Re: Cleveland Cavaliers

2611
For sure. Guys like Korver were on the team solely because of Lebron so they have to move on.

I'd be happy for him if this happened because Philly would be a great landing spot for him. Ben Simmons, their star, is similar to Lebron without any outside shot. Great ball-handler and passer - and they need outside shooters there.
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain

Re: Cleveland Cavaliers

2612
The Cleveland Cavaliers are doing their due diligence in free agency.

According to a report by Joe Vardon of cleveland.com, Trevor Booker and Luke Babbitt are among the players the Cavaliers are having discussions with, though no agreements with either player are imminent.

Cleveland also has restricted free agent Rodney Hood still in its plans, according to Vardon, and plans on matching any offer sheet he would sign. The Cavaliers extended a $3.4 million qualifying offer to Hood, giving them that right to match, though they are still working on signing him.

The 6-foot-8, 228-pound Booker averaged 5.4 points, 4.5 rebounds and 1.0 assists in 17 games (one start) for the Pacers, shooting 46.4 percent from the field.

He also played 18 games for Brooklyn and 33 for Philadelphia. He played 68 games overall last season, starting seven, and averaged 6.3 points, 4.7 rebounds and 1.2 assists, shooting 51.6 percent from the field.

The 30-year-old eight-year veteran earned $9.1 million last season.

The 6-9, 225-pound Babbitt averaged 5.2 points and 1.9 boards in 50 games (14 starts) last season, playing for the Hawks (37 games) and Heat (13 games).

He shot 42.3 percent from the field, 38.5 percent from deep and 77.3 percent from the free-throw line.

The 29-year-old eight-year veteran earned $1.97 million last season.

With LeBron James’ second defection, his near-$36 million salary is off the books and allows the Cavaliers some flexibility, should they decide to utilize it.

Cleveland has a pair of salary-cap exceptions it can use to sign players, the full mid-level exception (($8.6 million for next season of $37 million over four seasons) and the bi-annual exception ($3.3 million for next season and $7 million over two seasons).

If James had chosen to remain in Cleveland, the most it could offer any free agent would have been $5.3 million.

A source told Vardon the Cavaliers are “exploring all options” in regards to using their salary-cap exceptions, as well as the $5.8 million trade exception they still possess from the Kyrie Irving trade Aug. 22.

Cleveland has until that date this year to add a player or multiple players whose salaries fit into that salary window.

Another possibility mentioned by Vardon is veteran guard Shane Larkin, who would play behind George Hill and rookie Collin Sexton at point guard should he land in Cleveland.

Larkin averaged 4.3 points, 1.7 rebounds and 1.8 assists in 54 games (2 starts) for Boston last season.

The 5-11, 175-pound Larkin shot 38.4 percent from the field, 36.0 percent from long distance and 86.5 percent from the free-throw line.

The 25-year-old was plagued by a shoulder injury that did not allow him to play against the Cavaliers in the Eastern Conference Finals last season.

Cleveland’s payroll stands at $109.5 million for next season and it has three open roster spots.

If Okaro White is still on the Cavaliers’ roster Aug. 5, 50 percent of his $1.5 million salary for next season is guaranteed.

Though the Cavaliers are over the salary cap for next season, $101.9 million, the tax apron is $129.8 million. Being below the apron gives Cleveland able to spend on free agents for the first time in years.

“I think if there’s a right opportunity and it’s worth it for our franchise, then we can explore that,” Clevleand general manager Koby Altman said of the luxury tax. “I’m not saying we’re definitely not going to go into the tax, but it’s interesting now sort of being below it.”

Finally, a source told Vardon there is “nothing to report” on the rumored deal that would send Kyle Korver to Philadelphia in exchange for Jerryd Bayless.

Re: Cleveland Cavaliers

2613
The Cavs have spoken with unrestricted free agent David Nwaba.

If the Cavs do go ahead and unload Kyle Korver, they will be desperate for players to log wing minutes. Nwaba proved to be not just a defensive player as he put up 7.9 points per game with the Bulls, who rescinded their qualifying offer on him. If the Cavs do land him, he could be someone to watch on what looks like a rebuilding roster.
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain

Re: Cleveland Cavaliers

2615
Will Jared Sullinger get a second chance in the NBA?
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By Bob Baptist 2h ago

When​ Jared Sullinger​ left Ohio​ State for the NBA in​ 2012 at age​ 20, he thought​ he​ was ready​ to be​​ a pro.

The NBA thought so, too. Only the questionable health of his lower back kept him from being a lottery pick in the draft, and in his rookie year with the Boston Celtics, who drafted him 21st overall, he averaged 6 points and 5.9 rebounds in nearly 20 minutes per game.

The next season, he played more and produced more — 13.3 points and 8.1 rebounds per game — and started more than half of the Celtics’ games. Season three brought more of the same.

There’s more to being a pro, though, than what happens in the arena, and away from it, Sullinger wasn’t ready to be one. The Celtics knew it. Many around Sullinger knew it. The only one with the power to change it, though, was unwilling.

“I wasn’t an NBA basketball player when I left the gym,” he said now. “I was still a kid, and I really fucked it up.”

That’s one reason Sullinger was at Capital University in suburban Columbus this past weekend, playing with many of his former Ohio State teammates in The Basketball Tournament, a made-for-ESPN event that pays $2 million to the winning squad but is off-limits to NBA players.

More than the money, Sullinger would like a second chance.

After 4 1/2 seasons in the NBA in which he had back surgery once, surgery to repair stress fractures in his left foot twice and ultimately found himself unemployed because of his inability to control his weight, he said he is healthy and just happy to be back playing basketball again. Whether next season sees him back in the NBA, back in China, where he played last season, or in Europe, is immaterial.

“Of course, everybody’s dream is to play in the NBA. Don’t get me wrong,” he said. “But I just want to play basketball somewhere. I’m at that point in my dream. I just want to play basketball and get paid somewhere to be able to play basketball. That’s my main goal. Whether it’s here, there or on the moon, I’m there.”
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Jared Sullinger with the Raptors. (Peter Llewellyn/USA Today Sports)
Former Ohio State coach Thad Matta said Sullinger was the most skilled and savvy big man he ever coached — and Matta coached not only Greg Oden at Ohio State but also 15-year NBA veteran David West at Xavier.

Scoonie Penn, the former Ohio State guard and the coach of Sullinger’s team in The Basketball Tournament, describes him as a “walking double-double.” He had 28 points and 20 rebounds in Scarlet & Gray’s second-round win Sunday. Penn said it was his plan to ride Sullinger in the second half, when he scored 19 of the team’s 44 points.

“Wouldn’t it be yours?” Penn said.

In January, “double-double” was not sufficient to describe what Sullinger did in a Chinese Basketball Association game. He didn’t merely finish in double figures in points and rebounds; he had 40 points and 31 rebounds.

The performance generated some ripples on social media. It didn’t merit Sullinger so much as a second look from the NBA, however.

He finished the season with the Shenzhen Leopards averaging 30.1 points and a league-best 16.6 rebounds per game. When the playoffs ended in March, he saw some players from other teams get picked up by NBA teams. He waited for a call, too, but none came.

“That’s when I was like, ‘You know what? You’re nowhere near as good as you think you are. It’s time to do what you need to do,’ ” he said.

Sullinger won’t play for Scarlet & Gray next weekend in Atlanta; he’s getting married Saturday in Miami to longtime girlfriend DeAnn Smith, whom he met as a freshman at Ohio State. He’ll be replaced in the lineup by Oden, who did not play in this past weekend’s games. Sullinger plans to return the following weekend, should his team qualify, for the semifinals and championship game in Baltimore.

Regardless of how well he plays in TBT, though, he doesn’t think it will have any bearing on whether he returns to the NBA next season.

“If I get a chance, I get a chance. If I don’t, I don’t,” he said. “At this point in my life … ”
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“I just want to play basketball somewhere,” Jared Sullinger said. “I’m at that point in my dream.” (Bob Baptist/The Athletic)
Sullinger hasn’t played in an NBA game since February 2017, when Toronto traded him to Phoenix and the Suns waived him the next day.

Brooklyn worked him out and offered him a contract last August after watching him play in TBT, but he opted to play in China instead.

He auditioned for the Nets again in June, during a free-agent camp, but wasn’t offered a contract this time.

Sullinger said he and his agent, David Falk, decided he would not play in the NBA Summer League earlier this month because they viewed it as a no-win opportunity.

“I played in the league for five years, and I was a starter for the majority of my four years with the Celtics,” Sullinger said. “So if I would’ve played well, I was supposed to, and if I had played bad, I would have been out of shape.”

Since the Nets camp in June, there have been no other feelers, he said. He’s not surprised.

“I kind of wrote my own passage, honestly,” Sullinger said. “It’s on me. It’s a stigma I put on myself that I’ve got to remove. If I remove it, I remove it. If I don’t, I don’t.”

NBA executives wonder whether Sullinger, still only 26, will ever commit to permanently shedding the excess weight that eventually caused the Celtics to give up on him after four seasons, renouncing their rights to him when they signed free agent Al Horford in 2016.

Former Ohio State star Evan Turner was Sullinger’s teammate for Sullinger’s last two seasons in Boston. Turner said Celtics general manager Danny Ainge once said he viewed Sullinger as the team’s big man of the future — with a caveat.

“He said, ‘Sully’s (averaging) 13 (points) and 8 (rebounds), and that’s good for him, and good for everybody else. But I view him as a 25 and 12. We’re trying to win championships.’

“In the pros, you have your learning period,” said Turner, an eight-year NBA veteran. “You fight through your first and second years, and then eventually (you have to be) accountable. It’s a business.”

Sullinger’s first season with the Celtics ended 2 1/2 months prematurely when he needed surgery to repair the lumbar disk in his back that had caused his fall on draft night.

Two years later, a stress fracture in his left foot — the first of three in two years — sidelined him for two months, and Ainge for the first time publicly called him out for his weight.

“He’s not up to … the standards that we feel are necessary to be a consistent winning player,” Ainge said on a Boston radio station.

Three months later, in May 2015, Sullinger’s family and Falk, his agent, staged an intervention in which former NBA player John Lucas took Sullinger to his Houston-based treatment program that helps athletes recover from substance abuse. Sullinger’s substance was food.

Back in Boston for training camp prior to the start of the 2015-16 season, Sullinger said all the right things. But by the end of that season, he weighed 320 pounds, and Ainge was looking for a better option.

“I was young and I got tired of people telling me what to do,” Sullinger said now of his years in Boston. “I was trying to be a man and, in reality, I was still a boy. I was living on my own and paying my bills and buying my own food and buying my own clothes and I had a lot of money.

“It’s not their fault, but growing up I had two older brothers and my dad and my mom, and being the youngest, I never got to tell anybody what to do or be able to write my own passage. For the first time, I got to write my own passage, and instead of going the way I thought it would go, it went the way everyone around me said it would go. And now look at me.

“So again, it’s on me. I look back on it now and say, ‘What the fuck was I thinking?’ ”

Toronto signed Sullinger to a one-year contract after the Celtics released him in 2016, but he broke his left foot for the second time in training camp and had surgery. He returned in January but played in only 11 games before the Raptors traded him to Phoenix, which dumped his $5.6 million salary the next day.

Miami brought him in for a look a few weeks later, but a scan of his left foot found the same stress fracture on which he had had surgery in the fall. He had surgery again.

Sullinger acknowledges the stress fractures probably are the result of him carrying too much weight. His goal every year since he was at Ohio State has been to play in the 260s, but there’s been little chance of him reaching that lately.

He said he currently weighs 282 pounds, and his body fat was 12.5 percent “last time I checked.” He acknowledges an NBA team probably wants to see those numbers lessen before it gives him another chance.

“But sometimes your body just doesn’t allow it. You might not play as well (weighing less),” Sullinger said.

“At the same time, I’m trying. Two-eighty-two is not a goal weight. But it’s a weight, and right now it’s working for me, and the further I go, the better.”

How far can he go?

“It’s going to take a team taking a chance on him and seeing that he’s matured,” Penn said. “Maybe he can rewrite his past.”

— Reported from Columbus
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain

Re: Cleveland Cavaliers

2616
Cleveland Cavaliers Verified account @cavs
2 minutes ago

It’s time to go to WORK!

@kevinlove is back in The Land and has a huge announcement for @TheQArena staff & @CavsWGNation…

He’s signing a long-term contract extension!

(video)
https://twitter.com/i/status/1021783767713767424


Brian Windhorst Verified account @WindhorstESPN
5 minutes ago

Kevin Love's extension (4 years) is at the max salary in 2019-20 and '20-21, then no raise in '21-22 and then decreases in '22-23. Took about $8M less than his full max, according to sources

Re: Cleveland Cavaliers

2621
Kevin Love extension is a nice win for Cleveland now, but where it takes them is unclear


By David Zavac 2h ago 3
The​ Cavaliers have​ been remarkably​ clear and consistent since​ the Kyrie Irving​ trade. They’re going​ to​ make moves​ to win​​ now, they’re going to try to develop young talent, and they’re going to try to compete with or without LeBron James. They haven’t been deterred by failure or results on the court and have doubled and now tripled down on their strategy.

There’s no use debating the year leading up to James’ departure. It seems like the team had good reason to believe James wasn’t long for Cleveland, and thus, trying to maximize his window without sacrificing the future makes more sense in hindsight. But his leaving left room for a reset, a recalibration of expectations and a new path forward. The Cavs team that limped toward the finish line of last season had nice young pieces, and no one would have blamed the organization if they moved away from a model that pushed for contention and youth all at once.

And yet, with Kevin Love’s contract extension Tuesday afternoon, that’s exactly what they’ll do. As Love himself said to Dan Gilbert on Twitter, “Thank you for believing in us!!!!” Few around the league do, but the Cavaliers appear ready to continue to push onward toward winning even with Collin Sexton, Larry Nance Jr. and Cedi Osman getting ready for big roles. Our Sam Vecenie broke down the deal in terms of dollars and cents, Love’s value and the risks presented by the deal. Here, we’ll jump into what it means for the Cavs as a whole.

The good
The Cavs have lost Irving and James in successive seasons. One asked to be sent away, and the other left in free agency. Love is an All-Star, one of the top 25 to 30 players in the league, and he just decided he didn’t care about any of that, he’s staying in Cleveland. He’s no doubt heard the snickers about James’ supporting cast and hungry to show this Cavs team can be pretty good. But it’s a testament, on some level, to the desirability of the city and the team that he’s willing to stay. Many, including myself, thought he’d want to jump ship pretty quickly to play for a winner. He didn’t, and while the money he’s now guaranteed is likely a big part of that, it’s a positive sign for the organization that he wanted to be there.

It also will be pretty nice for rookie point guard Sexton to have a legitimate pick-and-pop target to play off of and with. Irving had Antawn Jamison as a rookie, and then nothing as a second- and third-year player in the league, and it arguably stunted his development as a facilitator. Sexton needs more help with his passing than Irving did, and it appears he’ll have that in Love, and potentially Nance and Tristan Thompson as pick-and-roll dive-men. If the team holds on to George Hill and starts him next to Sexton, as has been reported, there will be another steady veteran on the floor.

Given the general weakness of the East, it’s possible the Cavs can play some of their young guys real minutes and still compete for a playoff spot.

The bad
I have no idea what the upside for this team is. As good as Love is, he’s not a top-15 NBA player anymore. Hill, J.R. Smith, Thompson and Kyle Korver remain. How helpful are they? Neither are long-term problems; Smith and Hill are functionally expiring contracts, Thompson remains a functional reserve big who can start if you need him to, and Korver’s going to keep making 3. For a team that wants to keep winning, it makes sense to give each of them roles, save perhaps Smith.

But how good is Sexton going to get? He was the eighth pick and excelled in summer league, but doesn’t have the college or size profile to get to a truly elite level. He is, by all accounts, a hard worker and great person to build around, but his passing vision and handle need work. He’s confident and looks like he’ll be a valuable player. Will he make an All-Star Game? We don’t need an answer to that now, but most guys taken where he was selected in the draft don’t reach star status. Osman and Nance, too, look like really nice pieces and potentially more. But are they potential All-Stars?

The easiest way for the Cavs to put themselves in contention for another All-Star would be at least one year of tanking to put themselves in position to take an elite talent, or trade for one. They haven’t gone that route, instead opting to retool instead of rebuild. And it’s always fair to note the best teams find talent later in the lottery; the Pacers with Paul George, the Warriors with Klay Thompson, etc., stand out as examples. But the Cavs aren’t in that spot. If they aren’t in the top 10 of the lottery next season, their pick goes to Atlanta.

Now, maybe Love isn’t the difference between the lottery and the playoffs for the Cavs. Maybe Hill still looks listless, Smith remains checked out, Thompson really did lose a step, and Nance can’t handle the heavy minutes. In which case, OK. You’re giving Love a lot of money, but he’s arguably worth it in the context of a team seriously competing, which the Cavs can build toward now that he’s locked up for a while. But the Cavs once again picking between six and nine ups the level of difficulty in bringing in a truly elite-level talent to help the team get better. And if they do make the playoffs or forfeit their pick to the Hawks? That’s a lost asset in team-building, and one hard to swallow for a team missing an elite talent.

It’s hard to argue the Cavs got closer to an NBA championship with Love’s extension Tuesday. It’s not hard to argue the Cavs got further away from a top pick in next June’s draft.

The … we’ll see
In six months, Love will be eligible for a trade again. Perhaps he’s having a great season, but the Cavs are still bad and the team is able to fetch a decent asset or two in return for sending him to a team like Philadelphia or Utah that think they are close to real championship contention. The Cavs struggle through the rest of the season and still find themselves in position for a top-five pick. It’s possible.

In six months, perhaps the Cavs will be enjoying a bounce-back season from Hill and Thompson, who is getting his first summer off in years. Osman and Sexton are bringing energy and fun every night, and the Cavs, somehow, are fifth in the East. Tyronn Lue even smiles every once in a while. It’s possible.

In six months, the Cavs are the East’s seventh seed, and Smith is reportedly unhappy, but Sexton’s December and January true shooting rate is hovering around 60 percent, so fans are largely happy and optimistic. It’s possible.

Maybe an NBA title isn’t the only way to measure what the Cavs are doing. Maybe the Cavs can get there this way. They’ll have to surprise a lot of people to do it.
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain

Re: Cleveland Cavaliers

2622
HB - this is your point:

In six months, Love will be eligible for a trade again. Perhaps he’s having a great season, but the Cavs are still bad and the team is able to fetch a decent asset or two in return for sending him to a team like Philadelphia or Utah that think they are close to real championship contention. The Cavs struggle through the rest of the season and still find themselves in position for a top-five pick. It’s possible.
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain

Re: Cleveland Cavaliers

2623
Kevin Love extension: Significant risk, but will that be the Cavaliers’ problem?


By Sam Vecenie Jul 24, 2018 6
If​ you’ve been​ listening closely​ to rumblings out of​ Cleveland since the​ departure of LeBron​ James,​ news of​ a Kevin Love​​ extension shouldn’t come as a surprise. The Cavaliers have been clear that they have no intention of bottoming out in the same way they did the first time James left in 2010, when they won an average of 21.3 games over the next three years and won three NBA Draft lotteries in 2011, 2013, and 2014.

Rather than trying to build through high draft picks and cap space, the Cavs are going to try to go with more of a “re-tool” than a full on rebuild. If that’s the route they want to go, signing Love, who had one guarantee year remaining at $24.1 million and one player option year remaining at $25.6 million, to an extension makes sense. The numbers, though, were always the question. Finally, our answer came on Tuesday, when Love signed to a four-year, $120-million extension. That means the Cavs are committed to Love for the next five years at $145 million, counting this upcoming season.

Structurally, based off of the salary cap and reporting by ESPN, he’ll play this season on his $24.1 number, decline his player option in 2019-20, then see his salary rise by the full 120 percent allowed under the collective bargaining agreement’s extension rules in 2019-20. From there, his salary will jump by the standard eight percent raise in 2020-21, stay at that number for the 2021-22 season, then decrease for the 2022-23 season. The full numbers are mapped out below.
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This is a complicated contract to discuss, value-wise. Really, it comes down to two questions. Is Love worth this contract? And how does this affect Cleveland’s future flexibility? Let’s break down those two aspects.

Is Kevin Love worth five years, $145 million?

Ultimately, this is the most important question. If Love is worth the contract, then he’s a positive asset and someone who can either be built around or traded around the NBA in return for valuable commodities.

Given that this contract runs for Love’s 30- to 34-year-old seasons, I think there’s a lot of reason for skepticism that he will wind up proving himself as worth this contract. Let’s talk about the positives in regard to Love’s game first, though.

Love is coming off of his most efficient season ever. He averaged 17.6 points and 9.3 rebounds playing as the secondary option for the Cavaliers next to James and he was among the best second bananas in the NBA. Along with James Harden, Kevin Durant, and James, Love was one of just four players in the NBA to post a 61.4 true-shooting percentage to pair with at least a 25 percent usage rate.

Largely, that efficiency came from career-high jump-shooting marks. He hit 41.5 percent of his 5.6 3-point attempts per game, while setting a career-high shooting 88 percent from the line. Given that Love has seen basically the same percentage of open shots in each of his four years with the Cavaliers (about 61 to 63 percent of his shots have been classified as either “open” or “wide open,” per NBA.com), Love seems to have expanded his game and become, if not an elite shooter from distance, then certainly just below that mark.

He’s done all of this while also maintaining his ability as a high-level defensive rebounder. Love’s 29.8 defensive rebounding rate was 10th in the NBA last season, with his more advanced metrics lining up nicely behind it. He finished sixth among all big men in defensive rebounding chance percentage — a statistic measuring how many rebounds you gather when you’re actually in the area for a rebound — and 15th in defensive rebounding chances per minute. The two main skills that Love brought from Minnesota (scoring and rebounding) have held up in Cleveland through four years.

The question, however, remains: will those numbers hold up over the next five? And will he, as the centerpiece of the Cavs next season, return to an approximation of the Love who saw so much success in Minnesota? The latter point is something I’m a bit more skeptical on.

Last season, Love played fewer minutes per game — 28.0 — than in any season outside of his rookie year. Almost certainly, that helped keep him a bit fresher throughout the year. It’ll be harder to keep that minute load under control this season with him as the No. 1 option. In that vein, it seems unlikely that Love will be able to put up the same level of efficiency he posted last season.

Another part of this equation? Percentage of open shots. While Love has seen nearly two-thirds of his shots qualify as “open” over the course of the last two years, it’s unlikely he’ll see a similar number with more defensive attention paid to him as the primary scoring option. We have those numbers running back to Love’s final season in Minnesota. During that year, only about 50 percent of Love’s shots were classified as “open.” Instead of posting efficient, star-level numbers at 25 as a primary option — something he was remarkably successful at in Minnesota — he’ll be asked to do so at 30.

Historically, that’s been a big ask for players of Love’s type. During their age-30 seasons or older, only six players have posted at least 25 points and 10 rebounds on a league-average true-shooting percentage — Shaquille O’Neal, Wilt Chamberlain, David Robinson, Hakeem Olajuwon, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, and Karl Malone. For a player of Love’s caliber — something resembling the ball-park of Hall-of-Fame-quality, but not in the class of the top-20 players ever — it’s unheard of.

Even reducing the number to 20 points and 10 rebounds a game on league-average efficiency during age-30 or over seasons, you still only add Charles Barkley, Elgin Baylor, Patrick Ewing, Kevin Garnett, Elvin Hayes, Moses Malone, and Bob Pettit — all of whom would qualify as top-40 players ever. Love is unquestionably an excellent player, but the Cavs are paying him to do something that a player of his caliber just hasn’t done. That’s not to say it’s impossible, but it would be fair to qualify it as unlikely. And that 30-year-old season is before the extension aspect even kicks in. Given normal aging curves, the deal could only get worse from there.

That’s the positive side of Love’s game, too. We have yet to talk about the defensive side, where Love has been — at the very least — a negative contributor for a while now.

Defensive rebounding, unfortunately, only goes so far. He’s been a big part of the Cavs’ 21st- and 29th-ranked defenses each of the last two years, struggling with pick-and-roll coverage and rim protection. Among the 36 players in the league to contest at least four shots at the basket per game, according to NBA.com, Love finished 35th in field goal percentage against on those shots, allowing opponents to shoot 65.7 percent against him at the basket.

Opponents shot, on average, 5.3 percent better when Love was the primary defender. In general, opponents took 12 shots per game against him, shooting 52.9 percent — 300th out of the 304 players in the NBA who had at least five shots taken against them per game in such situations. The surrounding players in that metric aren’t exactly pretty.
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Finally, Love’s injury history needs to be mentioned. This past year, he missed 21 games in February and March due to a fractured hand. During the 2016-17 season, he missed six more weeks due to a knee surgery to remove loose materials from his left knee. The Kelly Olynyk incident cost him a large portion of the 2015 playoffs due to a dislocated shoulder.

Multiple fractures in his right hand cost him a large portion of the 2012-13 season with Minnesota. A left groin injury cost him the end of 2010-11 season, and another broken left hand injury cost him a portion of his sophomore season. None of these injuries particularly speak to long-term muscular or structural issues, but the propensity for him to break bones does seem to be real, and it’s something that should be placed into the calculation.

With this contract, the Cavaliers are essentially paying Love to continue at a high-level, star-quality pace for five seasons. Or, at the very least, they’re hoping he can deliver surplus value in the first couple of years of the deal, followed by what will likely be down years. Given past precedent, I’m not sure that should be expected.

The Cavs would have likely been better off offering a two-year max extension similar to the one the Spurs offered LaMarcus Aldridge as opposed to a four-year extension. That kind of deal would have preserved potential trade value by keeping Love under team control for the next three seasons, kept the team competitive moving forward, while also mitigating the downside risk both for themselves and for other potential trade partners.

Would Love have accepted such a deal? Maybe not. But if that were the case, they could have explored trade options for him and started anew immediately. This is where Cleveland’s strategy and mine would be differ. I understand why they want to go a different route, given how tough things were the last time James left town. I also understand that Love’s market may not have been particularly strong right now. Still, this contract has significant downside even with salary cap increases slated to come in the next two years. It’s worth wondering how that affects both the Cavs going forward, as well as their potential to move the contract if they decide to shift into a different direction.

How does this affect Cleveland’s future?

Well, for now, it ties Love to the Cavaliers for five years at the cap figures projected above. From a short-term perspective, it’s worth noting the potential effect that this decision has on the Cavaliers’ 2019 first-round pick. The Cavaliers currently owe their first rounder next year to the Atlanta Hawks if it falls outside of the top-10 picks. That protection stands through the 2020 draft. If the pick has not conveyed by that point, it then becomes the Cavs’ 2021 and 2022 second-round picks.

That makes the opportunity cost of keeping Love on this year’s roster as opposed to potentially moving him to confirm that they keep those picks real. Given Cleveland’s standing in the league, it’s not impossible that the Cavs end up missing the playoffs this year, and also have to convey their first-round pick. Sure, the 2019 draft is not seen as particularly strong, but the potential cost of losing a cost-controlled first rounder to help them re-tool must be accounted for.

Long-term, this move doesn’t really harm Cleveland’s flexibility all that much from a cap perspective. The Cavs have about $80 million committed to Love, Tristan Thompson, Jordan Clarkson, Collin Sexton, Cedi Osman, and Ante Zizic (as well as small guarantees to larger contracts for George Hill, J.R. Smith, and Kyle Korver) in 2019-20. They’ll also have a potential cap hold (or extension number, based on reports) for Larry Nance Jr., as well as potentially Rodney Hood if they sign him to a multi-year guaranteed contract. It was always unlikely that the team would use significant space next summer.

But in the summer of 2020, the team still figures to have quite a bit of space. Counting the Love deal, Sexton’s third-year option, Zizic’s fourth-year option, and a $5.5 million cap hold for Osman, the team figures to have well over $50 million in cap space regardless of what it gives to Nance and Hood, and could even have as much as $70 million given reported potential salary cap increases. Even with this extension, that remains the summer the Cavs need to knock it out of the park. It represents their best opportunity to be flexible and add talent to the roster.


Another way to add talent to this roster would also be by trading Love, something that shouldn’t be ruled out over the course of the next two summers.

Next summer, owing the salary cap increase and contracts that will get off the books, 11 teams are currently slated to have enough space (near the max) to trade for Love’s contract without attaching any salaries. In 2020, the number is currently slated to be even higher (although that will change after contracts are handed out next year). For teams over the next two summers who miss out on big-time free agents, Love might represent an interesting way for them to still take a step forward while also seeing the Cavaliers get something of value in return.

There are a few teams who could be interested, based off of the talent they have already accumulated. The Philadelphia 76ers missed out on getting to use their cap space this summer, with next summer currently representing their last chance to add talent via free agency before extensions for Ben Simmons and Joel Embiid engulf their cap sheet. Does Love make sense as a floor-spacing 4 in-between those two, given how well they could insulate him defensively?

The Utah Jazz have always made a lot of sense for him, due to their unselfish offensive style and defensive strength inside. They also enjoy playing with two big men, something a team acquiring Love would have to do if it wants to stay reliable on defense. Placing him between Rudy Gobert and Donovan Mitchell makes a lot of sense.

Indiana has similar long-term pieces in place with Victor Oladipo and Myles Turner, and could see Love as a risk worth taking. The Clippers are star-hunting next summer after dealing all of Blake Griffin, DeAndre Jordan, and Chris Paul over the last 14 months. Could they try to acquire Love as a secondary piece to a higher-profile star to bring him back to his UCLA roots?

All of this is dependent upon Love maintaining his value next season, though. He needs to have a monster year, so that the Cavs either make the playoffs or have the ability to move him due to his contract being seen as a long-term asset. Ultimately, I’m skeptical of such a situation, and worried that this deal will be seen as toxic around the NBA due to the lack of value in the back-end.

As we learned with the Clippers’ Griffin deal this season, though, it only takes one team seeing Love as an asset for the Cavaliers to be able to get off of it. If Love can keep producing early on in this deal, someone will likely bail the Cavaliers out before the arrangement gets all that bad. Because based off of past precedent, this deal is going to get bad for someone.

Whether or not it ends up being an anchor on the Cavaliers’ future or another team’s depends on just how strong Love’s immediate performance is as their No. 1 option this season.
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain