoid that." He
didn't have surgery; he will be sidelined for eight weeks.
The
Cavs have until next Thursday to make significant changes to the roster.
It is unlikely they could make a move or two that would fix all the
structural changes they need -- they are old and slow by league
standards, they have mostly poor defensive players and a number of their
players are having substandard seasons that have negatively affected
their value. But they so badly need a chemistry change that they might
have no other choice but to switch out faces to try to change the energy
flow.
James (11 points, 3 of 10 field goals) is completely
dispirited. Never before in his career has he played like this. Maybe on
the occasional midseason evening he has been less than energetic -- in
the past, he has called it "chill mode" -- but never like this.
This is why it's unfair.
Since the end of the Finals last season, James has watched as Jimmy Butler, Paul, Paul George, Carmelo Anthony and Blake Griffin have been traded. None of them were sent to the Cavs. When the Cavs traded Kyrie Irving, the centerpiece of the deal was a draft pick.
Looking
through his eyes, you can understand why he's frustrated. You can
understand why he sometimes feels like the organization hasn't kept the
pedal down. When he sees Isaiah Thomas
struggling, trying so hard to fight through a devastating injury but
having to go so slow that he's hindering the Cavs instead of helping
them, he wonders why they traded Kyrie Irving at all. And why they took
the deal with the Boston Celtics, even though they had a chance to back out.
James
must wonder if they won't go all-in to try to keep the best team around
him whether he might want to be elsewhere. Maybe even that he'd want to
waive his no-trade clause.
Instead, he stews.
Meanwhile,
the Cavs point out that James will not commit to them past this season.
That they tried to mold a future in attempting a trade last June with
George, and he wouldn't go there. They point out that they have the
highest payroll in the NBA and are paying a hideously painful repeater
luxury tax. That the team lost $18 million last season because it spent
$25 million on luxury taxes.
Cavs owner Dan Gilbert has been here
before. He spent wildly, got an old team and traded away a bunch of
future picks in 2010 only to see James walk. The result was a miserable
rebuilding process that lasted four years and was failing until James
stunned them by walking back through the door.
The Cavs must wonder if they should just publicly come out and say they will trade everything, they will trade the Brooklyn Nets
pick, if James were only to commit past this season. But if he won't,
they can't sentence themselves to a miserable rebuild again. That would
put it on his plate and take it off theirs.
Instead, they stew.
And the adversarial situation grows. And the team plays worse. And the pressure tightens. And the clock runs.
To
those who know him, it was concerning two weeks ago in San Antonio when
James came into a close game in the fourth quarter and seemed to just
let the game go. He has come into hundreds of games like that, and if he
didn't lead his team to victory, he went to the finish line clawing.
In
the games since, James' defensive effort has further wilted. His
aggression has waned. His frustration has extended. And his leadership,
which at times has been controversial in its style but never questioned
in its intent, has faded.
He is absolutely culpable; his past
month has been one of the worst of his adult NBA life. This comes after
the first two months of the season in which he was a leading candidate
for MVP. Which makes his erosion all the more clear.
And the Cavs
are culpable for allowing the trust and the relationship with management
to crack. The Cavs know crisis better than anyone, they've been
immersed in it on and off for four years. But this is a different
situation. Everyone can feel it.
They're almost out of time.
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