2093
by Hillbilly
Win now and keep LeBron James? NBA source says Cavaliers' trades a 'win-win'
Updated 1:03 PM; Posted 1:03 PM
By Joe Vardon, Cleveland.com
CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Cavaliers do not have a formal commitment from LeBron James to remain with the organization past this season.
Nor did general manager Koby Altman or owner Dan Gilbert ask for one, sources told cleveland.com. Rather, the Cavs traded nearly half their roster, committed to new money beyond this season, got much younger and, according to league sources, gave themselves a better chance to get to and compete in the Finals in June.
Which is what matters to James.
"What this shows is the organization did right by the organization and by its players," one league source who's close to multiple Cavs players told cleveland.com. "They're trying to finish this season strong. If LeBron decides to leave, they're better set up for the future than they were 48 hours ago. And if he decides to stay, the Cavs are set up for winning long term.
"It's really a win win. The Cavs did a great job."
Cavs send:
Isaiah Thomas to the Lakers
Channing Frye to the Lakers
Jae Crowder to Utah
Derrick Rose to Utah
Iman Shumpert to Sacramento
Their own 2018 first-round pick to the Lakers
Dwyane Wade to Miami
2020 second-round pick to Sacramento
Cavs get::
Larry Nance Jr. from the Lakers
Jordan Clarkson from the Lakers
George Hill from Sacramento
Rodney Hood from Utah
Protected second-round pick from Miami
James, 33, can be a free agent at season's end. He has a $35.6 million player's option in his contract.
When James first returned to Cleveland in 2014, and as recently as the start of training camp in September, James said his intention was to retire with the Cavs.
But to maintain flexibility and leverage over the front office, James never gave a formal commitment to stay past this season. He wanted the team to make roster upgrades to remain competitive with, and close the gap on, the Golden State Warriors.
Team owner Dan Gilbert, meanwhile, wanted the commitment from James before taking on more money. Gilbert may pay $50 million in luxury taxes for this season after all the moves that were made.
With the Cavs' season quickly going down the drain -- they are 7-13 since Christmas and have lost four times by 24 or more points -- and the roster apparently broken, Altman and Gilbert swung into action.
Altman made moves which address James' concerns, even if he did not ask for these specific players (he didn't), and not merely because James wanted change. Altman knew what needed to be done, too.
James felt Isaiah Thomas was not a good fit on the Cavs, especially because of his injured hip, and trading Kyrie Irving for Thomas and Jae Crowder was a mistake.
The Cavs traded Thomas to the Lakers and Crowder to the Utah Jazz.
James and other players on the Cavs felt the team needed to get younger, more athletic, and versatile to compete with the Warriors. Jordan Clarkson, Larry Nance Jr., and and Rodney Hood are all 25.
Clarkson's averaging about 14.5 points for the Lakers and Hood is scoring 16.8 points for the Jazz. Clarkson has two years and about $26 million on his contract, George Hill (a new point guard, replacing Thomas) has $19 million on his contract for next season, and Hood could be in line for a big contract as a restricted free agent.
That's new money.
James told people close to him recently that he doubted the Cavs could pull off what they did on Thursday. He was skeptical of their chances of doing anything at the trade deadline, let alone this entire roster shakeup.
If James was stunned that Irving wanted out of Cleveland after three Finals runs, and upset with the Cavs for trading him for Thomas, Crowder, and Brooklyn's No. 1 pick, he must be equally stunned and pleased by the moves Thursday. He endorsed the trade of his best friend, Dwyane Wade, back to the Miami Heat.
And, the Cavs kept the Brooklyn pick.
None of what happened Thursday means James is definitively staying in Cleveland. But as the trades were flying off the stove, the Cavs stood closer to ninth place than first in the East.
Altman and Gilbert did something about it.