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by rusty2
Why always aggressive Cavs ‘sat out’ the NBA trade deadline this year
Updated: Feb. 09, 2023, 8:23 p.m.
By Chris Fedor, cleveland.com
CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Shortly before 3 p.m. Thursday afternoon, Cavs president of basketball operations Koby Altman stepped out of his office inside Cleveland Clinic Courts with a phone attached to his ear -- a familiar February sight.
Call it a last-second effort for the guy affectionately known as “Trader Koby” to strike a deal. Only it wasn’t to be. Not this year.
The chaotic NBA trade deadline passed on Thursday with a rare outcome: Cleveland failing to make a move.
During a flurry of furious activity, with 28 of the 30 teams (Chicago was other one that didn’t) completing at least one deal, Altman -- who has made 14 in-season trades since becoming the franchise’s architect -- even surprised his front office lieutenants by standing pat.
“We just didn’t feel like anything was going to really move the needle for us,” Altman said shortly after Thursday’s 3 p.m. deadline buzzer. “Scoured the market and talked to every team I could. We could have made a move that was lateral, multiple moves that were lateral, that I didn’t think appreciably made us better. I really wanted to see what this group looked like together, fully healthy, and the potential of this group, which we’ve seen right in front of our eyes, continue to grow.
“A few of my guys over there, they said, ‘Koby, I’m proud of you. You could make deals, you can. There’s things you can land the plane on. Don’t just do something to do something. Let’s be very, very intentional with what we’re doing. If the move wasn’t there to do it, don’t do it.’ So, I guess we sat this one out.”
The Cavs were aggressive. They always are. There was belief that another shooter could’ve helped. They spent months making -- and taking -- calls. They gauged the value of their “movable” pieces -- Caris LeVert, Kevin Love, Cedi Osman, Dylan Windler and eight second-round picks. They gathered an abundance of intel and medical information.
But there’s always a line between aggressive and reckless. The front office was careful not to cross it.
Sources tell cleveland.com the Cavs had a long list of high-priority targets, players they coveted most -- Brooklyn’s Royce O’Neale, Dorian Finney-Smith and Cam Johnson, Atlanta’s Bogdan Bogdanovic, Boston’s Grant Williams, Pistons sniper Bojan Bogdanovic (Detroit’s ask was termed “outrageous” by one rival executive) and a few others. All of them stayed put. Sources say those teams either weren’t interested in what the asset-poor Cavs -- who couldn’t offer a first-round pick without acquiring another one (something the team explored) because they used so much draft capital on the Donovan Mitchell blockbuster -- were willing to give up or the price tag was deemed too high for the caliber of player coming back.
Throughout Thursday, sources say Cleveland went hard after O’Neale -- a playoff-tested 3-and-D wing, one of Mitchell’s closest friends from their Utah days together, a snug locker room fit and a name that went to the top of the team’s wish list following Brooklyn’s roster overhaul. The Cavs even tried to get ultra-creative, lining up a series of shrewd, out-of-the-ordinary chess moves with other teams to strengthen a potential final package. Brooklyn -- which wanted more than a first-round pick, a price increase from what it took to get O’Neale this past offseason -- wouldn’t bite.
A few of the other players that sparked varied levels of interest -- Josh Hart, Cam Reddish, Josh Richardson and Malik Beasley -- went elsewhere. The Knicks and Blazers agreed to a Hart-Reddish swap late Wednesday night. Beasley was sent to the Lakers. Richardson got acquired by the New Orleans Pelicans.
The Cavs kicked around the idea of San Antonio sharpshooter Doug McDermott. But he’s widely viewed as a negative defender who is likely to get played off the court in a seven-game postseason series. Cavs coach J.B. Bickerstaff, a defense-first coach, would’ve had a hard time providing McDermott consistent minutes. His contract was also an impediment, viewed as one of those lateral pickups Altman mentioned. The same went for Dallas swingman Tim Hardaway Jr.
Beyond everything else, the Cavs weighed each realistic trade target against Caris LeVert -- a player they like, believe in, is part of their every-night rotation and gave up a first-round pick to acquire last February. Ultimately, they determined LeVert was still a better option than what was realistically available.
“I think there’s value in continuity,” Altman said. “I think there’s value in giving this group a runway. Sometimes you just say to yourself, ‘Don’t mess this up.’ I think that was a big key for us this deadline. It was not easy for me. We’re the fifth best team in the NBA right now -- 35 wins, which is the fourth most in the NBA -- and some really good numbers to back up what I think you guys see on the court every day. I didn’t see anything that was going to put us over the top. I’m really happy with where we are and where we’re going. Give this group what they deserve, what they’ve already accomplished.”
If the Cavs were going to make a significant roster upgrade, LeVert was always the linchpin. His salary number matched many of the possible trade targets while also allowing suitors to view him as both a help-now addition and future salary-space shedder.
LeVert told cleveland.com the other night he was expecting -- and hoping -- to stay beyond the deadline despite constant rumors.
A free agent at the end of the season, the Cavs are interested in bringing him back on a multi-year deal -- at the right price. Given they stood pat and still retain his Bird rights, the Cavs have essentially backed themselves into a corner on a new deal this summer. It’s just a matter of length and annual salary.
Projected to be an over-the-cap team -- barring an unexpected and significant roster shakeup -- Cleveland can’t afford to let LeVert, a $19 million player, walk in free agency. With so much money already tied up, the Cavs won’t have the means to replace him -- even if renouncing the rights of Love and LeVert and waiving Osman, whose contract is non-guaranteed for next season.
“There’s a lot of interest to keep him here,” Altman said of LeVert. “We obviously kept him through the deadline for a reason. We acquired Caris last year in vastly different circumstances. I think what he’s done this year is tried to adapt his game to two ball-dominant, all-world guards. He’s gotten better at a spot-up shooting. He’s had a career high this year at 37% a game in terms of shooting, and that’s not even his real piece. He’s just a really good basketball player.
“The thing that really speaks to me too is, and I’m a softy for this, but guys that really want to be here. Guys that show up every day to work, that have a great attitude, that whatever their role is -- he had to take a substantial step back, be a six-man type when he could be starting in the NBA on a lot of different teams – and him being like, ‘I want to make this work. I want to be here.’ That’s meaningful to me. It’s meaningful to the organization. And it’s a big reason why he’s here.”
The Cavs also see the importance in his shot-creation, isolation skills and playmaking, especially when one of their two ball-dominant guards is off the floor -- a belief backed up by the five-man lineup metrics. It’s why 14 games into the season, Cavs coach J.B. Bickerstaff made a permanent change, shifting LeVert into a more suitable sixth man role, where he would log fewer minutes next to the high-usage backcourt tandem.
“To be able to spot start Caris at times is an absolute luxury,” Altman said. “We learned that last year. We can’t have enough ball-handlers, and we’ll see in the playoffs. I know it’s been a few years now, but to break your man off the dribble when everything else breaks down and you’re set plays are not working, you’re gonna need guys to go get some stuff and manufacture some runs, if you will. He remains a very important part of what we’re doing. He’s a really good basketball player and I know he’s thrilled to still be here. We’re happy that he’s here as well.”
The Cavs also debated whether one of their potential pickups would actually crack Bickerstaff’s tight eight- or nine-man rotation. When at full strength or close to it, the top 8 are set. The ninth will likely fluctuate between Osman, Lamar Stevens and Raul Neto -- depending on the matchup and who else is available. It will take an injury for Love to get another extended look.
Altman said even though the current situation isn’t easy on the 34-year-old Love, he has not been approached about any buyout talks and doesn’t anticipate those happening.
So, the thinking was logical and straightforward: Who would come in and displace Dean Wade, Ricky Rubio or LeVert -- the three primary reserves? Would that newbie be OK with limited minutes or the kind of playing time oscillation that others have been forced to accept? Would that player be too disruptive to the status quo in which everyone seems to have a clear understanding of their role and the team’s identity.
“Everybody wants more shooting,” Altman admitted. “It’s something I looked at, but where are those minutes going to go to? And that starting five, which has been really good with Isaac Okoro, who are you taking off the floor there?”
The recent uptick from Okoro, the No. 5 pick in the 2020 NBA Draft, also played part in Cleveland’s decision-making -- although it didn’t prevent it from having advanced conversations while looking for an upgrade. Because of Okoro’s impact over the last month, especially in the starting lineup, it, at the very least, kept the Cavs from approaching the deadline with a sense of desperation.
“I think we’ve been hammered since this off-season about, ‘What are you going to do at the wing?’ We’ve always wanted the solution to be internal,” Altman said. “That’s the ideal, right? You’re developing within and helping guys achieve from within. I’m so happy for Isaac who puts the most work in that now he deserves that sort of 3-and-D position that we drafted him as. Between him, Dean, Cedi, we always wanted to hopefully have that be internal and not use more assets and go outside and hope it works.
“At the deadline, you’re making these deals and hoping that it fits. You’re ingratiating a new person to this system, everyone has to adapt around this person, you have to change the way you play a little bit to accentuate their positives. Keeping the continuity and letting the internal growth happen I think was a big part of it.”
The Cavs were the only current playoff team to stand idle during a trade deadline that featured a competitive market and an overabundance of buyers because of the wide-open view of the league’s hierarchy and the cluttered standings.
In past years, they might have gotten antsy, perhaps even felt compelled to do something. But this is a much different roster setup. They aren’t rebuilding. They aren’t in asset-collection mode. They aren’t trying to stockpile future draft picks. They aren’t searching for players to make up a foundation. The decision-makers like this group and what to see how it looks at full strength. They have already done the toughest part, assembling the league’s youngest group of contenders with a window of contention that just cracked open and should stay that way for years to come.
Now it’s about letting that core -- with an average age of 23 years old among the starters -- grow and prove what it can become.
“There’s no trade I could have accomplished that was going to account for Darius Garland playing in his first playoff series, Evan Mobley playing in his first playoff series, Isaac Okoro playing in his first playoff series. We have to go through that as a team,” Altman said. “We have the second-youngest starting lineup in the NBA. We have to go through those experiences. We’re gonna have to go down the stretch here and battle for our position. We’re gonna have to go and, hopefully knock on wood, go into a playoff series and see what that feels like. I’m excited about that. That’s the growth. That’s the maturation that I want to see from this group down the stretch.
“It’s a really, really exciting place to be.”