If the Cleveland Cavaliers are lucky, this could be their last NBA Draft lottery for a while
Mary Schmitt Boyer, The Plain Dealer
on May 20, 2013 at 6:47 PM, updated May 20, 2013 at 6:55 PM
If the Cleveland Cavaliers are lucky, this could be their last NBA Draft lottery for a while
CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Although it feels as if the NBA lottery is an annual event for the Cavaliers, it really isn't.
Yes, this will be the Cavs third straight appearance, but it's their 17th appearance overall since the current system was adopted in 1985, and that includes two chances in 1999 and two in 2011. They're tied with the Minnesota Timberwolves for the fourth -most appearances.
The Los Angeles Clippers have made 22 appearances in the lottery, followed by Golden State with 20 appearances and Sacramento with 18, including this year.
Not coincidentally, the Clippers have won the lottery three times, which ties them with the Orlando Magic for the most victories.
The Cavs, who won the lottery in 2003 and 2011, will be bidding to join them on Tuesday evening, when the 29th draft lottery will be held in ABC's Disney Times Square Studios in New York. It will be televised at 8:30 p.m. on ESPN, before Game 2 of the Western Conference Finals between San Antonio and Memphis.
For the third straight year, Nick Gilbert, son of Cavs owner Dan Gilbert, will represent the team on stage, wearing his traditional bow tie. Nick Gilbert was the Cavs representative when the team won the lottery and the chance to draft Kyrie Irving in 2011, uttering the memorable phrase, "What's not to like?''
He was distraught last year when New Orleans vaulted from the No. 4 spot to win. Although the Cavs and Hornets each finished with 21-45 records in 2011-12, tied for the third-worst record in the league behind Charlotte and Washington, the Cavs had won a tiebreaker with the Hornets and had one more combination. It didn't help, and they wound up with the No. 4 pick in the draft, which they used to select Dion Waiters.
This year, the top prize in the lottery looks to be Kentucky power forward/center Nerlens Noel, even though he's coming off a torn ACL and likely won't be ready to play until Christmas. Most teams feel as though he will be worth the wait.
The No. 2 pick is projected to be Kansas shooting guard Ben McLemore, with No. 3 likely to be Georgetown small forward Otto Porter Jr.
But a lot can happen between the lottery and the NBA draft of June 27.
Ideally, lottery teams will be looking to replicate the performance of the San Antonio Spurs and the Chicago Bulls. Those teams won the lottery in 1997 and 2008, respectively, and haven't been back since.
Jeff Cohen, the Cavs vice chairman who will be in the room for the actual lottery drawing for the third straight year, promised as much.
"Last time,'' he said, meaning the Cavs would be in the playoffs next year and not the lottery.
Lucky fans: Gerry Burma of Brecksville and Tate Moore of Wadsworth won a trip to the lottery with the Cavs. Burma won a random drawing for Cavs Wine & Gold United members, and Moore's 30-second Twitter video was judged the best of all entrants who took Dan Gilbert up on his challenge last week. To see Moore's video:
http://youtu.be/tJZFUnBr0xY.
Cleveland native and hip hop artist Machine Gun Kelly will make the trip to New York as well, but Browns stars Bernie Kosar, Joe Haden and Josh Cribbs are not expected to take part this year.
Fact box
What: 2013 NBA lottery
When: 8:30 p.m. Tuesday
Where: ABC's Disney Times Square Studios in New York
TV: ESPN
Cavs odds: The Cavs, who finished with the third-worst record in the league, have a 15.6 percent chance of winning the No. 1 pick, a 15.74 chance of winning the No. 2 pick, a 15.58 chance of staying at No. 3, a 22.56 chance of dropping to No. 4, and a 22.48 chance of falling to No. 5. The worst they can draft is No. 6.
How it works: Representatives of each team and selected reporters, including Mary Schmitt Boyer of The Plain Dealer, will gather in a secured room before the televised lottery begins. At that point, 14 ping-pong balls numbered 1 through 14 are placed in a drum. There are 1,001 possible combinations when four balls are drawn, without regard to order. Prior to the lottery, each team is assigned a number of combinations based on the order of finish in the regular season. Orlando has 250 combinations. Charlotte has 119. The Cavs have 156 possible combinations. Four balls are drawn to the top to determine a four-digit combination. The team that has that combination wins the lottery and the No. 1 pick in the draft. The process is repeated for the No. 2 pick and the No. 3 pick. The rest of the teams will select in inverse order of finish.