How Caris LeVert became the Cavaliers’ chameleon in the trenches
Kelsey Russo
Dec 2, 2022
When Caris LeVert was traded to the Cleveland Cavaliers last season, he told coach J.B. Bickerstaff in an early conversation that he was adaptable. Use me in whatever capacity you need, he assured him.
That stuck with Bickerstaff. Not only at the time, but to this day.
“Understanding himself and not having an unrealistic picture of who he is allows him to do that and do it comfortably because a lot of people can’t,” Bickerstaff said. “If you ask a guy to be different on a night-by-night basis, that’s extremely difficult.”
LeVert’s initial sentiment to Bickerstaff played a role in LeVert earning the starting small forward job at the beginning of the season. But it also laid a foundation for the journey to come.
In LeVert’s first 18 games this season, LeVert has needed to play multiple roles. His role shifted between being a playmaker to scorer to defender, sometimes depending on the specific possession.
Not only has he played at the three, but he also slid over to play in the backcourt while Darius Garland missed five games with an eye injury. When Donovan Mitchell missed a game with an ankle strain, LeVert shifted down a position again. When Bickerstaff decided the Cavs needed a change following a five-game losing streak in November, LeVert was moved back out of the starting lineup. When LeVert plays next to one of Garland or Mitchell on the second unit, his role is again different because he can be a scorer, he’s comfortable with the ball in his hands and can be a playmaker.
While these shifts are challenging for most players, LeVert’s selfless mentality has allowed him to adapt to whatever is needed of him on a nightly basis. He’s able to handle the unexpected and embrace what is asked of him.
“I think he’s kind of a chameleon in a way,” Donovan Mitchell told The Athletic. “You could put him in any environment in life, and I feel like he would thrive and fit in.”
As the Cavs ran through plays before their season opener against the Toronto Raptors, LeVert wore a red jersey, which typically indicates he is playing with the first group. LeVert was a part of that group a couple of times in a row. But it was only after they ran through lineups that LeVert heard the news officially: he would be a starter.
LeVert started two games at small forward during the preseason, playing well on both ends of the floor next to Garland and Mitchell. Bickerstaff noted how LeVert created for others, found ways to score and defended well without having the ball in his hands as often. He demonstrated in the preseason that he could be a two-way player.
Four days before the season opener, Bickerstaff was still zeroing in on a decision for the starting small forward. But he realized he liked what he’d seen from LeVert in that role.
“He had to be multi-dimensional at that spot,” Bickerstaff said. “Like he’s got to have a bunch of different personalities. […] So it’s not an easy thing that we’re asking him to do. We’re asking him to be three or four different people in the course of a night. And I think he’s taken that challenge on.”
LeVert overhauled his diet this offseason by shifting to a more keto-friendly approach and reducing his sugar intake. He also worked on his conditioning. Unlike previous years, he didn’t have to rehab a serious injury over the summer, which helped him be a standout during training camp.
During the five games Garland missed with his eye injury, LeVert slid over to play in the backcourt next to Mitchell and averaged 15.6 points on 33.8 percent shooting. Dean Wade moved into the starting lineup in the meantime at the three.
Bickerstaff made it clear at the time that after Garland returned, the starting lineup was not going to change. LeVert had earned the spot.
“I’ve got so much respect and appreciation for what Caris has done over the past two and a half months that he’s been back here with us, and the time that he put in over the summer to get himself to this level, it would be disrespectful to just move him out of that spot,” Bickerstaff said at the end of October.
Donovan Mitchell and Caris LeVert celebrate after the Cavs’ 114-113 overtime with over Boston on Nov. 2. (David Butler II / USA TODAY Sports)
That was before the Cavs went on a five-game losing skid where their defense took a nosedive. Following LeVert’s 41-point outing versus Boston, he averaged just 10.4 points over a nine-game span leading up to Bickerstaff’s lineup change on Nov. 18. That’s when he slid Lamar Stevens into the starting small forward spot against the Charlotte Hornets.
LeVert, meanwhile, was the first sub off the bench, coming in for Garland at the 7:03 mark of the first quarter. Bickerstaff stuck with that lineup over the next two games against the Miami Heat and Atlanta Hawks, both wins.
But this was no demotion. In fact, it was LeVert’s idea.
“I kind of told (Bickerstaff) I wanted to come off the bench,” LeVert said. “He had the same thoughts as well. I think it was the same time, really. I think it will definitely help this team as well as myself going forward.”
Bickerstaff said it was an easy conversation.
“He reiterated to me that he was just all in. That literally came out of his mouth,” Bickerstaff said. “It was like, ‘Whatever you need me to do to help the team win and be better, that’s what I want to do.’”
They talked about the opportunity for LeVert to have the ball in his hands more with the second unit, allowing him more leeway to and create for himself and his teammates during his minutes.
“He is more comfortable with the ball in his hands,” Bickerstaff said. “He was sacrificing a ton playing that kind of third position with those two guards, and then obviously, we throw it to Evan and J.A. So his strength needs to be a rhythm that happens through the game. It’s unfair to him to not allow him to catch a rhythm and then be on the floor at the end of games when we need him, and now he has no rhythm, and when the ball does find him, he’s disjointed.
“It’s a combination of doing what’s best for him, but then when that’s our finishing lineup, he’s got a rhythm, he feels comfortable, and he’s touched the ball and has had an impact,” Bickerstaff continued. “That’s what we’re looking for. Will it happen overnight? No. But we will continue to work at it and think it will work.”
LeVert also dealt with a recent ankle sprain, which caused him to miss four games. He said that coming back from injury brings its own challenges, so adding a role change on top of that is especially difficult.
To ease those challenges, LeVert watched copious amounts of film while staying around the team during his rehab. He tried to look at games through the lens of his new sixth-man role. During games, he focused on picking up where he could get his touches or seeing his defensive matchups.
“It’s a little difficult,” LeVert said. “But I’m someone who focuses on winning. I’ve made that the most important thing. It is what it is, especially when you talk about being in the NBA and being on a really good team. It takes sacrifice. I think a lot of people don’t really realize that when you’re talking about being a part of a special group. Everybody has to sacrifice a little bit. For me, that’s just what it is this season.”
Caris LeVert (Allison Farrand / USA TODAY Sports)
LeVert said his biggest sacrifice came on the offensive end because he’s used to being more of a ball-dominant player – like when he spent his time in Brooklyn and Indiana as a ball-dominant player – whether running pick-and-roll or going one-on-one. The presence of Garland and Mitchell, however, made it harder for LeVert to receive those opportunities.
Moving LeVert to more of a sixth-man role allowed him to play alongside one of Garland or Mitchell, giving him more leeway to be a ballhandler and off-the-dribble scorer. There’s more of a concerted effort to get the ball in LeVert’s hands.
Regardless of his role, though, LeVert has been effective this season. Through 18 games, LeVert is averaging 11.9 points, 4.7 assists and 4.7 rebounds per game while shooting 38.7 percent from 3. The Cavs are outscoring opponents by an average of 5.1 points per 100 possessions with LeVert on the floor.
“I think he’s playing the game in total,” Bickerstaff said. “He can read the game. So those plays that he’s making will always be there. He can defend, so that will always be there. … he’s just continuing to impact the game in whichever way he can.”
LeVert’s all-around game was on display in Wednesday night’s rout of the Philadelphia 76ers, during which LeVert finished with 22 points, four assists, six rebounds, a steal and three turnovers. In different rotations and lineups, either Garland or Mitchell called different plays to get LeVert the ball. They understand how impactful LeVert can be.
“One night, we need him to have 40, and he’ll do that one night, and then guard Jayson Tatum and not shoot the ball at all, and he could do that,” Mitchell said. “One night, you need him to go out there and get 12 assists on two shots. One night you need him to score. There’s so many different things that he’s done in just 10 games, and I didn’t personally know he could do, and now that I’ve seen it, I get it.”
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