News Cavs Team Notes

Cup of Cavs: News and links for Tuesday, Dec. 17

gettyimages-2245205164.jpg


Good morning, it’s Wednesday, December 17. The Cleveland Cavaliers are still 15-12. They play today on the road against the Chicago Bulls. Let’s look ahead at today’s slate of NBA games.

Today’s game of the day​

  • Cleveland Cavaliers vs. Chicago Bulls – 8 PM, NBA League Pass, FanDuel Sports Network

Well, we might as well focus on this one.

The Cavs are sliding backwards and quickly. They’ve dropped two of their last three games, picking up their only win in a narrow finish over the Washington Wizards. Their two losses were at the hands of a Charlotte Hornets team and a version of the Golden State Warriors that didn’t feature Stephen Curry, Jimmy Butler or Draymond Green.

That isn’t good.

Cleveland is begging for some optimism. And while the Bulls aren’t a lofty opponent (they’ve only won one game since Thanksgiving), the Cavs could use this win as a reason to feel good. Or, at the very least, a win here would help them stop the bleeding.

The rest of the NBA slate

  • Memphis Grizzlies vs Minnesota Timberwolves – 8 PM

There are only two games on tonight, and both of them begin at 8 pm. Weird choice, NBA.

Cavs links of the day

NBA links​


Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cup-of-cavs/41707/cup-of-cavs-news-and-links-for-tuesday-dec-17
 
Winners and Losers: Cavs at Bulls – Is this rock bottom?

gettyimages-2252476462.jpg


The Cleveland Cavaliers are hitting new lows every week. It’s time to be brutally honest about the team right now, after they lost to the Chicago Bulls 127-111.

LOSER – Everyone, the whole dang team​


Alright, let’s just do this.

With apologies to Jaylon Tyson and Thomas Bryant, who played their hearts out and did everything they could tonight, it’s time to deliver a rant that brings me no joy.

This team is currently unserious.

Donovan Mitchell might visibly do the heavy lifting by pouring in three-pointers or fighting his way to the rim for scoring outbursts that allow the Cavs to momentarily claw back into games. But those bursts are nothing more than Band-Aids. A cover-up for the previous 42 minutes of questionable effort that stems top to bottom on this roster.

Mitchell isn’t to blame for Cleveland’s recent struggles. He might be the only reason they have been somewhat competitive this season. But he’s quickly wearing down, as the need for him to shoulder the load on offense has led to diminishing returns on defense. Tonight, Mitchell was as guilty as anyone for not getting back defensively.

The Cavs, and the Utah Jazz before them, have already seen how this story en ds. Mitchell can do amazing things as a prolific scorer. But, if the team around him can’t chip in, the ceiling can only go so high. This isn’t Mitchell’s fault so much as it’s the reality of being a 6’3” guard in the NBA. Mitchell physically can’t control both ends of the floor like LeBron, Jokic, or SGA can.

This is where the rest of the team comes into play.

While Mitchell has exerted himself to the max for most of the season, his teammates have largely been absent. Either literally, in the case of injuries, or figuratively, like when they deliver no-shows such as tonight.

The Cavs aren’t going to win many games when Jarrett Allen, Darius Garland and De’Andre Hunter are this ineffective. Garland and Allen can wave the injury excuse — but patience is running thin. Hunter, on the other hand, seemingly has no explanation for his sudden fall from grace. He’s currently a 30% three-point shooter who actively hurts his team defensively.

It hasn’t helped that the bench has seen all of its talent zapped away since last season. They lack an identity or purpose. No one on the second unit can score the ball. And, no one can effectively stop opponents from scoring themselves. This team found massive success when they had a microwave scorer (Ty Jerome) and a point-of-attack specialist (Isaac Okoro) at their disposal. They no longer have those options.

There aren’t enough Band-Aids to cover up this many wounds.

Can the Cavs turn this around? Probably. They certainly have the talent to be better than their 15-13 record currently shows. And, in fairness, they have been demonstrably banged up for the whole season. Sam Merrill, Max Strus and of course, Evan Mobley, are pretty important.

But that isn’t an excuse for the games they have recently dropped. A double-digit loss to the Chicago Bulls, just days after losing to the Charlotte Hornets and struggling for a win against the Washington Wizards, spells disaster. The most expensive team in basketball doesn’t get to dismiss this many red flags popping up all at once.

Anyone who has followed my work over the years knows that I’m an optimist. I’ve found the silver lining in every dark moment of this iteration of the Cavs. But I’ve never had more trouble finding optimism with this core than I do right now. They look defeated.

Will better health turn this around? Can they even get healthy in the first place? And what does it say about a team that hasn’t proven anything to look like they don’t care about winning in the regular season?

Maybe I’m overreacting to a bad stretch of basketball that has, once again, come during a time when half of the rotation is injured. I’m also under the weather, which could be worsening my mood even more. But if I can’t rant after a bad loss, then what am I blogging for anyway?

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-a...-and-losers-cavs-at-bulls-is-this-rock-bottom
 
Cavs vs Bulls: How to watch, odds, and injury report

gettyimages-2252477179.jpg


The Cleveland Cavaliers have lost seven of their last 10. This includes dropping three out of four to bad teams such as the Golden State Warriors, Charlotte Hornets, and Chicago Bulls. The Cavs will have a chance to rebound from their latest bad loss as they take on the Bulls again.

Chicago was able to use their quick pace to their advantage in their last meeting. It also helped that Cleveland’s perimeter defense was nonexistent and they once again failed to make their outside shots. That’s a deadly combination that is difficult to overcome.

We’ll see if the Cavs learned their lesson from Wednesday’s disappointing loss.

Support us and rep the Buckeyes with Homage

Ohio-Against-the-World-x-Ohio-State-Buckeyes-01012344930-Charcoal-Flat_15caeaa0-836a-4a0b-a279-b46e854d9931.jpeg

Anything bought from the links helps support Fear the Sword. The above shirt can be bought at the link HERE. Homage’s entire Ohio State collection can be found HERE.

Who: Cleveland Cavaliers (15-13) at Chicago Bulls (11-15)

Where: Rocket Arena – Cleveland, OH

When: Wednesday, Dec. 19 at 7:30 pm EST

TV: FanDuel Sports Network Ohio, FanDuel Sports App, NBA League Pass

Point spread: Cavs -6.5

Cavs injury report: Donovan Mitchell – QUESTIONABLE (illness), Evan Mobley – OUT (calf), Sam Merrill – OUT (hand), Larry Nance Jr. – OUT (calf), Max Strus – OUT (foot), Chris Livingston – OUT (G League), Luke Travers – OUT (G League)

Bulls injury report: Zach Collins – PROBABLE (wrist), Ayo Dosunmo – QUESTIONABLE (thumb), Noa Essengue – OUT (shoulder), Trentyn Flowers – OUT (G League), Tre Jones – QUESTIONABLE (hamstring), Emanuel Miller – OUT (G League), Lachlan Olbrich – OUT (G League)

Cavs expected starting lineup: Darius Garland, Donovan Mitchell, Jaylon Tyson, Dean Wade, Jarrett Allen

Bulls expected starting lineup: Josh Giddey, Coby White, Isaac Okoro, Matas Buzelis, Nikola Vucevic

Previous matchup: The Cavs had won five straight over Chicago before dropping Wednesday’s game 127-111.

Here’s a look at both teams’ impact stats via Cleaning the Glass.

Offensive RatingDefensive RatingNet Rating
Cavs116.3 (11th)114.2 (10th)+2.1 (12th)
Bulls113.7 (23th)117.4 (19th)-3.7 (20th)

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-i...-vs-bulls-how-to-watch-odds-and-injury-report
 
3 Things to watch for in Cavs vs Bulls

gettyimages-2252476469.jpg


The Cleveland Cavaliers could really use a win. They have a chance at revenge tonight against the Chicago Bulls. Let’s look at three things to watch.

Can the Cavs wake up?​


On my last preview, I said that this header would stay evergreen until further notice. Nothing has changed since then.

The Cavs played a truly awful game in Chicago on Wednesday. It might have been their lowest point of the last four years. Poor effort and even worse focus led to the Cavs dropping their third game in four tries. All of which were against opponents they were heavily favored against.

There is really no excuse for this. Sure, they are injured. Sure, they’ve had some bad luck in terms of shooting percentages. But, at a certain point, you just have to play harder — and with more intention.

I’ll be looking for that tonight. It’s almost more important that they fight hard and show energy than for them to actually win the game. This team is desperate for a spark. A valiant effort in a loss would honestly be more refreshing than another lackluster effort where they escape with a win.

Of course, I’d prefer they just outright win this game. Run the Bulls off the floor, if possible.

Join the conversation!​


Sign up for a user account and get:

  • Fewer ads
  • Create community posts
  • Comment on articles, community posts
  • Rec comments, community posts
  • New, improved notifications system!

De’Andre Hunter​


The Cavs recently moved Hunter to the bench. The team is hoping this will allow Hunter to find his stride after weeks of struggling. Playing with the bench takes some pressure off of him and puts Hunter in a position where he can score freely against lesser competition.

The early results weren’t great. Hunter still found trouble scoring the ball against Chicago and he wasn’t engaged on defense, either.

Something eventually has to give. Hunter is too important to the Cavs for him to be a net-negative on the floor consistently. He’s proven he can be more impactful, both last season as a sixth man, and as recently as the first few weeks of this season.

I’m looking for Hunter to have a big game tonight.

Darius Garland​


I know it’s hard to feel optimistic when Garland has been playing this poorly. But, I genuinely think he’s starting to turn the corner on the toe injury that severely limited him in the earliest days of the season.

Garland’s mobility is improving. He’s been more confident and comfortable navigating the floor, and we’ve seen hints of the ‘old DG’ sprinkled throughout this frustrating stretch of games.

His shot still isn’t falling. And, I wouldn’t say he is moving at 100%. But he’s getting to his spots consistently enough for me to think that Garland is capable of having a big scoring performance once again. Let’s hope that happens tonight.

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-game-previews/41808/3-things-to-watch-for-in-cavs-vs-bulls
 
Winners and Losers: Cavs vs Bulls – De’Andre Hunter has to be better

gettyimages-2252107724.jpg


The Cleveland Cavaliers lost another one. At some point, hopefully soon, we’ll be able to write one of these after a win.

WINNER – Darius Garland gives us hope​


I’ve written multiple times that nothing matters this season if Darius Garland can’t get healthy. At the time, I didn’t realize how bad things could get for the Cavs. I certainly didn’t expect them to be 15-14 at this point.

With that said, Garland’s health is still the most important thing. They don’t have a chance of turning things around and competing for a title if he isn’t on the court and contributing. While the other issues on this team have taken the spotlight — I can at least rest easy that Garland is trending in the right direction.

Garland had 35 points and 8 assists tonight. He shot above 44% for the first time all season. This was a spry and almost throwback performance from the two-time All-Star.

It still wasn’t perfect. Garland could have had 40+ points if he had made a few more bunnies. And, his defense is still leaving much to be desired. He was much more effective on that end of the floor last year, for example.

Nonetheless, a step in the right direction is worth noting. Garland finally showed that there’s some hope for him this season. Maybe he can turn the corner and be effective despite the toe injury. That’s worth something.

LOSER – De’Andre Hunter​


This has become egregious.

There are too many things going wrong for the Cavs for us to blame any one particular person for everything. But Hunter is trying his hardest to change that. He’s been the single most damaging player on the floor for weeks. Almost all of Cleveland’s current issues, outside of injuries, can be traced back to Hunter.

Watch any of their defensive breakdowns when Hunter is on the court. You can almost guarantee that he’ll be lost or out of place on all of them. If he isn’t getting beaten by a backdoor cut, he’s watching the ball as an opponent scores an uncontested layup. He doesn’t help. He doesn’t contain his man.

And worst of all, it looks like he doesn’t even try.

E'ANDRE, WYD?! pic.twitter.com/xdAimfFy9q

— RealCavsFans.com (@realcavsfans) December 20, 2025

Hunter has always been gifted enough as a scorer to compensate for some of his other shortcomings. But not this season. This year, he’s a sub 30% three-point shooter who is getting outworked on a nightly basis. Tunnel vision, inefficient shooting and poor defensive effort make for a disastrous combination.

We know for a fact that Hunter can be better than this. He showcased how he can fit into a team system last year. He was even impactful during the first few weeks of this season. But this is quickly getting out of hand — and something needs to change if Hunter doesn’t want to become the ultimate loser.

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-a...cavs-vs-bulls-deandre-hunter-has-to-be-better
 
Player Grades: Cavs vs Bulls – Darius Garland scores 35 points in loss

gettyimages-2252100290.jpg


The Cleveland Cavaliers have lost four of their last five. This one was just about as ugly as the rest.

All grades are based on our usual expectations for each player.

Darius Garland


35 points, 8 assists, 2 rebounds

The Cavs might have lost, but they really needed this performance from Garland. He was dynamite from the opening tip. Shifty, elusive, and making all of the right plays. Garland had 25 points going into the fourth quarter and finished with 30+ points for the first time all season.

Again, you can only take so much encouragement from another loss, but this game showed Garland can be effective even with his lingering toe injury.

Grade: A-

Jarrett Allen


14 points, 12 rebounds, 5 assists, 2 steals

Allen took an unorthodox approach to this game. He opened as a facilitator, dishing 5 assists before scoring his first points in the second half. He then put on a clinic in the third quarter, scoring 10 points on 5-6 shooting in that frame. All the while, he grabbed 12 rebounds.

In a normal season, this would have been more than enough for the Cavs to pick up a win over the Bulls. But there are deeper issues on this team right now. I don’t think it’s fair to project too many of the Cavs’ issues onto Allen — who otherwise did his job tonight.

Grade: A-

Support us and rep Evan Mobley with Homage!​

Mobley_comic.jpg

We’ve partnered with Homage to help provide Cavs fans with the best gear. Anything bought from the links below helps support Fear the Sword while also allowing you to rep the Cavs. You can also shop all Homage Cavs gear HERE.

  • You can grab the Mobley shirt seen above HERE.
  • The Mobley trading card shirt can be bought HERE.

Jaylon Tyson​


9 points, 1 assist, 5 rebounds

Tyson had a rough start to this one. He shot 0-4 in the first half and picked up a few frustration fouls along the way. He finally broke free in the second half, running in transition and scoring some key buckets out of the short-roll. But overall, this was one of Tyson’s only duds this season.

Grade: C-

Lonzo Ball


8 points, 8 assists, 3 rebounds, 2 steals

Ball has turned in plenty of frustrating performances this season. Tonight, I thought he showcased some of his redeeming qualities. He dished 8 assists, grabbed a pair offensive rebounds, shot 3-4 from the field, and energized the Cavs with his look-ahead passes in transition.

His activity on defense led to multiple Bulls’ turnovers and changed the momentum of this game in the third quarter. However, Ball was also guilty of some defensive breakdowns that likely cost them the game… which makes this one hard to enjoy.

Grade: C+

Tyrese Proctor


16 points, 3 assists, 6 rebounds

Proctor earned his first career start tonight and began the game with consecutive three-pointers. His production trailed off as the first half went on — but he snapped back to life with a huge third quarter. He finished with 16 points, the second most on the team.

Grade: A

De’Andre Hunter


11 points, 1 assist, 3 rebounds

I’m running out of things to say. This has been one of the most disappointing and frustrating stretches of basketball I can recall from a Cavalier. Poor shooting, bad defense, and worse effort. I don’t know how things could possibly get worse for Hunter.

Grade: F

Join the conversation!​


Sign up for a user account and get:

  • Fewer ads
  • Create community posts
  • Comment on articles, community posts
  • Rec comments, community posts
  • New, improved notifications system!

Dean Wade


2 points, 1 assist, 5 rebounds

The Cavs could really use some consistency from Wade. He’s regressed defensively and hasn’t had any touch from deep this season. It’s all come crashing down at the worst time.

Grade: D

Nae’Qwan Tomlin


15 points, 2 assists, 3 rebounds

Tomlin was shot out of a cannon tonight. He bolted to the rim for three dunks in the first half, and continued his rampage into the second half by nailing a pair of corner three-pointers. He did all of his damage in just 21 minutes.

Grade: A-

Thomas Bryant


11 points, 2 assists, 4 rebounds

Bryant continues to give his all. His intensity is always appreciated.

Grade: A-

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-a...bulls-darius-garland-scores-35-points-in-loss
 
9 Takeaways from Cavs 136-125 loss to Bulls: Darius Garland takes positive step forward

gettyimages-2252108139.jpg


CLEVELAND — The Cleveland Cavaliers dropped their second-straight game to the Chicago Bulls on Friday, 136-125. It’s their third loss in a row and their fifth in their last seven.

Things are not going well.

Inconsistent performances from their top remaining players have been one of the key contributing factors to the team’s struggles. Cleveland was without its two All-NBA players, Donovan Mitchell (illness) and Evan Mobley (calf). That meant that their remaining core pieces needed to step up in their absence.

Darius Garland did. He turned in his best performance of the season. Jarrett Allen and De’Andre Hunter once again didn’t.

Allen’s play remains inconsistent at best. There’ve been stretches, like the third quarter, where he’s featured in the offense and makes a meaningful impact. Ten of his 14 points came in the third quarter when the Cavs briefly retook the momentum and the lead. But his impact seemed nearly non-existent throughout the other three quarters.

It’s one thing when Allen takes a backseat when he’s the fourth or fifth option. Not having a consistent impact when he’s one of the few remaining core players during this tough stretch is inexcusable. Allen needs to get himself more involved. And his teammates need to look to give him the ball more when they can.

Support us and rep the Buckeyes with Homage

Carnell-Tate-Pay-Homage-01012989637-Ash-Flat.jpeg

Anything bought from the links helps support Fear the Sword. The above shirt can be bought at the link HERE. Homage’s entire Ohio State collection can be found HERE.

Hunter remains completely lost. Last season was the best of his career by a wide margin. A regression wasn’t out of the question. What we’ve seen so far this season couldn’t have been anticipated.

Through 25 games, Hunter is shooting a career low from three (30.3%) and is having his second-worst shooting season from the floor (42.5%), which is only slightly better than what he put up as a rookie.

This has bled into other parts of his game. Hunter has taken a meaningful step back defensively as he’s getting beaten consistently in transition and through backdoor cuts off-ball.

On Friday, Hunter finished with just 11 points on 3-10 shooting while being a team-worst -11.

It’s tough to put together functional lineups around Hunter when he’s playing this poorly. And the Cavs don’t have enough available talent elsewhere on the roster to not afford to keep running him out there. The only hope is that he breaks out of this prolonged slump sooner rather than later.

The Cavs have wrongly prioritized offensive rebounding this season. Head coach Kenny Atkinson has repeatedly mentioned that he wants his team to win the possession game. The thought process is that if you have more shot attempts than your opponent, you’ll have a better offense and a wider margin of error. Grabbing missed shots is one of the best ways to gain extra possessions.

There is a downside to doing this. Sending extra players to grab offensive rebounds leaves you susceptible to getting beaten in transition if you don’t get the rebound. Every additional player that crashes the glass is just another one that isn’t getting back on the defensive end.

So far, the juice hasn’t been worth the squeeze.

Cleveland is 14th in second-chance points per 100 possessions. Conversely, they’ve been torched in transition. They were 24th in points given up in transition after opponent defensive rebounds per 100 possessions going into Friday’s game.

This issue was on full display again. The Bulls were able to limit the Cavs on the offensive glass while also using it as an opportunity to get out and run in transition. And in the end, Cleveland still lost the second-chance points battle 20-18.

This doesn’t just affect missed shots, either.

The Cavs once again gave up an easy basket after a nice Tyrese Proctor layup. This happened because two players were crashing for the miss, Proctor was driving in the paint to make the basket, Hunter got outhustled down the court, and Lonzo Ball didn’t do much to make up for his teammates.

View Link

The Cavs have an overall energy and effort problem. Unnecessarily crashing the offensive glass and giving your opponent unneeded transition opportunities as well magnifies the issue.

Teams that get out and run — like the Bulls — continue to give the Cavs issues.

Atkinson admitted afterward that they don’t do well against teams that push the pace. The only issue is, every team is doing that against them now, after they showed they can’t stop it against the Indiana Pacers in the playoffs.

The concerning part about this is that the Cavs saw this coming. They talked about needing to get in better shape during the off-season and training camp. If they haven’t found a solution to their poor transition defense after having seven months to do so, there aren’t a whole lot of reasons to believe they’ll find it now.

As bad as the transition defense was, the half-court defense was the bigger problem against Chicago. The Bulls registered a 115.1 offensive rating in the half-court (91st percentile). They were able to easily get into the paint, which led to clean looks at the basket and open looks from the perimeter.

The Cavs haven’t been a defensive-first team under Atkinson. That’s fine. But you can’t show that little resistance in the halfcourt to a mediocre offense like the Bulls and expect to win.

Second quarters continue to bite the Cavs. They completely let go of the rope in the second frame as they were outscored 34-23. That turned what was a tie game into a double-digit deficit.

This has been a recurring theme this season. Cleveland has now been outscored by an average of 3.3 points per second quarter. That’s the worst mark in the league.

Injuries are a big reason why that’s so. Most of the deep bench lineups see the floor in the second quarter. Even so, they need to be much better than this. There’s never an excuse to be the worst in the league at something when you have this talented a roster.

Garland putting together his most complete offensive game was one of the few bright spots. He looked more like himself than he has at any point since his initial toe injury last spring as he poured in 35 points and eight assists.

It isn’t a coincidence that Garland’s strong scoring game coincided with the Cavs’ offense putting up 125 points. His threat as an on-and-off-ball scorer anywhere in the halfcourt, combined with how he can create angles for his teammates, just makes life easier for everyone.

His toe has slowed him down so far this season. Garland said afterward that he’s rediscovering his rhythm back and is feeling better than when he first came back. That’s encouraging for a team that desperately needs something positive right now.

Garland isn’t the best player on the team, but he is the most valuable offensive piece given how his game unlocks everyone else on the court. The Cavs can’t play the style they want to without him at his best. Friday’s showing provided reason to believe that he can get back up to his multi-time All-Star level play again.

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-a...veland-cavaliers-darius-garland-chicago-bulls
 
‘Unhappy’ Dan Gilbert is reportedly getting involved in Cavs’ decision-making

gettyimages-2250156310.jpg


The frustration level for the Cleveland Cavaliers is not only bubbling in the locker room, but even more dangerously reaching the top of the organization.

Chris Fedor of cleveland.com says that team owner Dan Gilbert is “very unhappy” about what is going on with the Cavs on the Wine and Gold podcast.

Sources tell @ChrisFedor it’s not just frustration in the #Cavs’ locker room — it’s reached the top.

Dan Gilbert is reportedly unhappy with what he’s seeing and starting to get more involved. For anyone who knows how he operates, that’s a wildcard the team can’t ignore. pic.twitter.com/ULEGw4zcGM

— The Wine and Gold Talk Podcast (@WineGoldTalkPod) December 20, 2025

Support us and rep the Buckeyes with Homage

Ohio-Against-the-World-x-Ohio-State-Buckeyes-01012344930-Charcoal-Flat_15caeaa0-836a-4a0b-a279-b46e854d9931.jpeg

Anything bought from the links helps support Fear the Sword. The above shirt can be bought at the link HERE. Homage’s entire Ohio State collection can be found HERE.

There are many negatives right now with this group. The Cavs are 15-14 at the time of this writing, getting booed off their home court, and have made a habit of being down double-digits to any team they are playing. While the “core four” of Donovan Mitchell, Darius Garland, Evan Mobley, and Jarrett Allen have played less than an hour of game time together so far, it does not excuse losses to some pretty poor teams.

Any Cavs fan who has been around for a little while knows that Gilbert is a wild card, but his dissatisfaction with the team is warranted. Cleveland not only has the highest payroll in the NBA, but they are the only team in the dreaded second apron (a very strict salary threshold that greatly limits roster moves) as well. Gilbert is paying a huge luxury tax bill based on the belief that the Cavs are a championship team. They haven’t looked anything close to that this season.

In fact, if the season ended right now, the Cavs would be playing the Atlanta Hawks in the Play-In Tournament —a team they have not beaten in two tries this season.

Now, this does not mean that everybody is getting traded and the team will be blown up. There is time to right the ship, though it is dwindling. But it’s difficult to construct a trade that completely saves them due to the second apron. They cannot aggregate salaries, use any trade exceptions, and cannot use their taxpayer midlevel exception. In essence, it will be very hard for the Cavs to up and trade their core pieces in a fit of rage. They will just have to endure the fit or rage.

But Gilbert has a history of inserting himself in discussions related to basketball operations, something that should be slightly worrying for not only Cavs fans, but the organization in general. The team is underperforming significantly and, given their losses to poor teams during this soft part of their schedule, things could very likely continue spiraling further. The cleanest solution is to figure it out within, dig deep, and pull themselves out.

Whether ownership gives them that time is an entirely different question.

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-rumors/41860/cavs-dan-gilbert-nba-trade-cleveland-cavaliers
 
Cavs vs Hornets: How to watch, odds, and injury report

gettyimages-2251356501.jpg


The Cleveland Cavaliers are struggling. They enter Monday’s game having lost three in a row, five of their last seven, and seven of their last 10. Right now, they just need a win, no matter how ugly it may be.

Going up against the Charlotte Hornets should provide them with a good opportunity to pick up a much-needed victory. The Hornets are a bad team and are coming off a 26-point loss to the Detroit Pistons. That said, they did just beat the Cavs last Sunday in overtime. And the Cavs have shown during this recent skid that they are more than capable of playing down to their competition.

The Cavs could also be getting back some much-needed reinforcements as Donovan Mitchell and Sam Merrill are both listed as probable. We’ll see if the Cavaliers can get back on track on Monday evening.

Support us and rep the Buckeyes with Homage

Ohio-Against-the-World-x-Ohio-State-Buckeyes-01012344930-Charcoal-Flat_15caeaa0-836a-4a0b-a279-b46e854d9931.jpeg

Anything bought from the links helps support Fear the Sword. The above shirt can be bought at the link HERE. Homage’s entire Ohio State collection can be found HERE.

Who: Cleveland Cavaliers (15-14) vs Charlotte Hornets (9-19)

Where: Rocket Arena – Cleveland, OH

When: Monday, Dec. 22 at 7:00 pm EST

TV: Peacock, FanDuel Sports Network Ohio, FanDuel Sports App

Point spread: Not yet set

Cavs injury report: Donovan Mitchell – PROBABLE (illness), Sam Merrill – PROBABLE (hand), Craig Porter Jr. – PROBABLE (illness), Evan Mobley – OUT (calf), Larry Nance Jr. – OUT (calf), Max Strus – OUT (foot), Chris Livingston – OUT (G League), Luke Travers – OUT (G League)

Hornets injury report: LaMelo Ball – PROBABLE (WRIST), Ryan Kalkbrenner – QUESTIONABLE (elbow), Liam McNeeley – OUT (G League), Drew Peterson – OUT (G League), Antonio Reeves – OUT (G League), Collin Sexton – DOUBTFUL (quad), Grant Williams – OUT (knee)

Cavs expected starting lineup: Darius Garland, Donovan Mitchell, Jaylon Tyson, Dean Wade, Jarrett Allen

Hornets expected starting lineup: LaMelo Ball, Brandon Miller, Kon Kneuppel, Miles Bridges, Ryan Kalkbrenner

Previous matchup: The Cavs lost in overtime to the Hornets on Dec. 14.

Here’s a look at both teams’ impact stats via Cleaning the Glass.

Offensive RatingDefensive RatingNet Rating
Cavs116.4 (10th)114.8 (13th)+1.6 (13th)
Hornets113.9 (21st)118.1 (22nd)-4.2 (23rd)

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-i...s-hornets-how-to-watch-odds-and-injury-report
 
Multiple Cavaliers could return from injury for matchup against Hornets

gettyimages-2213813708.jpg


The Cleveland Cavaliers may be getting some much-needed reinforcements for Monday’s game against the Charlotte Hornets.

Superstar Donovan Mitchell could be returning to the lineup after missing Friday’s loss to the Chicago Bulls with an illness. Sam Merrill is also expected to be back after missing a month with a hand injury. Both players are listed as probable for Monday.

Support us and Let ‘Em Know with Homage!

NBA_Jam_Cavaliers_Donovan_Mitchell_01012518637_Ash_Flat_3b4092d9_5ba1_4f03_b9c9_a23e377cafe7_x1000.jpg.webp

Anything bought from the links helps support Fear the Sword. You can also shop all of Homage’s Cavs gear HERE. The link to the Donovan Mitchell NBA Jam shirt is HERE.

The Cavs have been overly reliant on Mitchell this season. They are 8-1 when he scores 35 or more points and 0-5 when he plays and scores 21 or fewer. They are also 1-2 when he doesn’t play at all.

Mitchell has been one of the few bright spots for the Cavs this season. He’s elevated his game as he’s averaging a career high in points (30.8) and efficiency. The Cavs would be in a much worse position if he weren’t having as strong a season.

Merrill was also having the best season of his career before injuring his hand during Cleveland’s 118-106 win over the Milwaukee Bucks on Nov. 17. He’s been held out of the lineup since. Merrill is averaging a career high 13.9 points per game on .466/.444/.938 shooting splits.

The Cavs have also played much better with Merrill on the court this season. They are 9-3 when Merrill plays and 6-11 when he doesn’t. Unsurprisingly, he has the fourth-best on/off differential on the team behind only Evan Mobley, Mitchell, and Nae’Qwan Tomlin.

The Cavs have more issues than injuries, but things likely wouldn’t have fallen off as drastically as they have if they were healthier. We’ll see if the Cavaliers can get back on track with Mitchell and Merrill likely returning to the lineup.

Craig Porter Jr. could also be available. He missed the last game with illness.

The Cavaliers will be without Evan Mobley (calf), Larry Nance Jr. (calf), Max Strus (foot), Luke Travers (G League), and Chris Livingston (G League) on Monday.

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-i...ovan-mitchell-cleveland-cavaliers-sam-merrill
 
Firing Kenny Atkinson wouldn’t solve any of the Cavs’ actual issues

gettyimages-2251929294.jpg


Seemingly everything that could go wrong for the Cleveland Cavaliers this season has.

The Cavs can’t stay healthy, can’t make open shots, and aren’t playing hard. They’re going through the motions night in and night out, even after having a player-led meeting after being called out for their lack of defensive energy and focus.

This has all resulted in a team that is 15-14 and has lost five of its last seven games. Each of those recent losses came against opponents with worse records than the Cavs.

There’s a lot of blame to go around for what has been the most disappointing team in the NBA this season. And head coach Kenny Atkinson certainly deserves his fair share of criticism.

There are tactical decisions that Atkinson is making that should be called into question. Is it best for a team that can’t play transition defense to be crashing the offensive glass as hard as they are? Should an offense that’s 27th in three-point percentage be second in the league in attempts? Does it make sense to gamble for steals as much as they are when it gets away from what has made this team a top-10 defense for the previous four years?

On top of that, the players seem to be tuning out Atkinson. He has been delivering the same comments about how they need to get inside more and play with energy for several weeks — as have his players — but nothing has changed. These are signs that Atkinson’s message isn’t resonating with players. And once that happens, it’s nearly impossible to regain a locker room after you’ve lost it.

Support us and Let ‘Em Know with Homage!

City.jpg

Anything bought from the links helps support Fear the Sword. You can also shop all of Homage’s Cavs gear HERE. The link to the new City Edition shirt can be found HERE.

That said, Atkinson is far from the main reason why this team is in shambles. Being on the hot seat — as recent reports seem to suggest — is difficult to justify when you watch this team play.

Atkinson isn’t the one missing shots. He’s not responsible for the blown assignments. He didn’t trade for De’Andre Hunter and Lonzo Ball. Atkinson isn’t the reason the team is over the second apron. And, if he were fired, he’d be the second straight quality coach that the team had to let go of because this core group stopped playing for them.

It can be easy for an organization to blame the coach when things go wrong. It’s much easier to pin the failings on one person than it is to look inward and try to diagnose what is actually keeping a group from reaching its potential.

This isn’t to say that the coach shouldn’t be held responsible for critical issues they haven’t been able to correct. J.B. Bickerstaff took this core as far as it seemed like he could. The offense became stale as he never quite could figure out how to make lineups work with both Jarrett Allen and Evan Mobley. That was a hindrance for a team that believed it could be a title contender.

Then, there were the reports that the team grew tired of Bickerstaff’s message at the end of his tenure. The team seemingly didn’t believe in the offense he was running and the way he was leading the team.

However, that same style seems to be working for Bickerstaff with the Detroit Pistons. He’s completely transformed that organization in less than a season and a half. Right now, they have the third-best odds to win the Eastern Conference. Clearly, he’s doing something right as head coach.

Atkinson isn’t perfect, but if this core needs a third coach in two years, and both of the coaches fired just finished first and second in Coach of the Year voting, then that speaks more to the makeup of the team than anything else.

This core is still trying to overcome the issues that were exposed in their loss to the New York Knicks in 2023. They folded when they met their first bit of adversity in the playoffs and were completely steamrolled by a team that they were more talented than. And this is the same issue they’re dealing with right now. Things haven’t gone their way since the second-round loss to the Indiana Pacers last spring, and they have yet to pick themselves off the mat and fight back.

The Cavs have made many stylistic changes and periphery roster moves to try to solve these issues. That happened again this past offseason as they tried to find more versatile skill players. Yet, the same foundational problems dating back four seasons remain despite how many players have shuffled in and out of the organization.

Coaches are important. They can help change the culture of an organization and meaningfully affect wins and losses. But they can’t control everything. Even the best coaches need their players to perform up to their skill level to be successful. Right now, the players are the ones responsible for this poor stretch. And they are the only ones who can get them out of the mess that they’ve created.

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-a...land-cavaliers-jb-bickerstaff-detroit-pistons
 
9 Takeaways from Cavs 139-132 win over Hornets: ‘We didn’t crack any code’

imagn-27872788.jpg


The Cleveland Cavaliers picked up a much-needed win on Monday. The offense was clicking in a way that we’ve rarely seen this season, resulting in a 139-132 victory over the Charlotte Hornets.

For one night, everything seemed alright with the Cavs.

“There were no boos in the crowd tonight, so that was really good,” Darius Garland joked postgame. “And a lot more cheers. So we’re trying to get back to Cavaliers’ basketball.”

The offense gave the fans plenty to cheer about. The Cavs went 24-44 (54.5%) from outside the arc. It was the team’s most made threes and their highest three-point percentage for a single game this season.

The Cavaliers’ offense was artificially boosted by a hot-shooting night. They aren’t going to connect on over 50% of their outside attempts often. But they were also creating good looks by making the extra pass. Thirty-five of the team’s 48 field-goal makes were assisted. This includes 20 of their 24 three-point makes.

The Cavs did an excellent job of getting inside the paint and then kicking out for open outside attempts. They weren’t static, pull-up threes, or even shots from just moving the ball from side to side. The offense was getting downhill, and everything flowed from there.

View Link

The process was exactly what you’d want it to be on that end of the court.

On the other end of the spectrum, the defense remains incredibly frustrating to watch. The Cavs are seemingly always in rotation, chasing the ball. And more often than not, the ball finds the open man before the defense can recover.

These aren’t the traits of a respectable defense.

View Link

Support us and rep your community with Homage!

Cuyahoga-Valley-National-Park-Hoodie-01161455411-charcoal-flat_f8bb891b-3ff4-4b11-9725-876ed473d2fa.jpg

Anything bought from the links helps support Fear the Sword. You can find this comfortable Cuyahoga Valley National Park hoodie HERE. All of of Homage’s Cavs gear can be found HERE.

There’s more than a few factors that contribute to this. The point-of-attack resistance remains poor. They don’t have many plus defenders on the perimeter, or at the very least, they don’t have anyone who you can put on a team’s best scorer and expect them to make life difficult for them. This causes the defense to help, get in rotation, and there’s only so much you can do once you’re behind the play.

On top of that, the Cavs are insistent on trying to play this fast, trapping defense that forces turnovers. And to their credit, they’ve done that this season as they came into this game sixth in defensive turnover percentage. But like the emphasis on offensive rebounding, the effort they put into forcing turnovers may not actually be worth it.

There’s no one stat to show exactly that the team is trapping too much and giving up open shots because of it. But opponents came into Monday’s game shooting 37.2% from three against them, which is the sixth-highest mark in the league. On top of that, they’re giving up their highest percentage of shots at the rim since 2020-21. Both point to a team that isn’t consistently in its proper spots on the floor.

While this is an offense-led group, the defense needs to be considerably better than it’s been lately if they want to get back into contention.

“It’s not great,” head coach Kenny Atkinson said about the defense. “We got to get better defensively. It’s funny, the first 19 games, I think we were fifth in the league [defensively], and we’ve just had this dip defensively.”

Rebounding also remains a problem. The Hornets grabbed 46% of their missed shots (98th percentile). This led to a 20-7 second-chance points advantage for Charlotte.

“We’re not a good rebounding team,” Atkinson said. “That’s the last phase of defense. We got to get better.”

The Cavs did a much better job of getting back in transition against Charlotte, but were beaten consistently on the glass and off-the-dribble on the perimeter.

There are simply too many holes in the defense right now. Whenever one is plugged, two more seem to pop up.

De’Andre Hunter finally broke out of his slump. He scored 27 points on 9-13 shooting. A decent amount of those baskets came after getting elbowed in the face.

This was a game he needed badly. Hunter came into this game averaging 12.1 points on 38.9% shooting from the floor and 28.9% shooting from three. This cold streak resulted in Hunter recently being moved back to the bench.

It’s a decision Hunter says he agrees with.

“Just going off the results,” Hunter said. “It wasn’t looking too great. … The numbers said it wasn’t working great. So [we’ll] just try to look for a different outcome.”

Garland looked like his All-Star self for the second straight game. He backed up his encouraging performance against the Chicago Bulls by pouring in 27 points and 10 assists against Charlotte. He was able to once again create separation off the dribble — which is something he struggled to do when he first came back from injury.

The concern is whether or not Garland’s toe can hold up throughout a full season. He seemed to get banged up again down the stretch of Monday’s game, but confirmed afterward that he was okay after being asked about it repeatedly.

Garland is the key to the Cavs’ offense working. As talented as Donovan Mitchell is, Garland is the one who organizes the attack by getting the bigs involved and controlling the tempo. The ball has more life when he’s playing like this.

The Cavs will go as far as their offense takes them. And their offense is only elite when their quarterback is in there playing near the level Garland has recently.

Mitchell benefits greatly from playing with this version of Garland.

Last season showed that their games complement each other quite well offensively. Mitchell needs someone who can set up an offense, while Garland is helped by having another guard there to carry some of the scoring burden.

That was on display Tuesday when both were able to do what they do best.

“I try to create as much advantages as I can for him just to get rolling, get some open ones,” Garland said about Mitchell. “He’s always gonna have the best defender on him. So, anything to get him open just for a split second, because he can do whatever with the ball. That’s all of our jobs. So, I’m trying to make his life a lot easier so he don’t have to keep running around with some of the best defenders in the world.”

Mitchell scored 30 points on 10-18 shooting on a night Atkinson said he “wasn’t as sharp” as normal. That speaks to the incredible standard that Mitchell has set this season.

This was a much-needed win for the Cavs. They demonstrated that they still can be the offensive juggernaut they were last regular season. At the same time, this is what a good team is supposed to do against the 24th-ranked defense.

While this was an encouraging offensive performance, this win on its own doesn’t mean much if they can’t find a way to build on it.

“We didn’t crack any code,” Mitchell said. “This isn’t a victory lap because we won tonight. We did it once, now ultimately, we got to do it on a consistent basis.”

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-a...lotte-hornets-darius-garland-donovan-mitchell
 
Player Grades: Cavs vs Pelicans – Donovan Mitchell makes it look easy

gettyimages-2252688183.jpg


The Cleveland Cavaliers rattled off another win. This time over the New Orleans Pelicans.

All grades are based on our usual expectations for each player.

Donovan Mitchell


27 points, 4 assists, 4 rebounds

A quiet game from Donovan Mitchell can mean one of two things. Either the team lost in a tragic fashion, or everyone else was playing so well that Mitchell never had to exert himself. Tonight was the latter. He had 27 points on 11-16 shooting, and you hardly even noticed him.

Don’t take it for granted. This type of stuff isn’t as easy as Donnie makes it look.

Grade: A+

Darius Garland


10 points, 8 assists, 1 rebound

Garland might give us a heart attack every time he falls for the rest of his career. But, hey, he keeps getting back up. This was another quality performance, and it has us feeling encouraged.

Grade: B+

Support us and rep Evan Mobley with Homage!​

Mobley_comic.jpg

We’ve partnered with Homage to help provide Cavs fans with the best gear. Anything bought from the links below helps support Fear the Sword while also allowing you to rep the Cavs. You can also shop all Homage Cavs gear HERE.

  • You can grab the Mobley shirt seen above HERE.
  • The Mobley trading card shirt can be bought HERE.

Jaylon Tyson​


18 points, 2 assists, 6 rebounds

Tyson was bumped back to the bench in favor of Sam Merrill. I’m not sure what that means for his role moving forward, but it did result in a bounce-back game from Tyson, who had struggled in his previous two outings.

Grade: A+

Jarrett Allen


14 points, 9 rebounds, 3 assists

Allen hasn’t had a huge scoring game yet but he’s done more than enough to help his team win these last two games. We’ll take it.

Bonus points for his three-pointer in garbage time. That’s worth a half grade.

Grade: B+

Dean Wade


16 points, 4 assists, 5 rebounds

Wade connected on three triples in the first half and helped Cleveland build its early lead. This has been two stellar games in a row from Wade, just when he needed them most.

Grade: A+

De’Andre Hunter


10 points, 1 assist, 2 rebounds

Hunter wasn’t as explosive as last night, but he turned in an otherwise helpful game. Getting to the rim a few times to shake up a poor three-point shooting performance was huge.

Grade: C+

Craig Porter Jr.


12 points, 7 assists, 8 rebounds

Porter saw some action tonight after riding the bench for most of Monday and missing Friday’s game with an illness. He had his hands in multiple cookie jars tonight, stuffing the stat sheet in BLANK minutes.

Grade: A+

Thomas Bryant


15 points, 0 assists, 6 rebounds

Bryant finished an and-one and screamed into the crowd early in the first quarter. That type of stuff always gets a positive reaction. We love it.

Grade: A+

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-a...-pelicans-donovan-mitchell-makes-it-look-easy
 
Winners and Losers: Cavs vs Pelicans – Good Vibes are Back

imagn-27879331.jpg


The Cleveland Cavaliers beat the New Orleans Pelicans 141-118. Let’s see who won the night.

WINNER – Welcome back, Cavalanche​


The Cavs haven’t had many opportunities to use their Cavalanche machine. They even flooded the arena with fake snow for a somewhat forced segment of ‘Let It Snow’ on the Jumbotron. But they had a chance to hit the button for real tonight when the Cavs built their 25-point lead.

As someone who has been tracking Cavalanches, I honestly can’t tell you when their last Cavalanche was. Maybe against the San Antonio Spurs back at the start of December? I really don’t remember. But it’s been a while. And it’s been a long time since the Cleveland crowd went multiple games without having to boo their home team for poor effort.

We’ll take the Cavalanche over that any day.

WINNER – Player Movement​


We now have two games in a row where the Cavs played offense as efficiently as last season. It’s a sight for sore eyes.

It’s no coincidence that Cleveland’s offense has opened up as Darius Garland and Sam Merrill get healthy. Their reacclimation to the lineup has made it so that everyone on the floor is encouraged to move and pass the ball. Garland, of course, as the team’s quarterback, and Merrill, as the never-ending battery that keeps the team moving without the ball.

Merrill is always moving. That makes it harder for the rest of the team to be stagnant, because there’s a good chance Merrill is going to bump you off your spot throughout any given possession. His off-ball movement, paired with Garland’s ability to penetrate the defense and allow his teammates to fill the gaps, has helped make the Cavalier offense an elite force once again.

WINNER – They Finally Played Defense!​


The Pelicans scored just 22 points in the first quarter. That’s the fewest points Cleveland has allowed in any quarter since they held the Golden State Warriors to 12 points in the first quarter, all the way back on December 5th.

Unlike their performance against Golden State, this time, the Cavs actually earned this one by playing legitimately good defense. The Warriors, in that previous game, just flat-out missed good looks. But the Pelicans were disrupted by an active and aggressive Cavalier defense tonight.

I wish I could tell you they carried this into the second quarter and the Pelicans didn’t score 38 points in that frame. But the Cavs momentarily let their foot off the gas after building an 18-point lead, and Zion Williamson started to punish them in the paint for 10 points in the second quarter.

However, the Cavs tapped back into their identity in the third quarter. It wasn’t a totally dominant defensive effort — but it was cleaner than most of their recent games. They were connected and defending on a string. One rotation led to another crisp, clean rotation. All in all, they showed some life on the defensive end for the first time in what feels like weeks.

WINNER – Dean Wade​


Listen, I get as frustrated as anyone when Wade delivers his classic ‘Cardio Dean’ performances. No one likes to see a player running the floor for 20+ minutes and rounding out as a net neutral.

That is, unless you enjoy having a 6’9” wing whose floor is being a serviceable defender who just doesn’t take enough three-pointers.

We understand that Wade isn’t going to develop into a gunner anytime soon. We’ve known that for years, at this point. But Wade’s floor is much higher than other players, who can turn into absolute negatives when things aren’t going right. At least Wade usually just turns invisible. He doesn’t tank lineups.

All this to say, Wade has actually played great during this two-game stretch. He’s burying three-pointers, playing better defense than we’d previously seen this season, and grabbing rebounds on both ends of the floor.

Again, I understand why you might feel the urge to trade Wade to the void and salary dump him when things aren’t going as planned. That urge might seem cathartic, but it would be a mistake. You don’t lose 6’9” wings who can provide all of this for nothing.

If Wade is your 8th or 9th most important player, that signals a healthy and competitive roster. He’s more than qualified to fill that role. Don’t be so quick to forget how bad the Cavaliers’ wing-depth can get.

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-a...d-losers-cavs-vs-pelicans-good-vibes-are-back
 
Cup of Cavs: News and links for Wednesday, Dec. 24

gettyimages-2251423717.jpg


Good morning, it’s Wednesday, December 24. The Cleveland Cavaliers are 17-14 and play the New York Knicks tomorrow.

The First Sip​


There are no NBA games on today, so instead, enjoy some scattered thoughts on the Cavs’ season up to this point.

It hasn’t been all fun and games this year. That’s for sure. The team is already on the verge of losing more games before New Year’s than they did all of last season. I couldn’t blame you if you felt disappointed.

But let’s look at it this way.

The team that won 64 games last season has not played any meaningful minutes together this season. The core four have shared the court for only 127 possessions this season. That’s hardly more than a game’s worth. And, it doesn’t include any of the recent games in which Darius Garland has finally started to look like himself.

I want to be clear about something. Injuries do not excuse the poor effort we’ve seen at various points this season. But, if someone told you before the season that Jarrett Allen, Evan Mobley, Darius Garland and Donovan Mitchell would hardly share the floor together — on top of Max Strus and Sam Merrill missing significant time — then you’d have gone into this season with drastically different expectations.

The Cavs are better than their current record. At least, they should be. And if they can get healthy entering 2026, then they have a chance of turning things around.

That’s my Christmas wish.

Cavs links of the day

NBA links​


Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cup-of-cavs/42047/cup-of-cavs-news-and-links-for-wednesday-dec-24
 
3 Things to watch for in Cavs at Knicks

gettyimages-2242333883.jpg


Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays. The Cleveland Cavaliers are in the Mecca for a matchup with the New York Knicks.

Let’s get this W.

An Old Rival​


The Cavs and Knicks have a history of bad blood between them. Their meeting in the 2023 NBA Playoffs was a stepping stone for New York and a reality check for the Cavaliers. The Cavs have been carrying that loss with them ever since — and they are hungry for a chance to redeem themselves in a potential rematch.

Both Cleveland and New York entered the season as favorites to win the Eastern Conference. That might have changed recently as the Detroit Pistons wedge themselves into the mix and the Cavaliers struggle to get out of the gates. But make no mistake, these two rosters are still among the most talented in the East. This game could carry weight by the time the playoffs begin.

Join the conversation!​


Sign up for a user account and get:

  • Fewer ads
  • Create community posts
  • Comment on articles, community posts
  • Rec comments, community posts
  • New, improved notifications system!

New York has found a groove​


The Knicks had a slow start last season as growing pains muddied their process. But following a trip to the Western Conference Finals, a coaching change and some roster tweaks, they’ve gotten off to a much better start this season.

New York holds the 2nd-best record in the East. They have the 2nd best offense, 14th best defense and 5th best net rating this season according to Cleaning the Glass.

This is a team that has found its identity and plays basketball like they trust each other. They can give as good a challenge as any.

Winning a Big Game​


It’s pretty simple. The Cavs have had a rough December full of low points. But after winning back-to-back games at the start of the week, they have a chance to really make things right with a statement win over their rival on Christmas Day.

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-game-previews/42053/3-things-to-watch-for-in-cavs-at-knicks
 
9 Takeaways from Cavs 126-124 loss to Knicks: Same issues, different day

gettyimages-2252794663.jpg


The Cleveland Cavaliers couldn’t do enough down the stretch to hold off the New York Knicks. They fell 126-124.

This was a showcase game for the Cavs. A chance to prove to themselves and the league that they are still a contender in the Eastern Conference.

For 38 minutes, they showed that they were. The ball was humming on offense, Darius Garland was playing like an All-Star, and they seemed to prove that they could go into a hostile environment and answer the bell.

Then, the ensuing 10 minutes happened. The Cavs blew a 17-point fourth-quarter lead largely due to their inability to grab a defensive rebound. The offense then ground to a halt as it resorted mostly to isolation attempts.

The Cavs were good for three quarters, got bullied on the glass, and needed Donovan Mitchell to save them down the stretch, but he wasn’t able to do so. It might as well have been a game from their 2023 playoff series.

For as much as the Cavs have changed in the past three and a half seasons, they still haven’t figured out their core issue.

The rebounding needs to be better. The Cavs are spending over $66 million on their two centers in Evan Mobley and Jarrett Allen. That’s way too much for this team’s identity to be rooted in getting bullied on the glass.

Mitchell Robinson — a reserve center who hasn’t averaged over 20 minutes a game in the last two seasons — once again changed the momentum of the game in the fourth quarter. He grabbed four of his eight offensive rebounds in the final quarter, which led to eight second-chance points.

Playing good defense for 24 seconds and forcing a miss just to see the team get another chance at a basket is demoralizing. It happening repeatedly down the stretch of a game, in a way that is all too familiar, is even more so.

Allen deserves the blame here.

Robinson was able to repeatedly bully Allen on the glass. All four of Robinson’s late offensive rebounds came against Allen. Robinson was able to get the inside position before the shot went up, he outhustled Allen, and was more physical at the jump.

View Link

It would be concerning if this were the only time this happened or the only matchup Allen has struggled with. However, this has been a recurring theme for years, and we’ve seen no signs of it changing any time soon.

This would be one thing if Allen were a perimeter-oriented big, but he isn’t. He’s a traditional center that is supposed to provide the rim protection, lob threat, and rebounding that you need when you start two skilled, undersized guards in the backcourt. Allen consistently hasn’t performed as they’ve needed him to in the biggest matchups, which included getting pushed around by Myles Turner of the Indiana Pacers in the second round of last postseason.

Allen gets unfairly blamed for a lot of the team’s issues. It’s tough to fit into a team that has this many high-usage players. That said, the rebounding and toughness issues are things that someone with his skillset is supposed to supply. And if he isn’t, this two-big structure fundamentally doesn’t work.

Mobley isn’t free from the rebounding criticism. He fell asleep on the most important defensive possession of the game as he let Karl-Anthony Towns seal the game with an easy tip-in layup.

View Link

Support us and rep your community with Homage!

Cuyahoga-Valley-National-Park-Hoodie-01161455411-charcoal-flat_f8bb891b-3ff4-4b11-9725-876ed473d2fa.jpg

Anything bought from the links helps support Fear the Sword. You can find this comfortable Cuyahoga Valley National Park hoodie HERE. All of of Homage’s Cavs gear can be found HERE.

Losing concentration like this is inexcusable at any point of a game, let alone in that situation.

The other side of the court wasn’t much better for the Cavs. They continue to struggle to close games offensively as well.

Mitchell and Garland’s worst stretches came in the fourth quarter. Mitchell went just 4-11 from the field in the fourth while Garland went 1-5. You’d like those shot attempts to be a little more balanced, considering how well Garland was playing until that point.

This has been a theme throughout the season. As Bobby Marks pointed out on Twitter, the Cavs are now 1-8 in their last clutch games (games that are within five points in the final five minutes) and 6-12 on the season.

Cleveland is 25th in point differential in those situations. They’ve registered a 103.1 offensive rating, 115.5 defensive rating, and a -12.4 net rating in the clutch. That’s not ideal.

Many within the analytics community dismiss clutch outcomes. They believe it’s too small a sample size to draw conclusions from.

I would lean the other way. I believe that clutch situations are the closest simulation of playoff basketball in the regular season. The pace slows down considerably in the clutch, which means that you need to be able to problem-solve and beat half-court matchups in a high-pressure, slower environment. That’s what the playoffs are.

How you want to interpret the Cavs’ struggles in the clutch is up to you. What can’t be disputed is that the Cavs are continually falling flat in these situations. And a lot of their issues have come on the offensive end.

Despite how bad things ended, there were still some good things to take away from this game.

Garland continues to look more like himself as he has for the past week.

He poured in 35 points against the Chicago Bulls, had 27 against the Charlotte Hornets, and threw in eight assists in 29 minutes against the New Orleans Pelicans. In short, he’s recently looked like the All-Star he was last season.

That continued in New York. He had the offense humming, was attacking Towns in the pick-and-roll, and was comfortable pulling up for three when the defense gave him any daylight.

It’s not a coincidence that the offense has been playing up to its potential once Garland returned to form again.

The three-ball is once again falling. Cleveland went 15-35 (42.9%) from three on Christmas Day. This is on the heels of connecting on 54.5% of their threes on Monday and 40.8% on Tuesday. For comparison, they were shooting under 30% from three in their previous eight December games.

The Cavs are a three-point shooting team. Their offense will live and die based on their outside shot. That’s no different than the other top offenses in the league. What separates the good and bad ones is your ability to make threes.

Jaylon Tyson showed that he could be an impact player in a high-stakes environment. This wasn’t a playoff matchup, but it was the closest approximation the Cavs have had to one this season.

Being able to excel and adapt to multiple roles is often what makes someone successful in the postseason. Tyson has shown that he can be a catch-and-shoot three-point threat. On Christmas, he showed that he can also attack in the short roll.

The Knicks were blitzing Mitchell and Garland in the second half. They were forcing the ball out of their hands in an effort to make someone else beat them. And Tyson repeatedly made them pay.

View Link

Tyson still has room to improve, especially on the defensive side of the ball. That said, he’s shown that he can impact winning in a meaningful way by doing simple things like this well.

This was a perfect microcosm of the Cavs’ season so far. They executed well in many aspects of the game and showed signs of real growth. But the flaws that have held them back in previous postseason runs did so again when it mattered most. Until that changes, there’s little reason to believe things will be different next spring.

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-a...ers-christmas-donovan-mitchell-darius-garland
 
Player Grades: Cavs vs Knicks – Donovan Mitchell’s 34 points weren’t enough

gettyimages-2252798260.jpg


The Cleveland Cavaliers coughed up a 17-point fourth quarter lead to fall to the New York Knicks 126-124 on Christmas Day.

All grades are based on our usual expectations for each player.

Darius Garland


20 points, 10 assists, 1 rebound

Garland has played like an All-Star for stretches this week. He comfortably got into the teeth of the defense and was a threat to score at all three levels through the first three quarters.

That didn’t continue in the fourth. He was a team-worst -16 in the final frame as he went 1-5 from the field with two assists and a turnover down the stretch.

It was an encouraging performance, but the Cavs needed more from him late when the game was on the line.

Grade: B

Jarrett Allen


7 points, 8 rebounds, 2 assists

On one hand, Allen is doing exactly what you expect your starting-caliber center to do. He’s chipping in on the glass and providing some rim protection. On the other hand, he has All-Star talent and is being paid as such, which matters in a salary-capped league.

Having injuries on both hands undoubtedly makes it more difficult to do normal center tasks. At the same time, this offense could use more rim pressure than what he’s been able to provide, and the team’s defense and rebounding were suspect throughout the game. These are areas you’d expect Allen to help with.

Grade: D

Support us and Let ‘Em Know with Homage!

Cleveland-Champions-2016-3-1-Comeback-01010777525-wine-flat_ce99e41a-f377-46da-8528-b1fd9d7347fc.jpeg

Anything bought from the links helps support Fear the Sword. You can also shop all of Homage’s Cavs gear HERE. The link to the 2016 championship shirt HERE.

Donovan Mitchell


34 points, 6 assists, 7 rebounds

Mitchell knew how important this game was. He did everything in his power to will the Cavs to victory, but he couldn’t make enough shots down the stretch to get them across the line. He went just 4-11 from the field in the fourth quarter when his team needed someone to stop the bleeding.

Grade: C+

Sam Merrill​


11 points, 1 assist, 5 rebounds

Merrill’s inclusion in the starting lineup — in addition to Garland moving around considerably better — has opened up the offense. His off-ball movement is infectious, and his shooting gravity can’t be ignored. Merrill also held up well defensively.

The only issue was that this team needed him to make more shots than he did. Merrill went just 2-8 from three.

Grade: B-

Dean Wade


6 points, 2 assists, 4 rebounds

This was a typical Dean Wade game.

Grade: C

Evan Mobley


14 points, 3 assists, 9 rebounds

Mobley looked good physically in his return. He came off the bench for the first time in his career and was a positive contributor.

However, he got beat by Karl-Anthony Towns for an offensive rebound late that turned a two-point game into a four-point game with under 30 seconds left. Losing focus in that moment is inexcusable for the reigning Defensive Player of the Year. Plays like that simply can’t happen.

Grade: C

De’Andre Hunter


13 points, 2 assists, 3 rebounds

Hunter made some shots, but he was also on the court during some of the team’s worst stretches. He was a -7 for the afternoon which is the worst mark among Cavaliers who played 20 or more minutes.

Grade: C

Join the conversation!​


Sign up for a user account and get:

  • Fewer ads
  • Create community posts
  • Comment on articles, community posts
  • Rec comments, community posts
  • New, improved notifications system!

Lonzo Ball


0 points, 3 assists, 1 rebound

This was the type of game and matchup that Ball was brought in to help with. Instead, he was mostly a non-factor and played under 14 minutes.

Grade: D-

Jaylon Tyson


16 points, 4 assists, 6 rebounds

The Cavs used Tyson as a screener when they blitzed their guards. He made the most of these advantages by consistently finding the open man and scoring in the midrange when given the opportunity to do so. This resulted in 11 third-quarter points on 5-6 shooting. Tyson singlehandedly made the Knicks change their defensive strategy in the fourth.

These are the exact things he will need to do if he’s going to be a playoff contributor. It was an incredibly encouraging game from Tyson.

Grade: A

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-a...cks-donovan-mitchells-34-points-werent-enough
 
Cavs get one of their shortest injury reports of the season

gettyimages-2252798127.jpg


The Cleveland Cavaliers aren’t at 100% just yet, but they are as close as they have been all season. The injury report finally doesn’t look like a laundry list.

Cleveland lists Max Strus (foot) and Larry Nance Jr. (calf) as their only standard contract players unavailable for tomorrow’s game against the Houston Rockets. Two-way players Chris Livingston and Luke Travers are also out with G-League assignments.

Everyone else is available. It feels good to type that.

Evan Mobley made his return on Christmas against the New York Knicks. He quickly worked his way back from a calf strain injury that took him only 14 days to recover from. He came off the bench in his first game back and played on a minutes restriction.

Sam Merrill, who previously missed a few weeks with a hand injury, also made his return last week. He’s helped jolt the Cavalier offense back to life with his off-ball movement and three-point shooting. Merrill has played a huge role in almost all of the Cavaliers’ best moments this season.

Of course, Strus can replicate much of Merrill’s contributions once he’s back from his foot injury. Having two three-point specialists who have developed into well-rounded players is a luxury.

Being healthy has been one of the biggest obstacles facing this team. They’ve had unfortunate injuries in each of the last three seasons. This year has been tough from the jump. The Cavs have played more starting lineups than any other team in the league so far. Hopefully, that can start to change.

It’s hard to build momentum when you don’t know who is going to be on the court each night. I don’t want to jinx anything, but having a shorter injury list (for now) is something that should allow the Cavs to continue their upward trajectory.

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-i...of-their-shorted-injury-reports-of-the-season
 
3 Things to watch for in Cavs at Rockets

gettyimages-2246962079.jpg


The Cleveland Cavaliers are on the road again for a game against the Houston Rockets. This one begins at 8 PM and has all of the usual players available for the Cavs, other than Max Strus and Larry Nance Jr.

Rebounds​


Alright, sure. Let’s do this again.

We all know that rebounding has been a thorn in Cleveland’s side since… well, since forever. This team has never been great at rebounding — even if they’ve been a bit better than most people would assume. The truth is, wathcing an opponent grab an offensive rebound over the Cavs is always going to incite a reaction.

We are all frustrated. Losing to New York at the hands of another huge rebounding game from Mitchell Robinson hasn’t made things any better. The Cavs will have an even bigger challenge tonight against the Rockets, who have made offensive rebounds their entire identity.

I don’t expect the Cavs to win the rebounding battle tonight. But can they avoid being pummelled? That could be all they need to win the game.

Join the conversation!​


Sign up for a user account and get:

  • Fewer ads
  • Create community posts
  • Comment on articles, community posts
  • Rec comments, community posts
  • New, improved notifications system!

Clicking on offense​


Cleveland’s offense has come to life this week. They are scoring at a rate that feels closer to last season than anything they had previously shown this year.

Getting Sam Merrill back has been a huge reason for this. But even more importantly, Darius Garland has looked like an All-Star again. Those two have tilted the scales back in Cleveland’s favor.

Can they keep it up?

Evan Mobley’s return should only add more fuel to this fire. Another play finisher who can lead second units with his shot creation is something that could give the Cavs the final push they need to be a contender again.

Locking in on defense​


While the offense has found its groove, the defense has lagged slightly behind. The Cavs have had some fine moments recently, but this defense still isn’t where it needs to be.

Having the regaining DPOY back in action will help. Mobley, as he gets readjusted to the team, can anchor this defense into being top-1o almost all on his own.

But what I’d really like to see is a big Jarrett Allen game.

I know. Allen has taken his lumps for another dud against the Knicks. And he hasn’t been playing his best basketball this season. But we know he’s capable of more. Allen and Mobley have been dominant in the past. Let’s get back to that tonight, shall we?

Source: https://www.fearthesword.com/cavs-game-previews/42150/3-things-to-watch-for-in-cavs-at-rockets
 
Back
Top