stowfan
Assistant Coach
Don't be so hasty about trading my guy Dion:Here's a look at the Chris Grant legacy.
The 2009-10 Cavaliers finished with a record of 61-21, the best record in the Eastern Conference.
Then came The Decision.
The 2010-11 team, the first of the post-Lebron era, finished with a record of 19-63, and included a 26-game losing streak. The highlight of the season came on February 24th, when the Cavaliers traded Mo Williams and Jamario Moon to the L.A. Clippers for Baron Davis and a first-round draft choice. Davis was a salary dump, but the first-round pick turned out to be the number one overall in the 2011 draft. The Cavaliers also had their own selection, at #4.
This is the Cavaliers' roster at the end of the 2010-11 season:
Baron Davis
Semih Erden
Christian Eyenga
Alonzo Gee
Daniel Gibson
Joey Graham
Luke Harangody
Manny Harris
J.J. Hickson
Ryan Hollins
Antawn Jamison
Anthony Parker
Samardo Samuels
Ramon Sessions
Anderson Varejao
It would be difficult to assemble a worse team than that, and it's not surprising that the Cavaliers were such a terrible team - Davis and Jamison were aging veterans, way past their primes; Gee and Sessions were decent bench players; and Varejao a solid starter or sixth man. The rest of the roster was garbage.
In the NBA, there are really three ways to build a championship-level team - around a point guard (Magic, Isaiah, John Stockton, Iverson), around a dominating big man (Olajuwon, Ewing, Shaq, Tim Duncan), or around a high-scoring wing player (Jordan, Kobe, James, Durant). There are a few exceptions to the rule, like the 2007-08 Boston Celtics, who had four very strong starters (Garnett, Pierce, Allen, Rondo) but no true superstar.
So, entering the 2011 draft, the Cavaliers had one legitimate building block (power forward Varejao) and two high draft choices. Of course, I don't know how Chris Grant preferred to build the team (around a point guard, a big man, or a wing), but he didn't really have any choice. Kyrie Irving was clearly the best player in the draft, and he was a point guard. So, Grant (wisely) selected him first overall. The Cavaliers now had their potential superstar to build around.
With his second pick, #4 overall, Grant made the first of his "hipster" selections (credit to Ken Carman of 92.3 The Fan for that term). Thompson was an undersized power forward with limited offensive skills. However, he was a hard worker and good character guy who was a decent rebounder. Even though Thompson played the same position as Varejao, I can't kill Grant for that pick - in the short term, Varejao could play center alongside Thompson, and in the long term, after the Cavaliers acquired a true center, one could go to the bench and be a valuable rotational player.
The problem with Grant's drafting began in 2012. After another dreadful season (21-45 in a strike-shortened year), the Cavaliers again had the #4 overall selection; they were also able to trade for the #17 selection.
Although Kyrie Irving is a budding superstar, he still has some weaknesses - he is undersized, he shoots too much, he doesn't play well off the ball, and he plays no defense. So what does Christ Grant do with the #4 pick in the 2012 NBA draft? Selects Dion Waiters, an undersized guard who shoots too much, doesn't play well off the ball, and plays no defense. And he's a shooting guard who can't shoot - Waiters is shooting .413 from the field, and there are 17 players in the NBA who are currently shooting better than that from three-point range! (Waiters is shooting .333 from behind the arc). And top top it all off, Waiters had known work ethic and character issues at Syracuse, a program that is not known for producing good citizens. If Jim Boeheim had problems with Waiters, then he must have been pretty bad. So to sum up Dion Waiters - no shot, no defense, bad fit with Kyrie, bad guy in the locker room. If any one move doomed Chris Grant, it was the selection of Dion Waiters.
Very few NBA teams besides the Cavaliers (probably none, actually) had Waiters rated as the fourth-best player in the 2012 draft. In overvaluing Waiters, who was a complete misfit for the Cavaliers, Grant passed on small forward Harrison Barnes and center Andre Drummond, each of whom (especially Drummond) would have fit in better with Kyrie on the court, and wouldn't have been a problem in the locker room.
At #17, Grant took Tyler Zeller. Of course, you don't really expect #17 picks to be All Stars, but Zeller has been exceptionally bad, averaging just 6.6 points and 4.9 rebounds for his career. Zeller is an end-of-the-bench guy. Again, you can't expect much from mid-round picks, but Grant did pass on Jared Sullinger to select Tyler Zeller.
In the 2013 draft, Grant again had the #1 overall selection, and again he made a strange selection - Anthony Bennett. Clearly a tweener, Bennett doesn't have the athleticism to play small forward, especially on defense. Although his rookie campaign has been historically bad to date, Bennett has enough skills to eventually become a functional NBA player. The problem is this - Bennett is a power forward, and the Cavaliers already have two in Anderson Varejao (the original building block of the post-Lebron era) and Tristan Thomson (the #4 selection two years prior). Again, another mismatch on the court.
With the #19 pick in the 2013 draft, Grant selected Sergey Karasev, a 6-foot-7 shooting guard. Karasev is a long-term project.
The players whom Grant brought in for the start of this season - Andrew Bynum, Jarrett Jack, and Earl Clark - have all been busts. Luol Deng, who was acquired for Bynum, has severely underperformed in Cleveland despite being a two-time All Star.
Finally, Grant brought in Mike Brown as head coach for the 2013-2014 season. Brown is a defensive-minded coach who has excelled with veteran teams, and Grant gave him a bunch of youngsters who had no interest in playing any defense (especially Irving and Waiters). Another bad fit, and it is showing on the court.
It is clear at this point that the Cavaliers have quit on the season. They don't respect their head coach, and they don't get along with each other. Mike Brown and Dion Waiters will have to go - those moves must happen. The big question is this - Is Kyrie Irving part of the problem, or part of the solution? If Waiters and Brown are sent packing, will Kyrie be able to flourish with a new head coach and a new running mate at shooting guard? If not, then the Chris Grant's tenure in Cleveland will have been an even bigger failure, as his cornerstone player will also have to be moved in a complete tear down of this team. That is not a happy thought.
http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/cleveland-cavaliers-washington-wizards-2014020727/
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