Cleveland Charge release 2025-26 schedule

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The Cleveland Charge, G League affiliate of the Cleveland Cavaliers, are getting ready for their first full season in Cleveland Public Auditorium after playing the second half of their schedule there last year. This year’s team will feature Luke Travers and Nae’Qwan Tomlin on two-way deals. They will be led by Eli Kell-Abrams as head coach.

The Charge will open the season on the road on Friday, November 7 against the Iowa Wolves. They will host the Wisconsin Herd the following week on Friday, November 14 at 7 PM for the home opener. That’s the first of back-to-back games that weekend against the Herd.

Seventeen of the Charge’s 24 home games this season will take place on the weekend. A majority of those will be on Friday and Saturday (eight games on each day).

The G League season is broken up into two parts: the Tip-Off Tournament and the regular season.

Teams will play 14 games against their region in the Tip-Off Tournament. The teams with the best winning percentage in their groups, along with the four winning percentages from teams that didn’t win their group, will advance to a single-elimination tournament that takes place from December 19-22 at the G League Winter Showcase. Teams that don’t advance to the tournament will still attend and play at least two games at the G League Showcase.

Records then reset for the start of the regular season shortly thereafter. The Charge will open the regular season at home against the Delaware Blue Coats on Friday, December 27. The regular season consists of 34 games. The top eight teams in each conference will advance to the playoffs, which begin in April.

The Charge’s full schedule can be seen below.

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Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cleveland-charge/38704/cleveland-charge-release-2025-26-schedule
 
Cavs announce location of 2025 training camp

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The temperature is starting drop, the leaves will be changing soon, and the Cleveland Cavaliers are almost back in our lives. Preseason tips off in just over a month starting on October 7 against the Chicago Bulls. Now, we also know when and where training camp will be.

The Cavs announced Tuesday morning that they will be holding training camp in Sarasota, Florida, at IMG Academy. This will be the second year in a row they’ve conducted training camp there. Training camp is scheduled for September 30 through October 5.

IMG Academy is a high school that specializes in sports. They have world-class practice facilities for numerous sports, including basketball. There are three regulation gyms on site along with recovery and training areas. It’s truly a world-class facility.

This will be the third time the Cavs have hosted a remote training camp. The only other time they’ve done so aside from these last two years was in 2004, when they hosted it in Columbus as Capital University.

Having remote training camps is becoming more en vogue for NBA teams. It’s easy to see why, as it gives them the opportunity to eliminate some of the distractions that they may run into at home while giving them a chance to bond as a team. That happened last season. Donovan Mitchell said last year that the team spent hours each night playing video games like NBA 2K and NCAA Football together when they were in Sarasota. It’s safe to say something similar will happen again this year.

The Cavs have also announced that media day will take place on September 29, right before they head out for training camp.

Basketball season is just around the corner.

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-n...-academy-cleveland-cavaliers-donovan-mitchell
 
Random Cavalier of the Week: Bill Musselman

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We continue our summer look back at random figures in Cleveland Cavaliers history by shining a spotlight on Wooster’s own — Bill Musselman. He served various roles for the Cavs, including head coach for stretches of the 1980-81 and 1981-82 seasons.

Former Cavs owner Ted Stepien is widely regarded as one of the worst owners in American professional sports history. He was an overall creepy person, to say it mildly, who also didn’t have any business sense. For example, he threatened to move the team numerous times, including to Toronto, and injured people in a publicity stunt that included throwing softballs off of Terminal Tower.

Additionally, Stepien didn’t seem to understand basketball.

To say he didn’t know how to run the Cavaliers would be an understatement. Stepien is infamous for trading first-round picks for over-the-hill players, which is why the Stepien rule exists today. That rule requires teams to make first-round selections at least every other year.

Stepien only owned the Cavs for three seasons, 1980-83, but oversaw six different head coaches during that time. One of whom was Bill Musselman.

Musselman started out as a college basketball coach. He began his coaching tenure with Kent State, but is more known for leading the University of Minnesota from 1971 to ‘75. That team had success on the court, but had controversies off of it.

During Mussleman’s tenure, two Minnesota players assaulted Ohio State center Luke Witte after a game during the 1971-72 season. This resulted in a brawl that ended with three Ohio State players being hospitalized. Mussellman has been blamed for the incident because he encouraged overly physical play, which led to this kind of behavior.

Mussellman left Minnesota in 1975 with over 100 NCAA violations. He bounced around the ABA for a few years before taking over as head coach for the Cavs in 1980.

Mussellman’s physical and abrasive style didn’t translate well to the NBA. For instance, he played guard Randy Smith 48 minutes in his first outing as head coach, even though it was a preseason game.

Mussellman was relieved of his duties late in his first season. The team was 25-46 at the time. Stepien replaced him with “general manager” Don Delaney — who spent time coaching Stepien’s professional softball team. This move speaks to the dysfunction that was around the franchise at the time.

Despite being relieved as head coach, Mussellman still worked as director of player personnel. Delaney started the next season as head coach, went 7-19, and was replaced again by Mussellman.

Mussellman’s second stint with the Cavs went worse. They won just two of their final 23 games of the 1981-82 season. Mussellman was supposed to start the following season as head coach, but resigned a few days before the 1982-83 campaign.

Overall, the Cavs went 27-67 with Mussellman, which somehow, was the best winning percentage for a coach during the Stepien era.

Mussellman bounced around as head coach after leaving Cleveland. He spent time in the ABA before making it back to the NBA to coach the Minnesota Timberwolves from 1989-91. He didn’t fare much better as he went 51-113 in two seasons.

Mussellman went back to minor league and college basketball before returning to the NBA with the Portland Trail Blazers as an assistant coach in 1997. He served as an assistant there for three seasons before dying in May 2000 after suffering a stroke.

Mussellman was known as being a fiery and hard-nosed coach who hated losing, despite doing it quite often. Even though he didn’t have much NBA success, Mussellman did give Tom Thibodeau (who may have picked up on Mussellman’s substitution patterns) his first job as an NBA assistant. Other members of his coaching tree include Sidney Lowe, who was an assistant under J.B. Bickerstaff in Cleveland.

Mussellman’s son, Eric, spent time as an NBA head coach and is currently leading USC.

The Cavs were a mess during the Stepien era. Mussellman’s brief foray into and out of leading the Cavs was just a small part of what was a dysfunctional three-year period. Fortunately, things never reached that level of chaos after Gordan Gund bought the team in 1983.

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cup-of-cavs/38693/cleveland-cavaliers-random-cavs-bill-musselman
 
The regular season still matters for the Cleveland Cavaliers

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Few teams have more pressure on them for the 2025-26 NBA season than the Cleveland Cavaliers.

Their historic 64-win season went up in flames before they even sniffed the conference finals last year. That hasn’t sat right with anybody. Add to this a growing cap sheet that will cause unsustainable tax penalties — and we have a situation that’s reaching a boiling point.

All this to say, next season is do-or-die.

This time around, no one will be satisfied with regular season success. We’re all waiting for it to translate to the playoffs. That’s the only place this roster can prove itself in any permanent way.

But let’s not get ahead of ourselves. There are 82 games left to play before the postseason begins. And while the regular season isn’t everything… it certainly doesn’t mean nothing. Virtually every team that has won a championship was great in the regular season. Only two teams in NBA history have won a title after finishing lower than the third seed. So, there’s at least some correlation between the regular season and playoffs.

Of course, there isn’t always a direct translation.

The Cavs did it all last year. In the regular season, I mean. They had the best start in franchise history (15-0), pulled together for another 12-game winning streak one month later— and then rallied again for a franchise record 16 straight wins in the second half of the season.

Evan Mobley won Defensive Player of the Year, earning All-Star and All-NBA honors along the way. Donovan Mitchell reached All-NBA First Team while Darius Garland returned to All-Star status. Ty Jerome and De’Andre Hunter finished as Sixth Man of the Year Finalists. Kenny Atkinson won Coach of the Year.

There was nothing else the Cavs could have accomplished in the regular season. And yet, you know how the story ends. They fell woefully short of the ultimate goal.

So, with all that in mind, why would anyone care about the upcoming regular season?

Here’s the thing: Right now, the Cavs are a team that has one spectacular season under their belt. They weren’t anything special in the years before, finishing fourth in the East for consecutive years. Determining whether last year was an outlier — or something that can be repeated — will tell us a lot about the Cavs.

Is Mobley someone who made the All-NBA team because his team won 64 games? Or is he going to stamp himself as an All-NBA lock for the foreseeable future?

Can Garland and Mitchell continue to lead the league’s best offense? Or was last year built on a foundation of three-point shooting that can’t continue?

Mitchell has been a borderline top-10 player the last three seasons. His three-level scoring is something you can’t take for granted. Having any of this click together again is no guarantee.

Another season of roaring success in February would indicate something is working. A major lapse would be the opposite. Life in the NBA is too fragile to think that lackluster months are acceptable for a second apron team that hasn’t won anything yet.

We don’t expect another 64-win season. But there is a power vacuum in the Eastern Conference that should have Cleveland salivating. Boston and Indiana are injured. Milwaukee doesn’t have a strong enough supporting cast around Giannis Antetokounmpo. The 76ers likely missed their window with Joel Embiid.

A new leader has to emerge. There is no reason it shouldn’t be the Cavaliers.

Let’s put it this way. You can say the “regular season doesn’t matter” all you want. But if the Cavs finish below New York, Atlanta, Orlando and Detroit — then you’re going to be pissed. Rightfully so. Cleveland has a roster that matches or surpasses each of them. They should be the top dog.

Again, winning in the playoffs is more important than anything else. Yet getting to the playoffs as the team that dominated all year long is still something worth aspiring for.

You can argue there’s a reality in which the Cavs win 50 games and coast the rest of the way to get to the playoffs healthy.

I would disagree.

This isn’t a LeBron-level team that can flip a switch and problem-solve as they go. This is a team that has repeatedly failed in the playoffs and still has some serious soul-searching to do.

Every game in the regular season is an opportunity to grow. It shouldn’t be overlooked. Not for this team.

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-a...son-still-matters-for-the-cleveland-cavaliers
 
Cavs Season Preview: What’s next for Kenny Atkinson?

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Cleveland Cavaliers head coach Kenny Atkinson laid out several goals in his introductory press conference last July shortly after taking over. His main objectives were these: modernize the offense, position Evan Mobley to take the next step, align Donovan Mitchell and Darius Garland, and determine how to utilize the two-center lineups.

To say he met those goals would somehow be an understatement.

  • The Cavs went from the 16th-rated offense in 2024-25 to the best last season.
  • Mobley made his first All-Star game, won Defensive Player of the Year, and was All-NBA Second Team.
  • Mitchell and Garland both played some of their best basketball at the same time, as Mitchell earned All-NBA First Team honors and Garland returned to All-Star form.
  • The Cavs had a blistering 120.8 offensive rating when both bigs were on the floor last season and a 12.2 net rating. For the sake of comparison, the Cavs had a 111.3 offensive rating and 0.9 net rating the year before when both bigs were on the court.

All coaches set out lofty goals and things they want to improve on before a season. Not many accomplish all of them as convincingly as Atkinson did. It’s part of the reason he was the runaway winner for Coach of the Year.

But for all the progress the Cavs made, they won the same number of playoff games last season as they did in J.B. Bickerstaff’s last year with the team: five. That simply isn’t going to cut it.

The Cavs’ issues seemed straightforward going into last season. Now, it’s not as clear, which makes Atkinson’s task for next season more difficult.

How do you better prepare a team that has mastered the regular season, but still hasn’t come close to imposing its style of play against a similarly skilled opponent in the playoffs? How do you empower the supporting players who shrink in their roles in the postseason after they starred in them for 82 games? And most importantly, how do you keep your best players from giving into their worst habits when the games matter most?

There isn’t an easy answer to any of these questions. There also isn’t anything that they can truly prove in the regular season that can make you believe these won’t be problems again. However, these are the questions that Atkinson will need to solve this year.

In some ways, everything went too well for the Cavs last regular season. Their baseline offensive and defensive strategies held up throughout their 64-win campaign. Even when they lost, it was because of poor execution, effort, or just missing shots. There was never a recurring flaw that they needed to counter if they wanted to be successful against other elite teams.

Atkinson seemed to know this at the time as well. He tinkered with different gimmicks for possible playoff matchups (the zone defense). But nothing really stuck or felt worth focusing on given how well their core principles worked.

This ultimately left them unprepared for when they faced real adversity in the second round against the Indiana Pacers. Injuries were certainly a problem, but not having any alternatives defensively when the switch-easy man defense and the 3-2 zone were getting repeatedly exposed was a problem as well. On the other end, not being prepared to slow down the pace and exploit mismatches contributed to giving up two leads of 19 or more in the second round.

How do you solve these issues? Does another year of continuity help you get over those hurdles? Were injuries the sole reason why they collapsed so spectacularly? If so, how do you keep from overcorrecting?

Atkinson took over a talented but flawed team last year. He knew what the issues were and fixed nearly all of them before their 15-0 start to the regular season. He made incredibly difficult tasks look easy.

In many ways, Atkinson’s challenge for this season is much tougher. There are known issues, but most of the problems don’t have simple fixes. There isn’t some drill or offensive scheme that keeps teams from melting down under playoff pressure.

Atkinson will have six months to prepare the Cavs for the playoffs. We’ll find out then whether or not he’s done so next spring.

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-analysis/38722/cavs-season-preview-whats-next-for-kenny-atkinson
 
Cavs Season Preview: Is this Luke Travers’ last chance?

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There has been a lot of hype and wonder ever since Luke Travers was drafted by the wing-needy Cleveland Cavaliers. He initially profiled as the point-forward the Cavs needed, a stat-stuffing player who can rebound, pass the ball, and ideally hit a few shots.

That has not materialized.

Travers has been better on paper than in practice, unable to crack out of the G League for any significant amount of time. The Cavs have a good pipeline of G League talent making their way to significant NBA minutes (see: Sam Merrill, Dean Wade, and Craig Porter Jr.), but Travers has not been one of those players. At least, not yet.

The 24-year-old Australian appeared in just 12 games last season with the Cavs, accruing very little meaningful playing time or statistics. His pathway to playing in the NBA this upcoming season is muddied as well, as the Cavs are a team with not just playoff — but championship — aspirations where every game counts. They aren’t the Washington Wizards who have minutes to spare for young, unproven talent.

The injury to Max Strus does leave a faint crack in the window to eke out some playing time for Travers, but that is largely predicated on other injuries to the wing room as well. But none of that matters if he does not play better in the G League with the Cleveland Charge.

Travers played in 21 games for the Charge, averaging 17 points, 9.8 rebounds, and 7 assists per game. He also averaged over a steal and a block per contest. Those counting stats are nice on paper, but the Cavs need more in other areas for Travers to have a chance of making it up to the major league team for any significant amount of time.

Shooting and defense will be two key aspects of Travers’ game that need improvement. He shot just 26.2% from deep in the G League on under three attempts per game, and 49.8% from the floor overall. While the field-goal percentage is passable, it’s not what you want to see in a league where Travers should be more dominant. The three-point shooting is far below what he shot in even the Australian league (40.5% in 2022-2023). Travers got relatively good looks from deep in the G League last season, but he simply did not knock them down.

Defensively, Travers once again looks better on paper with his counting stats than he does in the game. Too often he looks a step slow for guarding small forwards and too small for larger power forwards. He is a “tweener,” a tough spot to be in. Travers is caught between two positions without being able to gain a significant advantage over either one (see: former Cavalier Derrick Williams).

This isn’t to say that Travers is what he is. The Charge had a down season last year and are going to look different when they start playing in the next few months. New head coach Eli Kell-Abrams will come with a different offensive game plan and scheme. Emoni Bates is no longer on the roster either, potentially freeing up more offensive touches for Travers and an opportunity to shoot more. On the flip side, not having a shooting threat like Bates on the floor with Travers means he may have to flex those passing skills more as well — another wrinkle he could bring to the Cavs. After all, passing is spacing.

Travers would also do well to learn from fellow “tweener” Larry Nance Jr., who is one of the few combo bigs who has carved out niche roles across the league. Nance has improved his shooting and passing, and can reasonably play power forward and center if needed. Nance is an inch taller and has three more inches on the wingspan, but the point remains that Travers could learn a thing or two about becoming more versatile between playing two different positions.

This likely isn’t the end of the line for Travers if he doesn’t play well this season, but the Cavs could opt to pivot if they don’t see enough growth. As a team with limited resources and draft picks in the near future, Travers may have a shorter leash if things do not go well. Still, the skillet is tantalizing, and something the Cavs are clearly invested in maximizing.

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-a...avers-nba-g-league-cleveland-cavaliers-charge
 
Cavs Season Preview: Can Nae’Qwan Tomlin take another leap?

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Nae’Qwan Tomlin wasn’t in the Cleveland Charge’s rotation at the start of last season, but ended it on a two-way deal with the Cleveland Cavaliers. It’s difficult to imagine a year going any better for someone in his position.

Tomlin’s size and scoring profile make him an intriguing gamble for the Cavs. The 6’10” forward averaged 17.2 points, 7.3 rebounds, and 1.9 assists on .537/.330/.663 shooting splits for a Charge team that struggled to find consistent point guard play. Much of Tomlin’s offense came from facing up on the perimeter and creating for his own off the dribble.

There simply aren’t many guys of his size who are consistently doing that, even at a G League level.

Tomlin’s weird combination of skills is partially due to his unorthodox path to the NBA. He didn’t play organized basketball until enrolling at Monroe Community College. He then attended three other schools throughout his collegiate career before ending up with the Charge last season.

This weird road stands out in a league where many players receive specialized training before they reach even middle school.

This ultimately led to Tomlin developing a well-rounded skillset based on his strengths. He was never pigeonholed into stereotypical roles for forwards of his size. Instead, he just developed standard basketball skills from simply playing the game. That path has allowed him to be the scorer he is today.

At the same time, Tomlin hasn’t been put in many positions where he had to develop an off-ball game like he will need to if he’s going to be an NBA rotation player. The Charge needed anyone who could create for themselves off the dribble, given their inconsistent guard play. This allowed Tomlin to thrive and be comfortable in his game. He simply won’t be able to play that way at the next level.

It’s difficult for anyone to make the jump from the G League to the NBA. It’s especially difficult if you have to drastically change how you play to do so.

For example, Sam Merrill’s role between the Cavs and Charge didn’t change that much since being an off-ball, movement shooter translates well to the next level. He had to learn how to pick his spots and play with his new teammates, but what he did best was a seamless fit. Merrill’s primary role didn’t change. Just his usage and playing time varied.

Conversely, what Tomlin does best won’t be as seamless a fit. He won’t be asked to create for himself if he’s on the floor with guys like Donovan Mitchell, Darius Garland, or Evan Mobley. In those contexts, he’ll likely be used as a second-side scorer who quickly attacks a shifting defense or spaces the floor. Additionally, generating your own looks in the NBA is considerably more difficult than doing so in the G League. It’s why good isolation G League scorers typically don’t become rotation NBA players.

Tomlin can, however, break that stereotype. He theoretically has the tools to be a good off-ball player. We just don’t know if he can adjust and best utilize them in that context yet.

On top of that, there are concerns about whether his rebounding and defense can hold up in the NBA. Is he strong enough to get contested rebounds against similarly sized players? Is he quick enough to stay on the perimeter with some of the more dynamic fours? Can he defend the post if he’s switched onto a bruising center?

These are all questions that Tomlin will need to answer this upcoming season if he’s going to make the jump into being an NBA player on a standard deal.

Tomlin showed last year that he has the skills and work ethic to make the leap from being a fringe G-League player to having his own NBA locker. The leap he needs to make this season will be just as difficult. Most players on two-way contracts never end up being viable rotation players. At the same time, most don’t have the size and skillset Tomlin does, either. We’ll see if he can make the most of that this season.

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-a...omlin-cleveland-cavaliers-charge-g-league-nba
 
Cavs Season Preview: Tyrese Proctor is in a great place to grow

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It’s not easy being a rookie on a championship-contending team. More often than not, you’re an afterthought who is destined to be buried in the rotation; a cheap contract to fill the backend of a roster that is already complete.

But for Tyrese Proctor, the Cleveland Cavaliers are a hotbed for internal development.

Proctor was selected 49th overall in the 2025 NBA Draft. A 6’5” combo guard who excelled as a three-point shooter in college. He’ll join a star-studded backcourt that features Darius Garland and Donovan Mitchell, with veterans like Max Strus, Lonzo Ball and Sam Merrill eating deeper into the available minutes. Proctor might not surpass any of them during his rookie season — but he can learn from all of them.

There are multiple paths in front of Proctor. He can lean into being an off-ball threat by following Merrill’s footsteps as a pure shooter.

Or, Proctor can learn to blend his off-ball movement with a little bit of tertiary playmaking, like Max Strus. The more capable Proctor becomes as a ball-handler, the more he can learn from Garland and Mitchell. Even Lonzo Ball can help Proctor tap into his defensive potential as a taller guard with a plus-wingspan.

Will Proctor perfectly fit into any of these comps? Of course not. That’s the beauty of basketball. But there are shades of each teammate in Proctor’s unpolished game. He will benefit greatly from the lessons they can provide.

The Cavs organization is not in a position to prioritize Proctor’s development. Meaning, he won’t get in-game reps until he earns them. And, his star teammates aren’t likely to stop what they are doing and take the time to mentor him.

Nonetheless, Proctor will be with the team more than usual for the 49th pick. The Cavs landed Proctor because they promised him a standard contract rather than a two-way deal. Cleveland clearly sees potential in Proctor and isn’t planning on casting him away to the G-League. At least, not right away. That means Proctor will get to practice with the pros and learn through osmosis.

It’s unlikely Proctor plays heavy minutes or cracks the rotation in his rookie year. But Kenny Atkinson’s motion offense will ensure Proctor gets a fair shake whenever he sees the floor. I’d expect to see flashes of Proctor’s potential as a 3-and-D creator — with plenty of warts to cover up as the season goes on.

Proctor is a promising player for a late second-round prospect. The Cavs will be patient with his development. So while it could take years for Proctor to develop, we can safely bet that he’ll find everything he needs by watching his star teammates.

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-a...w-tyrese-proctor-nba-duke-cleveland-cavaliers
 
Cavs conference rival adds some much needed depth

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The Cleveland Cavaliers and the New York Knicks are expected to be the two top teams in the Eastern Conference this upcoming season. Cleveland is the better one on paper, and certainly was during this past regular season as they went 4-0 against New York, but they haven’t come close to having the same playoff success as the Knicks. It will be tough to pick the Cavs in a potential playoff series against the Knicks until Cleveland shows that their brand of basketball can translate to the postseason.

The Knicks don’t have the same depth that the Cavs do. They sacrificed that for star power last summer when they traded for Mikal Bridges and Karl-Anthony Towns. This leaves a second unit that features Jordan Clarkson and Miles McBride as its only viable backcourt options. That’s why signing Malcolm Brogdon to a non-guaranteed deal can’t hurt anything.

Free agent guard Malcolm Brogdon has agreed to a one-year deal with the New York Knicks, agent Sam Permut of Roc Nation tells ESPN. Entering his 10th NBA season, the former Sixth Man of the Year gives the Knicks key backcourt depth and reserve playmaking. pic.twitter.com/JyVAywF2gj

— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) September 12, 2025

Brogdon isn’t the player he was in 2023 when he won Sixth Man of the Year with the Boston Celtics. He’s played just 63 games combined the last two seasons with the Portland Trail Blazers and Washington Wizards.

Last season was his worst from an efficiency perspective as he registered an effective field goal percentage of 46.7%. This is due to his three-point shot falling off as he hit just 28.6% of them last season. He ended last season averaging 12.7 points, 4.1 assists, and 3.8 rebounds on .433/.286/.880 shooting in just 24 appearances.

A change of scenery might help. It’s difficult to go from a championship contending team like the Celtics to rudderless, tanking teams the following two seasons. Or, this could just be the result of not being the player he previously was, which is natural for a guard entering their age 33 season.

There’s a reason Brogdon’s deal is unguaranteed. He will need to beat out Landry Shamet for a roster spot in training camp and preseason. The Knicks are only expected to keep one on the opening night roster.

We’ll see if this is a consequential move. The odds are that it won’t be. But at the least, it shows that the Knicks know this is a weakness on the roster. It’ll be interesting to see if they try to make a trade after training camp or around the deadline to bolster the backcourt if things don’t work out with both Brogdon and Shamet.

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/nba-ne...rk-knicks-cleveland-cavaliers-nba-free-agency
 
Cavs Season Preview: Can Craig Porter Jr. really be a backup guard?

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The Cleveland Cavaliers have endured a lot of turnover in their guard room this offseason. With Ty Jerome heading to the Memphis Grizzlies, Lonzo Ball coming over from the Chicago Bulls, and Darius Garland sidelined to start the year, the Cavaliers will enter the season with a thin pool of talent at the lead guard spot. Ball will presumably be the lead point guard without Garland, which will lead to Craig Porter Jr. sliding into the backup role.

Porter Jr has been a frustrating developmental project to this point in his Cavaliers’ tenure. Arriving on the scene in 2023, CPJ showed a lot of raw talent and athleticism in Summer League, swaying the Cavaliers to convert him from UDFA to a 2-way deal. That carried over into the early part of the 2023-24 season, where his contract was then converted into a standard deal.

Unfortunately, he hasn’t been consistent since then. It wouldn’t be that hyperbolic to say that July to December 2023 was CPJ’s most consistent stretch of play. Porter Jr’s has left a lot to be desired for what his ceiling seemed like it could be.

There were reports regarding CPJ’s lack of work ethic that carried into the 2025 Summer League, prompting many, including myself, to believe that if everything went accordingly, it would be a short stint in Vegas for CPJ due to inspired performances.

This was not the case. Porter suffered a hamstring injury in the first game against the Indiana Pacers and was sidelined for the remainder of Summer League—a disappointing outcome for both Porter Jr. and the Cavaliers, who had outlined a clear path for him to seize the backup point guard role coming into this season.

Porter’s path is clouded more by his inconsistent shooting than by his overall talent. The skill is evident—CPJ would find a roster spot on most NBA teams—but when the Cavaliers are searching for surefire depth pieces for a title run, his track record from the past two seasons doesn’t check all the boxes.

A successful season for Porter Jr. would be one in which his shooting keeps defenses honest. In previous years, he developed a reputation as a poor yet willing three-point shooter. If there has been unseen growth in his shooting profile—paired with his confidence and elite athleticism—the Cavaliers may have made a solid bet by reshuffling their guard rotation.

With Garland out to start the season, the Cavaliers will quickly find out whether Porter has taken these reports to heart. If the story hasn’t changed, the front office may need to do some quick window shopping, as the guard room is far from the healthiest in the league.

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-a...-can-craig-porter-jr-really-be-a-backup-guard
 
Cavs have reportedly decided on their starting five

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The Cleveland Cavaliers will be without their starting small forward from last year, Max Strus, for the beginning of the regular season. Strus injured his left foot at the end of August. That will sideline him for three to four months, which would keep him from returning until the end of December at the earliest. Someone will need to fill that opening until he’s healthy again.

According to Terry Pluto of cleveland.com, the Cavs have made up their mind as to who could fill that void. As of now, it’s De’Andre Hunter “unless there is a change of plans.” Pluto went on to say that he has “looked great” in summer workouts and that the Cavs were “looking at Hunter as a starter before the injury to Strus.”

If true, this would make perfect sense for the Cavs.

Hunter conceptually fits great alongside the other pieces of the core four. His off-ball shooting is lethal as he shot 43.1% on catch-and-shoot threes last season when he was in a Cavaliers uniform. The quality of those looks would theoretically increase if he’s playing alongside the starters, which is something he hardly did last year.

Defense, and particularly defensive rebounding, have been and will likely continue to be concerns for Hunter. He is a poor rebounder for someone of his size, 6’8”, but that shouldn’t be as much of an issue if he isn’t playing the four like he was last season, thanks to the addition of Larry Nance Jr.

Even though he isn’t someone who’s best suited to defend the four, he can hold his own when he’s switched onto a bigger forward. Doing so with Jarrett Allen and/or Evan Mobley in a help position makes that switch a little easier.

Darius Garland will also be missing the start of the season with a toe injury. Pluto reported that Sam Merrill is expected to start in his place. That would leave Lonzo Ball to come off the bench and place Donovan Mitchell as the lead guard.

We’ll see if head coach Kenny Atkinson decides to go with Hunter and Merrill in the starting unit when the season begins in just over a month. A lot can change between now and then. But for now, going with a starting unit of Mitchell, Merrill, Hunter, Mobley, and Allen would make sense.

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-r...re-hunter-sam-merrill-cleveland-cavaliers-nba
 
Cavs forward Larry Nance Jr. partnered with Swensons to raise money for Akron Public Schools

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Akron native and Cleveland Cavaliers forward Larry Nance Jr. has been to Swensons “hundreds” of times, but there were two things he hadn’t done before: be a roadside server and try a signature Galley Boy. He was able to check off both of those things on Saturday afternoon, while more importantly, raising money and school supplies for Akron Public Schools.

“It’s about supporting the community that supported me and allowed me to get to where I’m at today,” Nance said at Saturday’s event.

And if you’re going to support the community of Akron, there’s no better place to do so than at Swensons.

“It doesn’t get any more Akron than that,” Nance said. “That’s something I’m very proud of. I’m very proud to be from here, and this is a place that I have truly eaten at hundreds, thousands, I mean literally hundreds of hundreds of times. … So why not partner with my favorite spot in my favorite area?”

Together, Nance and Swensons hosted a school supply drive on Saturday afternoon. Swensons will donate 20% of all sales from Saturday to fulfill classroom wish lists. Additionally, Nance has pledged to personally match that donation as well.

To help out, Nance became a curb-side server for the afternoon. This included wearing the uniform — white belt and all — and running to cars when they turned on their headlights.

“We started him out as a trainee,” Swensons’ president Jeff Flowers said about Nance. “All of our curb servers start up as a trainee. And as you learn and you get faster, you can actually earn more olives (on the nametag). So you can go from a trainee, from a two olive, to a three olive, to a four olive to a five. Just in case, we do have a five olive Larry [nametag] ready.”

I don’t think Nance worked his way up to the five olive nametag. He took too many breaks to sign autographs and take pictures with everyone in attendance. But then again, that’s part of the fun and why he was there.

“The curb servers are having a blast with him,” Flowers said. “He’s great. He’s been taking orders. He’s taking out trays to deliver it to our guests. He’s doing an amazing job.”

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Somehow, Nance had never had a Galley Boy — Swenson’s signature burger — before, even though he’s been to Swensons countless times. Olives were the main deterrent for him. The staff found out about this and presented him with one to try. Unsurprisingly, Nance might have a new favorite order going forward.

Larry Nance Jr. has been to Swensons “thousands” of times, but hasn’t had a Galley Boy until now.

He might have a new favorite order. pic.twitter.com/y8OPzj3Ex0

— Jackson Flickinger (@JacksFlickinger) September 13, 2025

As much fun as Saturday was, the main goal was to help a community and school system that has meant so much to Nance throughout his life.

“For every step of my life, I’ve got a teacher that helped me get to that next one,” Nance said. “For this next generation, for Akron Public Schools, they’ve got a great group of teachers.”

And now, they have more of the resources they need to teach their students.

“Now there’s no excuses,” Nance said when asked what his message to students was. “We got everything you need: pens, pencils, notebooks, all the good stuff. And again, that’s huge. Thanks to everybody that showed up. … There’s no excuses now. So those grades better stay on track, and I’ll be checking in periodically to make sure they do.”

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-n...sons-akron-public-schools-cleveland-cavaliers
 
Cavs Season Preview: The Dean Wade Dillema

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Each year, around September, we begin our previews for the upcoming season. A preview will usually focus on recapping where a player has been, who they are currently, and what growth we can expect from them moving forward.

But in the case of Dean Wade, the Cleveland Cavaliers might already have everything they need to know.

Wade has been nothing if not consistent for the last three years. He’s averaged essentially the same points, rebounds and assists for six straight seasons — while hovering around the same shooting splits in each year.

You know what to expect from Wade at this point. He’ll check into a game, play stellar defense, rebound the ball, and occasionally, he’ll shoot a few three-pointers. Wade will rarely step outside of his comfort zone and change the outcome of a game.

This might feel disappointing. Fans had higher hopes when Wade emerged as a 6’9” forward who could slide his feet, play without the ball, and shoot near 40% from deep. This size and versatility is everything you want in the modern NBA. We have long felt that Wade would be an elite role player if he ramped up his three-point shooting.

But clearly, being a high-volume gunner just isn’t in the cards for him. Let’s figure out why.

Is Wade shooting enough three-pointers?​


We are entering year six of wanting Wade to shoot more three-pointers. And while he’s steadily increased his attempts to career-highs in consecutive seasons — he still sits in the 2nd percentile for usage according to Cleaning the Glass.

Wade seemingly has the mechanics and touch of a long-range marksman. But is it true that he needs to shoot more often? He’s a career 36.8% shooter on nearly 1,000 attempts. That’s good… but it isn’t elite by any means.

Tossing more offensive responsibility onto Wade’s plate isn’t as simple as it sounds. This team is loaded with talented scorers. How often should Wade get the ball on a team that rosters Darius Garland, Donovan Mitchell, Evan Mobley, De’Andre Hunter, Sam Merrill and Max Strus?

Wade attempted 3.8 threes per game last season. On those attempts, he placed in the 56th percentile in accuracy. This isn’t the profile of someone who needs to start unloading the clip.

But… alright, let’s be honest. The numbers might tell us one thing. The eye test will tell us something else.

Anyone watching can see that Wade is a little hesitant. He’ll routinely pass on clean shot attempts, causing the offense to reset — and even sputter out. This is where Wade has room to grow. A good drive-and-kick should result in an automatic three-point attempt.

Wade doesn’t need the ball more often to maximize the touches he’s already getting. Being a slightly more willing shooter could make all the difference, even if it only results in a marginal uptick in his usage.

This is perhaps the only question we have for Wade entering the 2025-26 NBA season. Will he be quicker to fire on semi-open shots? Or will he give us more of the same hesitancy? Whatever it might be, it’s worth acknowledging the positives that Wade brings to the Cavaliers despite his limitations.

Recapping the positives​


Look, it’s fair to fixate on Wade’s three-point shooting (or lack thereof). He broke onto the scene in 2021 as a player who checks all of the pace-and-space boxes of today’s NBA. He still does, to a certain extent. So let’s focus on that for a bit.

Wade is as defensively skilled as anyone on the roster outside of Mobley. His ability to switch all positions and roam as a helper has made him an invaluable presence on the defensive side of the floor. He’s also one of the better rebounders on the team, placing in the 78th percentile for defensive rebounding percentage last season.

On offense, Wade plays his role. He spaces the floor, moves without the ball, and doesn’t let it stick in his hands. You can build a functional and even thriving offensive lineup with Wade on the court. At his best, Wade is connective tissue in a five-out unit.

So yes, Wade hasn’t made any prolific leaps in his development. But, he has steadily grown as a player. An undrafted prospect rarely becomes a rotational player on a championship-contending team. Wade’s growth may have plateaued sooner than expected — but let’s not overlook the work it took for him to reach this point, in the first place.

Cleveland can rest assured that they have a steady, defensive-oriented floor spacer on their bench. Wade has filled this role for six years, and we don’t expect that to change (for better or worse) this season.

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-analysis/38837/cavs-season-preview-the-dean-wade-dillema
 
Cavs guard Donovan Mitchell wants to be known for more than just basketball

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Cleveland Cavaliers guard Donovan Mitchell spent the last 15 minutes of his two-day youth basketball camp in Cleveland answering questions from campers and their parents. One of the parents asked him what he wants to be remembered for in 30 years. Mitchell hesitated, praised the question, then finally said that he wants to be known for more than just being a basketball player.

“If I could impact one child at this camp, one moment, that’s what it’s about,” Mitchell said to reporters when asked the same question afterward. “In 30 years, that’s what my legacy is going to be. Yeah, if we win championships, that’d be fantastic, but at the end of the day, who are you as a person? What did you leave? What was your impact?”

Mitchell embodied that philosophy during his camp on Sunday morning. He energetically participated with the campers in their drills, played three-on-three with them, and went out of his way to make sure he interacted with everyone there. Most campers were from the area, but some made the drive from as far as West Virginia or flew in from Panama. Making sure each of them left with a memory was a goal for Mitchell.

“I want the kids to have that moment so when they go and tell the stories to their parents and to their friends and be able to say, ‘Hey, I was with that guy’ that they see on TV,” Mitchell said. “That I’m reachable. I’m touchable. I’m not just some character that they can’t really touch. I’m here.”

There’s no defense for a good shot. pic.twitter.com/ayfcnSv86o

— Jackson Flickinger (@JacksFlickinger) September 14, 2025

Mitchell made sure that everyone at the camp had fun while also raising money for his foundation, Spida Cares. The foundation helps in many charitable causes, but two stand out for Mitchell. The first being homelessness.

“People always need a place to stay, a trustworthy place to stay,” Mitchell said. “There are so many different situations that [lead to homelessness] that are just unfortunate. Just being able to shine a light on that, just give help where it’s needed, that’s our biggest emphasis.”

Education is the other.

“I think the biggest thing is education,” Mitchell said. “Just understanding that this is our youth. … I think everybody wakes up and is like, ‘I want to hoop. I want to play basketball.’ It’s like, no, there’s so much more than that. And it starts in school. It starts with education. And this is a small part of what we’re trying to do on the education front. I think the biggest thing is always being able to get our teachers paid more. I know that firsthand from watching my mom (who was a teacher) sacrifice on a daily basis for the classroom. I think that is definitely key.”

Mitchell poses for a group photo with the campers.

Mitchell doesn’t just want to throw money at education, he wants to use basketball as a way to possibly teach himself.

“I think for myself, just finding ways to impact the youth in that way,” Mitchell said when asked about coaching kids directly after his playing career is over. “I’m obviously not going to be a teacher, but being a coach is a form of being a teacher and an educator in a sense. So that’s something that…I’m pretty passionate about.”

Mitchell has done amazing things on the court for the Cavs in the three years he’s been in Cleveland. He’s established himself as a perennial All-NBA player and will only continue to rise in the rankings of greatest Cavaliers ever the longer he stays with the team. But for as good a player he’s been, he knows that there’s more to life than just basketball. He wants to impact a community that he calls his “home away from home.”

“Understanding that there’s life outside of just the game,” Mitchell said. “This game is going to always go on, even though I’m not here. It’s life. So understanding that for me, I’m always going to appreciate the legacy that you leave off the court. The way I’m able to reach people and touch people because that’s ultimately everlasting.”

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-f...-more-than-basketball-cleveland-cavaliers-nba
 
Cavs Season Preview: What does Larry Nance Jr. bring to the front court?

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The last name of Nance carries a lot of weight within the Cleveland Cavaliers. Larry Nance Sr.’s number resides in the rafters of Rocket Arena. Pete Nance has had an on-again, off-again relationship with Cleveland’s G League organization, the Charge. And, of course, there’s Larry Nance Jr., who is now beginning his second stint with the team after signing as a free agent this past offseason.

The salary space-strapped Cavs had to be picky with who they signed this summer, but Nance will likely outplay the dollar amount he is being paid this year. Nance will see a primary role as a backup power forward and center, giving a breather to both Evan Mobley and Jarrett Allen when necessary. He brings a mix of several skills, though of average quality and consistency. Nevertheless, in small quantities, Nance should be a productive player.

In 19 minutes per game last season with the Atlanta Hawks, Nance averaged 8.5 points (his most since 2019-20), 4.3 rebounds, and 1.6 assists per game. Those are, of course, modest stats, but it’s the other things that Nance provides that the Cavs will benefit from.

Nance attempted three shots from deep per game last season, drilling 44.7% of them. That small blip of stretchiness is useful in spacing, in that teams will have to care when he goes to hoist one from beyond the arc. That is useful when it comes to building lineups with Mobley or Allen next to him.

Then there is the “little things” factor, which cannot be discounted either. Nance pokes himself into passing lanes to break things up a bit, something you don’t normally have from a big of his size and quickness. He can bang around in the paint on both ends of the floor and doesn’t wilt against bigger guys. Where De’Andre Hunter is more slight and not as capable of going up for boards against bigger wings, Nance is harder to knock off his axis. Does passing count as a “little thing?” It should when its unexpected. Nance won’t be leading the bench in assists or anything, but he doesn’t turn the ball over and tends to make the right read.

Nance has been a well-liked teammate and, of course, has a rooting interest in the Cleveland area. The Cavs are still a younger team, and Nance will have an impact in the locker room as well as on the floor. It is impossible to measure that quantitatively, but it is at least part of the reason the Cavs showed interest in him.

The multifaceted toolbox that Nance has is modest, but helpful. He does not wow at anything in particular, but he gives the Cavs a little wrinkle in the same way Lonzo Ball does as a backup point guard. He can do numerous things decently, but nothing truly spectacular.

And, similar to Ball, Nance has dealt with injuries seemingly every season. It is almost a forgone conclusion that he will miss a handful of games for any number of reasons. Soft tissue stuff, sprains, you name it, and there is a good chance that it will happen to Nance throughout the season. That certainly limits his ceiling as a contributor if he cannot stay on the floor, and it’s a risk that the Cavs are willing to live with.

Nance will be able to help the Cavs in a number of ways, but expectations should be tempered. His impact is often not seen in highlights or on the scoresheet, but it is still there.

Think of Nance as a medium floor, low-ceiling type of player that will be useful, impactful, but never game-breaking in any way. He is a good connector, and that is something the Cavs need – especially missing Max Strus for at least half of the season. The biggest question will be health, and that has been an ongoing issue for Nance throughout his career. The Cavs had limited options as one of the most expensive teams in the league, but it’s a worthy gamble.

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-a...-does-larry-nance-jr-bring-to-the-front-court
 
Cavs Season Preview: Will the Lonzo Ball gamble payoff

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The offseason plan for the Cleveland Cavaliers in 2025 was to shuffle the deck for their role players. The first domino in this action plan was the trade with the Chicago Bulls that sent away Isaac Okoro for Lonzo Ball.

Ball was a highly regarded talent coming out of college in 2017. While he never lived up to the expectations that came with being the number 2 pick in the 2017 NBA Draft, Ball has found his niche as a versatile defender who is a capable orchestrator of an offense. This is a valuable skill set in today’s league and one that typically couldn’t be acquired for a reserve like Okoro. But then again, few players have Ball’s injury history.

Since Ball has entered the league, he has suited up for 287 of the possible 656 contests. Two of those seasons (2022-24) he missed entirely due to knee cartilage issues. Ball returned from that hiatus last year and played 35 games. The stat line doesn’t inspire hope for those expecting massive returns. However, a player coming off a two-year absence from professional basketball is never going to hit the ground running.

I view this move, if it hits for the Cavaliers, as their Alex Caruso type swing. Ball at his best is a force on the defensive end, the Cavaliers have made the most of raising the defensive floor of their guards who aren’t known for their ability on that end (i.e Caris LeVert, Ricky Rubio, Ty Jerome, Darius Garland etc).

The Cavaliers have not had a potential defensive disrupter that could guard multiple positions and contribute on the offensive end. Ball has the versatility that could have him play the one through three. That is a switchability that this team has struggled to find as they are operationally a smaller team in the backcourt and on the wing.

Another factor that would make this swing worth it for the Cavaliers is if Ball can regain his form offensively from 2020-22. Ball’s shooting splits in his final season with the New Orleans Pelicans and first with the Bulls are pretty encouraging. He shot 38% and 41% from three on good volume (8.3 per game in ‘20 and 7.4 per game in ’21). As discussed before, the shot was not there in his return (34% on 5.6 attempts). You’d hope Ball will have some positive regression to the mean after a healthy offseason and ramping back into the swing of things.

With Garland out for the start the season, and Donovan Mitchell slated to start at point guard in the interim, the Cavaliers appear to be allowing Lonzo to play it safe in his debut season for the Wine and Gold. This is the correct approach as they are past being a team aggressively pursuing wins in the regular season. The Cavs need to focus on postseason health and availability, especially from the players who already struggle to make it through a season.

If Ball’s health is not a topic of conversation by the trade deadline, the Cavaliers will look like they pulled off a heist by acquiring Ball for just Okoro. However, the price included the risk baked into getting into the Lonzo business. Schematically and talent-wise, it’s a great move. Now the “if” of it all will determine where this move puts the Cavaliers come postseason time.

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-a...chicago-bulls-cleveland-cavaliers-isaac-okoro
 
Cavs Season Preview: Will Sam Merrill live up to his extension?

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Heading into this past offseason, it would have been understandable to believe the Cleveland Cavaliers’ big free agent priority would be Ty Jerome. But you would be wrong.

The actual matter of greater importance was re-signing Sam Merrill, the guard who carved out a key role with the Cavs over the past several seasons. But it was this past season that saw Merrill become a multi-tooled force that head coach Kenny Atkinson relied on. And not just for heavy minutes, but heavy critical minutes.

Sam Merrill signed a lucrative four-year, $38 million contract this past summer. That is a heavy investment by Cleveland’s front office, money that many would have expected to go towards the fan favorite and Sixth Man of the Year finalist in Jerome. But the Cavs opted for versatility over flashy, something that will be exceptionally important this upcoming season — especially with key injuries to the Cavs’ backcourt and wing room.

The injury bug has bitten the Cavs early this time around. Darius Garland is not going to be ready for training camp, at the very least, and more than likely will miss the start of the regular season. Max Strus has a complicated broken foot and may not be back until after the All-Star break. Those are two prime slots for Merrill to step in and make an impact as a shooter, playmaker, and defender.

Merrill came into this league as a sharpshooter, but his numbers from deep declined year over year from 40.4% in 2023-24 to 37.2% in 2024-25. His three-point attempts per game remained a respectable 5.2, meaning he is not someone that opposing defense can just ignore. Without Garland, the Cavs will need the shooting to come back for Merrill. And on a more consistent basis.

The Cavs have more backcourt playmaking with Lonzo Ball, but Merrill was trusted with the ball in his hands last year as well. It would not be surprising to see lineups with both Ball and Merrill on the floor together, as the two complement each other. Should Ball suffer an injury, an unfortunate commonality, Merrill could be asked to bring the ball up more and take on a softer playmaker role, potentially next to Craig Porter Jr. at the point.

But it’s not the offense that became Merrill’s calling card: it was the defense. The Cavs’ defense was 3.7 points per 100 possessions better with Merrill on the floor versus off, which is in the 80th percentile per Cleaning the Glass. The eye test checked out on this, too. Merrill was consistently getting into passing lanes, generating turnovers, staying in front of his man, and forcing guys to make one too many extra passes. Those things don’t always show up in the box score, but they do when actually watching games.

Even after Garland and Strus return, Merrill is going to play a key role off the bench. The Cavs would not have paid him almost $40 million to play sparingly — he is going to play anywhere from 17 to 20 minutes per game on any given night. That may be somewhat surprising for Cavs fans who may still think of Merrill as the feel-good G League story, but it’s time to buck that mindset.

Merrill proved that he is more than a shooter, and the Cavs will need that this upcoming season. In fact, they will need it much, much more to begin the campaign than they ever have before. Atkinson trusts Merrill, something he talked about quite a bit last season. That will be tested almost immediately with two of the roster’s better shooters dealing with injuries. Merrill won’t lead the Cavs to victories, but he does have the role and level of responsibility that could swing a win or loss. For everyone’s sake, here’s hoping it’s the former.

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-a...n-preview-sam-merrill-cleveland-cavaliers-nba
 
Cavs Season Preview: Jaylon Tyson’s development is more important than you think

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Jaylon Tyson didn’t get much of an opportunity during his rookie season. The 20th pick in the 2024 NBA Draft spent his first year trailing the bench as his star teammates rallied together for 64 wins. There wasn’t a path for him to earn significant minutes during that miraculous regular-season run.

This year, the door is open.

The Cavs’ rotation won’t be as stacked to start the season. Max Strus and Darius Garland are injured. Isaac Okoro and Ty Jerome have been replaced in the backcourt by Lonzo Ball. Few things stand between Tyson and inserting himself as a nightly contributor.

All that’s left to figure out is which skill he can hang his hat on.

Tyson played various roles in college. He spent most of his freshman and sophomore years as an off-ball threat before becoming a high-usage, on-ball creator during his junior year at California. Tyson exceled with the ball in his hands, averaging 19.6 points and 3.5 assists.

This has carried forward in his young NBA career. All of Tyson’s best moments, including his best outings in Las Vegas Summer League, have come with Tyson as a creator. His handle and 6’6” frame allow Tyson to burrow into the paint and get to his spots. His playmaking and scoring have popped at the lower levels — or in garbage time of NBA games — but nothing fully clicked during the meaningful minutes of his rookie season in Cleveland.

That’s partly because Tyson was never asked to handle the ball with much frequency. Again, the Cavs simply didn’t need to spend time on a rookie when they were already demolishing opponents with their regular rotation. That will change this year. Tyson’s role is going to be far more important.

The problem is discovering what Tyson’s role should be. Can he adapt to being an off-ball, catch-and-shoot threat who impacts the game without scoring? Or is Tyson going to make a leap and become a capable ball-handler who can carry some of the offensive burden off the bench?

Tyson’s shooting mechanics will have to improve. He shot just 34.5% from deep as a rookie, with a slower jumper that made it easy for defenders to close out to him. Speeding up his jumper and shooting with more efficiency will open up Tyson’s game.

We’ve seen that Tyson can distribute the ball when the defense is in rotation. He makes quick, simple reads that get his teammates open looks. Packaging his playmaking with a steady jumper will make Tyson a difficult player for second units to defend.

Of course, that’s if Tyson develops offensively. In the meantime, Tyson can impact winning by being a sturdy defender who pounds the glass for rebounds. He’s shown a knack for tracking down loose balls, and he has the tenacity to fight over screes. Tyson might not be a full package on offense yet, but he has all of the physical tools needed to be a positive defender.

The Cavs would benefit greatly from Tyson finding success in one of these roles. Cleveland doesn’t have many avenues for improvement, given their financial circumstances. Homegrown talent is the best option they have. That makes Tyson a valuable asset, a multifaceted prospect who can develop into a winning rotational player. Don’t overlook the importance of Tyson’s second season. This is a long-term gamble that the Cavs need to go their way.

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-a...ason-preview-jaylon-tyson-cleveland-cavaliers
 
Cavs Season Preview: Max Strus is still the glue

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The Cleveland Cavaliers sought out Max Strus in the summer of 2023 because they desperately needed more three-point shooting. Two seasons later, Strus has become a multifaceted role player who serves as the glue for any lineup that he’s in.

Strus never quite fit the box that Cleveland thought he would fill. His jumper isn’t as consistent as other three-point specialists (though he can still get hot enough to burn the house down any given night). Instead, Strus has made himself invaluable by being a better defender and playmaker than anyone expected.

The Cavs have relied on Strus to lift their offense, not behind his shooting, but through his versatility. His off-ball movement takes attention away from Donovan Mitchell and Darius Garland — but he also pairs well as a pick-and-roll partner. Especially with Evan Mobley and the five-out lineups featured in Cleveland’s second unit. Strus can complement any lineup.

Strus averaged 9.4 points, 4.3 rebounds and 3.2 assists last season. He did this while playing out of position as the starting small forward, a role that he fully committed himself to. However, next season will likely bring him back to his natural position. With De’Andre Hunter in the starting lineup, and Strus coming off the bench as a shooting guard.

This change in the rotation looks perfect on paper. Hunter fits the starting five and Strus is an ideal sixth man. His microwave scoring is better suited to this role and he’ll spend less time attempting to scale up defensively to guard opposing wings. This should lead to the most comfortable season that Strus has had since joining the Cavs.

Still, Strus has a spiritual role with this team that has nothing to do with the starting lineup.

Because let’s be real. Anything tangible that you want from Strus can be better received from other role players. Hunter is more of a wing. Sam Merrill is a better three-point shooter. Lonzo Ball is a better ball-handler off the bench. The on-court production that you get from Strus is less than the actual value he adds to this team.

He isn’t the best shooter, defender, or playmaker. But he brings a maturity and focus to every lineup he’s in. He doesn’t make excuses, he doesn’t jog or sulk. Strus is all gas, no breaks — and that’s the type of fiery competitiveness that every championship team has on its roster.

Think of the biggest criticisms launched at Cleveland over the last two seasons. Soft. Uninspired. Scared of the moment. How many of those attributes would you apply to Strus? Probably none. That’s what makes him one of the most important players on the roster. Even more so than his genuinely dynamic skill set.

I wouldn’t go as far as to say Strus is the ‘heart and soul’ of the Cavaliers. In all honesty, Mitchell is the rare superstar who checks both boxes as team-leader and energizer. Still, Strus is the next closest thing, and the Cavs can’t afford to lose it.

Watch for Strus to thrive in his natural role off the bench this season. More so, stay intuned to how he raises this team’s ceiling by being a quintessential ‘lead by example’ role player.

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-analysis/38874/cavs-season-preview-max-strus-is-still-the-glue
 
17 Takeaways from Kenny Atkinson and Koby Altman’s preseason press conference: The Cavs are good enough

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The Cleveland Cavaliers hosted their preseason media availability on Tuesday for president of basketball operations Koby Altman and head coach Kenny Atkinson. They spoke on a wide variety of topics, but the overall tone was optimistic. This is a core they believe in.

Let’s get into some takeaways from their season-opening press conference.

The Cavs are still a good basketball team. This is easy to forget because of how poorly things went down in the second round against the Indiana Pacers last postseason. But, for as awful as that was, that one loss doesn’t have to define this era of Cavs basketball.

“This is a special group, this is a special era,” Altman said. “We hope to encapsulate that with some real playoff success and a championship to come. But this group has accomplished a lot, and they’re still young, and hungry, and still growing.”

The team’s core four of Darius Garland, Donovan Mitchell, Evan Mobley, and Jarrett Allen are largely responsible for that success. They’ve anchored one of the most successful three-year stretches in team history despite lingering questions about whether this group is an optimal fit together.

Altman isn’t eager to move on from a group that he’s assembled. They’ve continually shown that they can win games together. That isn’t something to take for granted.

“I’m not breaking that up,” Altman said when asked about this core group. “This is something you want to stick with. Like I said, don’t take this era for granted.”

The Cavs are relying on internal growth to take them to the next level. The organization isn’t banking on an all-in move or another return from their prodigal son to save them.

The CBA doesn’t allow for teams in the Cavs’ position to easily bring in outside talent, even if the ownership group has deep pockets. No, their path forward is through player development. That’s why they hired Atkinson in the first place.

Internal development worked for them last year. They’re banking on that again to take them to the next level after Atkinson has had a full offseason with the team.

“We really hired Kenny to do what you’re talking about, to get roots down and create this player development program for our players,” Altman said.

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Mobley remains the key to getting this all to work. He’s the one with the highest ceiling. Whether or not he gets there remains to be seen, but there aren’t many players in NBA history who have his combination of size, quickness, athleticism, and overall offensive skill. Whether or not he puts it all together will determine whether this is a fun era highlighted by bankable regular-season success or if this is an era defined by championship contention.

“We go as he goes,” Altman said. “As he continues to rise his level, or elevate his level, our organization continues to grow.”

Mobley’s next step requires development off the floor as well. We’ve seen him make noticeable progress every year on the court. That culminated last season with him being named to the All-NBA Second Team and winning Defensive Player of the Year.

While he still has room to continue to develop those skills, taking steps to be a leader for this team is just as important. It’s also something he’s working on.

“If you watch him this offseason, he’s been locked in,” Altman said.

“He is really serious about taking a leap to be a top five player. His work ethic, his character. … His leadership too. He hosted a player-led mini camp in LA this offseason. Most of his teammates were out in LA working with him. And so he’s growing. He’s still 24 years old, but now he’s becoming a grown man in terms of his body, his emotions, his maturity level has always been super mature for his age, so I think he’s ready to take that next step.”

Mobley’s approach to this season is different.

“You can just feel it,” Atkinson said. “You just sense that he’s ready to make another jump. The seriousness in which he approached his offseason from a body perspective. And then from a basketball perspective, he’s different. I don’t know how to exactly define that, but I feel like there’s confidence growing here that maybe we haven’t seen before.”

Mobley isn’t the only big who can still improve going into next season. Atkinson believes that there are still ways to unlock Allen.

“He’s a heck of a player and a vital piece of our core four,” Atkinson said of Allen. “That was one of the offseason deep dives. How can we use him better? How can we take advantage of him?”

Allen is overlooked for how skilled he is. We’ve seen that in glimpses, most notably during a few-month stretch during 2023-24 season when he briefly showed that he can operate well out of dribble handoffs when he was forced to do so with Mobley out of the lineup. That’s just one example of the skills that he has as a big man.

The issue is that he’s usually sharing the court with other, more skilled offensive players, which can force him into becoming a passive observer on offense or relegated to a few simple tasks.

“When you have a player that good and that talented, it’s on us as coaches to help them,” Atkinson said. “I do think you’ll see some shifts there on how we use him. Not radical by any means, but we really want to lean on his strengths.”

Garland also has room to improve. His injury could be a “blessing in disguise” as it allows him to add some much-needed strength so that he can take his game to the next level.

“So I think it’s gonna sound counterintuitive, because he was hurt, but he had a really good off-season,” Altman said. “Only because he focused on the things that we’ve been talking about for a long time with him, which is weight room, strength, and because he couldn’t touch a basketball for a month, he had to just lift and so he’s stronger.”

Cleveland’s other All-Star guard has proven to be a top-ten level player. The next step for Mitchell is figuring out how to peak during the playoffs. His last two postseason runs were either cut short or severely limited because of injuries. That needs to change if they’re going to have any type of postseason success.

The team knows this and is putting steps in place to try to keep that from happening again.

“I think we have him on a really good plan,” Atkinson said. “I think he’s keenly aware of his body, espeically this offseason. He’s going to try to have this marathon. We want to play into June. So I think he’s very cognizant of what he needs to do to be his best when it matters.”

The Cavs believe there’s more to De’Andre Hunter’s game than what we’ve seen. Atkinson went out of his way to praise Hunter saying that he was arguably the team’s “best player” this offseason.

Hunter has the skills to be an elite NBA player. That, unfortunately, hasn’t fully come to fruition on the court. Players usually don’t have a breakout season at age 28, but maybe this is a situation conducive to taking an unexpected leap forward.

Cleveland’s offseason moves were done with the playoffs and this core in mind. It’s readily apparent how Lonzo Ball and Larry Nance Jr. can help on both ends of the floor. They have a level of versatility that few in their most recent postseason rotation did. That should help.

Atkinson is particularly excited to see Ball play. He brings a level of basketball IQ that you can’t have enough of. Atkinson pointed to two changes that they’ve already made to their system based on suggestions from Ball.

Keeping Ball healthy during the season is a priority. The team has a program in place to ensure that he’s physically peaking for the playoffs. Whether or not that results in him playing postseason basketball for the first time in his career remains to be seen.

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Altman did a great job of finding cost-efficient veterans this offseason with Ball, Nance, and Thomas Bryant. They should all be able to help in the postseason, but the long-term runway of this team will be more predicated on how their young players develop.

It’s difficult to keep core players together with the CBA. It’s even harder to supplement them without outside talent. The goal is to continually replenish departing role players, like Ty Jerome, with cost-controlled players on rookie contracts, which is easier said than done.

Jaylon Tyson appears to be the most likely young player to step up. Atkinson has been impressed with what he’s seen from him this summer.

“We keep saying that he has NBA skills,” Atkinson said. “How hard he plays every possession. … That’s kind of what you have to do [as a role player]. So he’s checking that box. I think he’s had a phenomenal offseason. I’m just really excited.”

The Cavs’ lack of toughness apparently isn’t seen as an issue now, even though it was brought up by Altman immediately after their playoff loss to Indiana.

“Listen, I don’t know what your definition of tough is because I think we are extremely competitive,” Atkinson said when asked about what the process is for getting tougher. “I think we’re extremely competitive. We’re one of the most competitive teams in the league, so I think we’re tough enough.”

Competitiveness is something that Cleveland has continually shown throughout the regular season. They’ve been extremely resilient when faced with adversity and injuries the last few seasons. However, that hasn’t carried over into the postseason. And until it does, this will continue to be a fair question.

Only the players on the floor can change this narrative.

The Cavs will face pressure this season, but they believe in this group. Altman mentioned that they were one of a handful of teams that could conceivably win a championship this season, and he’s correct. That fact alone doesn’t mean that this is the core’s only remaining chance to do so. Altman still believes that there’s a long runway to compete and they still haven’t reached their peak yet.

“We set ourselves up for a runway with the guys that we have,” Altman said. “I’ve been almost more excited about our internal growth more than what we’ve done as a front office, if that makes sense. And so we’re going to continue to focus on this group. This group has had enormous success…how do we get over the hump? It’s going to come from those internal pieces that continue to grow.”

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-a...n-koby-altman-cleveland-cavaliers-evan-mobley
 
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