Lloyd: Kevin Love’s final days in Cleveland, his quiet departure and his lasting legacy
We sat on the bench together inside Cleveland Clinic Courts talking about what was and what will be. LeBron James was in Los Angeles by this point and Kevin Love was still in Cleveland.
That seemed impossible during their time together. Love always assumed when James left, he would follow out the door behind him. When it happened, when James actually left town again, Love still had a year left on his contract and he hoped the Cavs would work with him to send him someplace he wanted to go. But the team pivoted. They weren’t interested in gutting the organization again and instead agreed to a four-year, $120 million extension to keep him here.
Love knew it was probably more money than he would’ve gotten in free agency in a year, so he stayed. The Cavs staged the contract signing in front of team employees and construction crews working on the arena renovation project. It was a celebration that Love chose to stay.
A few months later, as training camp began without James and without title hopes, I asked Love if he could still be an impact player by the time the Cavs returned to contention.
“That’s the tough part, for lack of a better term,” he said. “The idea would be to have it not take too long, but that’s easier said than done in this league, especially when you have these juggernaut teams at the top.”
Five years later, we have our answer. Love’s time in Cleveland will end unceremoniously, just one more DNP-CD at the end of the bench following the Cavs’ loss at Philadelphia on Thursday to conclude the first half of the schedule. It will likely be his last time in a Cleveland jersey. Love and the Cavs are finalizing a buyout that should occur over this All-Star break, multiple sources told The Athletic.
It’s a shame it had to end this way. After three turbulent years between Love and the Cavs following James’ departure, things smoothed out these last two years as the Cavs returned to contention much faster than I ever thought possible. Love had his share of injuries and on-court blowups amid frustration from all the losing, but things were trending better the last couple of years.
Love agreed to step back last year and come off the bench to make room for Evan Mobley. He stayed healthy and thrived in a sixth-man role. This year his season has cratered in part to a thumb injury and the worst shooting season he’s had in 10 years. He told me a few weeks ago the thumb was feeling better and he thought he was turning a corner. He expected it all to turn around any day now. It never came. Now his relationship with some in the organization is strained again, which is part of what led to the buyout. Love wants to play and didn’t like falling out of the rotation completely. His next destination, whether Miami or elsewhere, will likely be a place where he believes he can get on the court again.
The Cavs didn’t get nearly the return they expected on the extension, but they stayed patient through the ups and downs for years. When he came to them recently and asked for a buyout, they acquiesced.
He’s 34 now and it’s fair to wonder how much he has left. We spoke earlier this season about his desire to end his career here. What an ending that would make, particularly after all the trauma and drama following those first couple of seasons here without LeBron.
Love came here strictly for James and the chance to win a championship. LeBron called him the day he announced he was returning to Cleveland. Love was in Los Angeles driving to the gym for a workout when he saw James was calling. He pulled the car over to hear LeBron’s sales pitch and immediately agreed. He was in. The Cavs and Timberwolves worked out the details and instantly the Cavs vaulted from a floundering rebuild to contenders with a legitimate Big Three.
Cleveland had actually pursued Love previously, before LeBron came home. Love had no interest. But James’ presence, as usual, changed everything. LeBron provided Love an opportunity to win and Love provided LeBron the floor spacing big he desperately needed. Their relationship was choppy at times, but ultimately they both delivered for the other.
Congrats from a friend.@kevinlove x @KingJames | #ScoringKing pic.twitter.com/VHWwX6apx5
— Cleveland Cavaliers (@cavs) February 8, 2023
The championship seemed to unburden Love more than anyone else. Kyrie Irving, LeBron and Love will forever be linked by The Shot, The Block and The Stop. Love’s role in it, his defense on Steph Curry at the end of Game 7 of the NBA Finals, immortalized him in Cleveland forever.
Love began to change and evolve following the championship. He won a world championship and Olympic gold, but he coveted an NBA title. I remember Love’s wrestling belt and his cigar during the parade. He smiled through dehydration underneath the searing sun. Where he was once sullen and quiet when he got here, he began to loosen up and let others in. He smiled more often. He was relaxed. He came to terms with his anxiety and depression and became an unofficial spokesperson for mental health. We texted about childhood suicide rates. The recent surge in childhood suicides bothered him deeply.
Now, as the Cavs are opening a new contention window, the last link to their title team is leaving. It’s a Greek tragedy of sorts. After the way Irving departed, it’s unfortunate Love leaves like this, too. Both sides did their best to keep buyout talks private — a number of Cavs players were unaware he is leaving.
But the good days far outweighed the bad during Love’s nine years here. His jersey will hang in the rafters one day, and I believe he’s a Hall of Famer. The day he gets in, it will be in a Cavs jersey. He’ll be canonized in Cleveland forever, receiving the same roaring ovation that Channing Frye, Richard Jefferson and everyone else from that title team receives whenever they’re back in town. It’s how he wants it. It’s how it should be.
“I always want to be able to come back here, and I will. I will come back,” Love told me a few years ago. “I will come back. I see Brad Daugherty comes around, Larry (Nance Sr.) is around, Mark Price and Z, Dahntay Jones was up here the other night. … That’s the cool part about Cleveland. If you just play hard, have a relationship with the organization and the fans … I feel like if you play at a place long enough, that’s all you can ask for.”
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